Diversity in India
The diversity in India is unique. Being a large country with large population. India presents endless varieties of physical features and cultural patterns. It is the land of many languages it is only in India people professes all the major religions of the world. In short, India is “the epitome of the world”.
Watch Physical Features of India
The vast population is composed of people having diverse creeds, customs and colours. Some of the important forms of diversity in India are discussed below.
1. Diversity of Physical Features:
The unique feature about India is the
extreme largest mountains covered with snow throughout the year. The Himalayas
or the adobe of snow is the source of the mighty rivers like Indus. Ganga and
Yamuna.
These perennial rivers irrigate extensive areas in the North to sustain
the huge population of the country. At the same time Northern India contains and
zones and the desert of Rajasthan where nothing grows accept a few shrubs. In southern part the Eastern and Western Ghats are the main sources of rivers. Sea coastal area is around 6000 km long is the main source of trade from a long years. India also has more than 270 islands in Lakshdeep and Andaman Nikobar islands.
2. Racial Diversity:
A race is a group of people with a set
of distinctive physical features such set skin, colour, type of nose, form of
hair etc. A.W. Green says, “A race is a large biological human grouping with a
number of distinctive, inherited characteristics which vary within a certain
range.”
The Indian sub-continent received a
large number of migratory races mostly from the Western and the Eastern
directions. Majority of the people of India are descendants of immigrants from
across the Himalayas. Their dispersal into sub-continent has resulted in the
consequent regional concentration of a variety of ethnic elements. India is an
ethnological museum Dr B.S Guha identifies the population of India into six
main ethnic groups, namely (1) the Negrito’ (2) the Proto-Australoids, (3) the
Mongoloids (4) the Mediterranean or Dravidian (5) the Western Brachycephals and
(6) the Nordic. People belonging to these different racial stocks have little
in common either in physical appearance or food habits. The racial diversity is
very perplexing.
Herbert Risley had classified the people
of India into seven racial types. These are- (1) Turko-Iranian (2) Indo-Aryan,
(3) Scytho-Dravidian, (4) Aryo-Dravidian, (5) Mongo o- Dravidian, (6) Mongoloid
and (7) Dravidian. These seven racial types can be reduced to three basic
types- the Indo-Aryan, the Mongolian and the Dravidian. In his opinion the last
two types would account for the racial composition of tribal India.
Other administrative officers and
anthropologists like J.H. Hutton, D.N. Majumdar and B. S. Guha have given the
latest racial classification of the Indian people based on further researches
in this field. Hutton’s and Guha’s classifications are based on 1931 census
operations.
3. Linguistic Diversity:
The census of 1961 listed as many as 1,652 languages and
dialects. Since most of these languages are spoken by very few people, the
subsequent census regarded them as spurious but the 8′h Schedule of the Constitution of India recognizes 22 languages.
These are (1) Assamese, (2) Bengali, (3) Gujarati, (4) Hindi, (5) Kannada, (6)
Kashmir. (7) zKonkani. (8) Malayalam. (9) Manipuri, (10) Marathi, (11) Nepali.
(12) Oriya, (13) Punjabi, (14) Sanskrit. (15) Tamil, (16) Telugu, (17) Urdu,
and (18) Sindhi, (19) Santhali, (20) Boro, (21) Maithili and (22) Dogri. But
four of these languages namely Sanskrit, Kashmiri, Nepali and Sindhi are not
official languages in any State of the Indian Union. But all these languages
are rich in literature Hindi in Devanagiri script is recognized as the official
language of the Indian Union by the Constitution.
The second largest language, Telugu, is
spoken by about 60 million people, mostly in Andhra Pradesh. Most of the languages
spoken in North India belong to the Indo- Aryan family, while the languages of
the South namely Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam and Kannada belong to the Dravidian
family.
It is said that India is a “Veritable
tower of babel”. In the words of A.R. Desai “India presents a spectacle of
museum of tongues”.
This linguistic diversity
notwithstanding, there was always a sort of link languages, though it has
varied from age to age. In ancient times, it was Sanskrit, in medieval age it
was Arabic or Persian and in modern times there are Hindi and English as
official languages.
4. Religious Diversity:
India is not religiously a homogeneous
State even through nearly 80 per cent of the population profess Hinduism. India
is a land of multiple religions. We find here followers of various faiths,
particularly of Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, Sikhism, Buddhism, Jainism
Zoroastrianism. We know it that Hinduism is the dominant religion of India.
According to the census of 2001 it is professed by 80.05 per cent of the total
population.
Next comes Islam which is practiced by
13.04 per cent. This is followed by Christianity having a followers of 2 03 per
cent, Sikhism reported by 1.9 per cent, Buddhism by 0.8 per cent and Jainism by
0.4 per cent. The religions with lesser following are Judaism, Zoroastrianism
and Bahaism.
Then there are sects within each
religion. Hinduism, for example, has many sects including Shaiva Shakta and
Vaishnava. We can add to them the sects born of religious reform movements such
as the Arya Samaj, Brahmo Samaj, and The Ram Krishna Mission. More recently,
some new cults have come up such as Radhaswami, Saibaba etc. Similarly, Islam
is divided into Shiya and Sunni; Sikhism into Namdhari and Nirankari; Jainism
into Digambar and Shwetambar and Buddhism into Hinayan and Mahayan.
While Hindus and Muslims are found in
almost all parts of India, the remaining minority religions have their pockets
of concentration. Christians have their strongholds in the three Southern
States of Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Meghalaya. Sikhs are concentrated largely in
Punjab, Buddhist in Maharashtra and Jains are mainly spread over Maharashtra,
Rajasthan and Gujarat, but also found in most urban centres throughout the
country.
5. Caste Diversity:
India is a country of castes. Caste or
Jati refers to a hereditary, endogamous status group practicing a specific
traditional occupation. It is surprising to know that there are more than 3,000
Jatis in India.
These are hierarchically graded in
different ways in different regions.
It may also be noted that the practice
of caste system is not confined to Hindus alone. We find castes among the
Muslims, Christians, Sikhs as well as other communities. We have heard of the
hierarchy of Shaikh, Saiyed, Mughal, Pathan among the Muslims, Furthermore,
there are castes like Teli (oil pressure). Dhobi (washerman), Darjee (tailor)
etc. among the Muslims. Similarly, caste consciousness among the Christians in
India is not unknown. Since a vast majority of Christians in India were
converted from Hindu fold, the converts have carried the caste system into
Christianity. Among the Sikhs again we have so many castes including Jat Sikh
and Majahabi Sikh (lower castes). In view of this we can well imagine the
extent of caste diversity in India.
In addition to the above described major
forms of diversity, we have diversity of many other sorts like settlement
pattern – tribal, rural, urban; marriage and kinship pattern along religious
and regional lines and so on.
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