I have a story to tell, a story about freedom, and a wild
society we call the Sentineli. In an age
of big craziness, they inspire pleasant daydreams. It’s almost impossible for me to imagine how perfectly
free they are, or to comprehend just how far modern society has drifted from the
freedom enjoyed by my wild ancestors.
The Andaman archipelago lies in the Bay of Bengal. These tropical islands are part of India. North Sentinel Island is inhabited by the
Sentineli, a society of negrito pygmies who have short stature, dark skin tone,
and peppercorn hair. Outsiders can sometimes
view them from offshore boats, or from helicopters, but the Sentineli want
nothing to do with outsiders. Intruders
who get too close are showered with arrows, rocks, and rude comments.
North Sentinel Island is 14,700 acres (5,949 ha), a bit
smaller than Manhattan. The interior is
forest, surrounded by sandy beaches, surrounded by reefs. [Aerial
photo] Treacherous currents make
landing on the island impossible for ten months of the year, and extremely
dangerous for the other two. The island has neither valuable timber nor minerals. For these reasons, the Sentineli are still
free people in the twenty-first century.
Unlike the societies on nearby islands that have been ravaged by the
diseases of civilization, the Sentineli are “clearly extremely alert, healthy,
and thriving.”
Flyovers have noted the existence of several villages with
clusters of small huts. No evidence of
agriculture has been observed. There may
be 50 Sentineli, or 500, nobody knows. They
survive by foraging, fishing, and gathering shellfish. They may also hunt for turtles, birds, and yummy
invertebrates. Their small canoes are
used in the lagoons, but not for open-sea travel. They fish with spears and nets.
Long ago, two expeditions were able to land on North
Sentinel. They brought along folks from
a nearby island to serve as translators.
In the brief and hostile meetings, the Sentineli spoke a language that
the translators did not understand.
Obviously, they have been living in isolation for a long time. They may very well be descendants of the
folks who first settled in the Andaman Islands 60,000 years ago. North Sentinel Island is a time capsule, the
Sentineli still live like humans during the warm interglacial before the last
ice age.
In 1974, National
Geographic sent an expedition to film the Sentineli. The director was promptly hit in the leg with
an arrow, and immediately lost interest in the project. In 2004, when a ferocious tsunami rocked the
lives of tens of millions in the region, the Sentineli made it to high ground
and survived. Some believe that they
have a sixth sense, because of their elevated sensitivity to the winds and
waves. In 2006, rogue fishermen got too close,
and two were killed. A helicopter sent
to fetch their bodies was driven away.
Between 1967 and 1996, a number of contact expeditions were
attempted, for the purpose of anthropological research. Anthropologists are highly educated
scientists. They were certainly aware
that successfully making contact would have exposed the natives to deadly
diseases for which they had no immunity.
Like modern missionaries in the Amazon, they didn’t care if making
contact would result in numerous deaths.
On the bright side, anthropologists actually had sufficient intelligence
to understand the strong message being sent via volleys of arrows and rocks.
In 1996, the Indian government banned further contact
expeditions, for any reason, in order to protect the natives from disease. The natives were clearly not begging to join
civilization and enjoy the pleasures of shopping, taxpaying, cell phone
addiction, and wage slavery. So, the
Sentineli enjoy complete separation from the modern world. In an amazing demonstration of respect, wise
leaders decided to leave these people alone, and allow them to live in wildness
and freedom (unlike the other 1.3 billion Indians).
Imagine what it would be like to live in a society that was
not at war with the planet and the future — a genuinely sustainable way of life,
a tropical culture with a year round supply of food, where your wardrobe
consisted of a g-string, headband, and a couple leaves. Imagine a life without money, clocks, calendars,
automobiles, airplanes, sirens, internet, locks, fences, bosses, salesman, presidents,
police, classrooms, guns, dogs, nuclear weapons, taxes, racism, billionaires,
and intolerant proselytizing religions.
Imagine a paradise where the diseases of civilization were unknown.
Contemplate the enormous load of information stored in your
brain, accumulated during a lifetime of existing in a highly complex society, and
your constant struggle to keep pace with competitors in the endless race for
status, wealth, and power. Imagine being
blissfully unaware of absolutely everything happening in the outside world —
and the entire outside world knowing almost nothing about your society. Imagine having a healthy, simple, sane life —
living in a manner very much like your ancestors did 15,000 years ago.
Imagine living on an island where there were no strangers,
where the soundtrack was waves, birds, breezes, and the voices of your friends
and family. We weren’t meant to live
like consumers. There are better paths.
Here are some links:
7 comments:
Nice romantic reality . what is that children's book where a clan of kids are lost on a island? That develop their social structure? Western civilation dies offer advantages
I actually like dogs, but I agree with you about everything else.
Good article.
Providence Mine, Thanks!
U-big, benefits that depend on the existence of the global industrial civilization — which is killing the planet, trashing the climate, and existing at the expense of future generations — cost far more than they are worth. A one dollar benefit that costs the planet a million isn’t ethical, in my opinion.
Hi, Richard! Thanks for writing this. I've seen some photos (real or fake) of the Sentineli with arrows drawn. It's nice to have the additional information you provide here. Glad they are being left alone, and they sure won the lottery having no immediately obvious 'resources' on that island. Hopefully the lure of the unknown doesn't inspire others to make any further attempts to make landfall.
I do certainly wish that my wardrobe was so simple, though perhaps others might not!
Hi Matt! Facebook has several North Sentinel Island pages. One comment mentioned sailing around the island and flying a drone over it. People are amazing, eh?
An anthropologist did make several contacts with these people and survived. Then, 20 years ago, she chose never to return. For more info, check HERE
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