Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Chau made notes of how tribesmen live, interact

- Prawesh Lama

SOUTH ANDAMAN: A note left by American missionary John Allen Chau, feared killed by members of the Sentineles­e tribe on their off-limits North Sentinel Island in Andaman, reveals more details of the indigenous people and also Chau’s own efforts to get to know them. For instance, it puts a number to the Sentineles­e - 250. It also provides some details of their social hierarchy.

The detailed note, titled “Observatio­ns”, was recovered by Andaman police from the possession of a fisherman who dropped him off at the island, S Jampo. The fisherman, along with four other fishermen, has been arrested for taking Chau to an island where outsiders, Indians and others, are not allowed. The North Sentinel island is at least three hours away by boat from the nearest village in Andaman. The note has been shared with anthropolo­gists in the hope that it might provide some tips on retrieving Chau’s body.

To be sure, Chau, 27 an adventurer who wished to bring religion to the islanders, wasn’t an anthropolo­gist and his observatio­ns will have to be treated as that of an amateur’s. Still, some of the details about the little known tribe are interestin­g.

According to Chau, on the morning of November 15, when he arrived on the island he met one man who appeared to be the tribe’s leader.

The man had a white crown made of flowers (according to Chau). The missionary added that the man “took a leadership stance . ... climbed on a rock, and yelled at me.”

Detailing how the Sentineles­e speak, Chau, from Alabama in the United States, noted that they “make high pitched sounds .... sounds such as the letters b, p, l and s.” Nothing is known of the language of the Sentineles­e. Chau guessed in his notes that the tribespeop­le “probably exchanged a lot of insults” although the basis for this isn’t clear. Chau also notes that he

tried some words used by the Jarawas, a tribe from South and Middle Andaman but the Sentineles­e didn’t seem to understand them.

Chau, the first outsider to have sneaked into the island in 12 years, also described the topography of island. Before Chau, in 2006, two fishermen who accidental­ly strayed near the North Sentinel beach while fishing were reportedly killed by the islanders. Before 2006, a government team with police officers and anthropolo­gists managed to reach the island and gift coconuts to the Sentineles­e in 1991.

Describing the North Sentinel Island beach, Chau wrote that the sand is white but coarse. The seabed leading up to the beach has mostly dead coral, he observed, but with a very clear bottom. “There is an amazing surf beach at the entrance of the south part of the cove. Saw three perfect sets of 4-6 feet high swells .... ” the note reads.

Some of the huts housed around 10 Sentineles­e each, including juveniles; and some could have had around 50, Chau noted. He has estimated the number of Sentineles­e to be about 250. In 2004, after the Tsunami, the Indian government , which conducted an aerial survery of the island to check on the islanders, estimated their number at between 40 and 200. The islanders shot arrows from their bows at the helicopter then too.

Chau says he saw no elderly Sentineles­e, and guessed that this meant they lived separately on another part of the island.

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