M MAISUANGDIBOU | Christ University, Bangalore, India (original) (raw)
Drafts by M MAISUANGDIBOU
EMBRACING STRANGERS, 2020
Deimperalization and decolonization are prefixed by the word ‘de-’, which means there is somethin... more Deimperalization and decolonization are prefixed by the word ‘de-’, which means there is something to remove, reduce, and reverse. Deimperalization and decolonization are closely intertwined, and they serve a similar purpose. Deimperialization is the phenomenon of dismantling imperialism, and decolonization is the aspect of resisting colonization , especially the colonial structures left by imperial powers. Before going further, one begins by highlighting what ‘imperialism’ and ‘colonization’ mean. One of the difficulties in defining imperialism and colonialism is that they are hard to distinguish from each other. Frequently, the two concepts are treated as synonyms. However, in the strict sense of the terms, imperialism is an ideological concept which upholds the legitimacy of control of one nation by another; whereas, colonialism is one form of practice that results from the ideology of imperialism. Indeed, it is arguable that while colonialism is virtually over today, imperialism continues promptly as Western nations are still engaged in imperial acts. The impacts of imperialism and colonialism and the present facets of neo-colonialism are mainly felt in the area of colonized mentality, language and culture, academia/theology, economy, and socio-polity.
This paper is an attempt to explore and locate the issues of imperialization and colonization of the tribal mind, language (culture), and academia. It will undertake to dismantle imperialism and colonialism in the natives’ life. Here the methods employed are a blend of postcolonialism , decolonization , and the tribal-natives’ reading. Overall, the paper aims to deconstruct the imperial and colonial legacy, and it tries to reconstruct the natives’ life and culture by infusing their histories, cultures, heritage, and traditions.
Tribal ethics is community ethics, emphasizing the communal over the individual as the primary fo... more Tribal ethics is community ethics, emphasizing the communal over the individual as the primary form of moral actions and principles. This ethics arises from a specific context, i.e., the tribal context. It is in the concrete reality of tribal life that the tribal people formulate their ways of living. Despite being context-specific, one can argue that tribal communitarian ethics has universal relevance because its values are wide-ranging and globally applicable in shaping the world for a better place. For that reason, communitarian ethics has a global vision that goes beyond time, space, and society, and it can be relatively appropriated in other socio-cultural milieus. Fascinatingly, communitarian ethics is available, explicitly or implicitly, in every society of the world, and it can be considered a common property. That means communitarian ethics is not an exclusive entity of the tribal communities; however, the overt emphasis on communitarian living and its values makes this ethics a point of departure in the tribal culture.
For the tribals, community interest always comes first, followed by individual or personal interest. This explicit manifestation of community values in tribal lives makes community ethics the starting point of their relationship and corporate living. This communitarian ethics exists in all the tribal communities in the forms of diverse linguistic terms such as chaliuraobo (Liangmai-Naga), tlawmngaihna (Mizo), sobaliba (Ao-Naga), and a state of moral practice. Nevertheless, notwithstanding its significance, several community ethical values are distorted and rejected with the coming of Christianity and modernity in the tribal world; however, numerous communitarian ideals continue to survive, inculcate, and synthesize with Christian values.
In order to limit the scope of the paper, the discussion is limited to the above three terminologies: chaliuraobo, tlawmngaihna, and sobaliba; however, the practical aspects of communitarian ethics deliberated here will not be restricted only to these three linguistic expressions.
Sahitya Akademi, 2022
Tribal people are one of the most religious people in the world. That is to say that there is no ... more Tribal people are one of the most religious people in the world. That is to say that there is no irreligious person in the tribal community. In fact, they do not know how to live without religion. Their religion and worldview are holistic in nature, as there is no separation between sacred and secular, and body and soul. Thus, everything is connected to their spiritual life. In other words, their whole life is religious and sacred. For instance, cultivating, farming, hunting, fishing, eating, dancing, celebrating, traveling, living, and so on are all sacred and spiritually linked. This religious way is the lifestyle of the tribal people. However, this religious life has undergone radical change beginning from the 19th century with the colonization of the northeast Indian region by the British Empire and the later entrance of Christianity and modernity. Several traditional indigenous tribal religions of northeast India are almost decimated with the introduction and expansion of alien forces. Today, only in the state of Arunachal Pradesh do the majority of the people practice the traditional primal religion, which they call Donyipolo.
The arrival of a foreign religion nearly annihilated the natives’ tribal religions. This critical situation provided a religious transformation from within that led to the rebirth and the avatar of tribal primal religions in the form of religious movements such as the Heraka among the Zeliangrong (Hamai) community beginning from the 1920s in Manipur, Nagaland, Assam, and the Donyipolo among the Arunachalis that was initiated in 1986. These two religious movements are the most well-known religious movements among the tribal communities of northeast India. They are the reformed versions of the indigenous religions. In this paper, the researcher will discuss the tribal religious movements of northeast India; however, it will limit its scope to the Heraka movement (of the Zeliangrong community of Assam, Manipur, and Nagaland) and its basic religious tenets.
Tribal Women's empowerment and self-reliance depend on several factors such as congenial environm... more Tribal Women's empowerment and self-reliance depend on several factors such as congenial environment, patriarchal-less situation, community support, skill development, market accessibility, high self-esteem, mental preparedness, and others. Tribal women in history have experienced both independence and oppression depend on spatial-temporal conditions. Several tribal communities have opened to women's participation in decision-making, politics, agriculture, and economy. However, the tribal value of communitarianism is always overshadowed by patriarchy and its manifestations. These community-centered tribal societies never experienced an ideal state of egalitarianism due to patriarchal-decided social systems. Despite the inequality women faced in tribal society, several cultural practices are liberating and transforming, making tribal women encountered a certain degree of equality compared to their counterparts in the rest of India. Here the Liangmai-Naga tradition of liuleh (women's property or possessions) is significant to appropriate women's empowerment and liberation. This paper attempts to reflect on the traditional concept and the practice of liuleh of the Liangmai-Naga community and contribute to current tribal women's empowerment.
There are five theories available on the historical origin of the Nagas as appropriated from diff... more There are five theories available on the historical origin of the Nagas as appropriated from different sources located in the contemporary Naga society. There theories are (1) mythical origin, (2) originated from Mongolia, (3) originated from China, (4), Originally from Southeast Asia, (5) Present territory origin. The approaches of the study are oral-historical analysis and library works. It takes into consideration the numerous views offered by oral experts, scholars, intellectuals in Naga context. Moreover, the five theories presented are interconnected in several ways therefore to bestow a single theory as a conclusive one is inconceivable at the present stage as the debate on the subject-matter is an ongoing process.
K. Thanzauva (1946- ) from Mizoram is one of the most influential theologians from Northeast Indi... more K. Thanzauva (1946- ) from Mizoram is one of the most influential theologians from Northeast India. He with few others are the pioneers of tribal Christian theology. His works are immense and they continue to make a huge impact in the theological circle in India. The contribution of Thanzauva on tribal theology ranges from the tribal understanding of community, methodology, ecclesiology, social ethics, the concept of humanity, spirituality, and many more. He tries to provide an elaborate methodological presupposition for the construction of theology in the tribal context of Northeast India.
Christianity in contemporary Liangmai-Naga Context needs re-examination. The fact is that Christi... more Christianity in contemporary Liangmai-Naga Context needs re-examination. The fact is that Christianity, which is based on Christ's life and his salvific works has not been deeply contextualized. The community has not experienced radical transformation and social liberation. These elements have led to the question; why Christianity has not brought a social and spiritual revolution in Liangmai Christian life? Given this circumstance, this paper is an attempt to radicalize Liangmai Christian theology as a tool for salvation and liberation. It is to root its theology in a sound contextual methodology. For that purpose, a communitarian approach is viable as a hermeneutical tool for Liangmai theology. Such a local and grounded method can interpret the Gospel to bring social justice and salvific dimensions in the Liangmai community.
Papers by M MAISUANGDIBOU
UBS Journal , 2021
The ongoing global Covid-19 pandemic is one of the significant challenges the world has ever face... more The ongoing global Covid-19 pandemic is one of the significant challenges the world has ever faced in the last 20 and more centuries. The coronavirus, which is tiny and unseen with the humans' naked eyes, has crushed and ravaged the world and put the latter on war footing to respond to this deadly situation. This extreme state of affairs has left humans' life and their faith in science and technology, such as machinery, equipment, technical know-how, and medicines, to reexamine the idea of human development, progress, and life itself. In such a circumstance, Christian faith, church, and theology have to revisit and reflect on the Word of God to discover life's meanings, mission, and praxis to uplift the spirit of the world, church and faith holistically. Hence, the community of faith should respond sincerely to the current pandemic to make itself relevant to the world now and then and be faithful to the Gospel. For this purpose, the study undertaken is explorative and community-based action-oriented one seeking life's reorientation and commitment.
Union Biblical Seminary Journal, 2023
Tribal theology(ies) can produce appropriate knowledge and praxis for tribal Christians using a p... more Tribal theology(ies) can produce appropriate knowledge and praxis for tribal Christians using a proper methodology(ies). Choosing a suitable methodology is critical for developing relevant and dynamic theology. Here, theology and methodology are interrelated and go hand in hand. In other words, the outcome of any theology is determined by the methodology applied. If an appropriate methodology is not selected, the theology constructed will have a systemic flaw and be irrelevant to the church and society. Therefore, picking an appropriate methodology will decide what kind of theology one produces. And out of several methodologies proposed and applied in tribal theology, the researcher would like to adopt communitarianism as the most realistic approach to tribal theology. Thus, this paper attempts to evaluate the existing methodologies in tribal faith expression. Not only that, but the researcher also once again recommends a communitarian approach as a viable methodology in tribal theology.
Journal of Tribal Studies, 2020
The tribal world, which is overtly communitarian, has to make use of this communitarian expressio... more The tribal world, which is overtly communitarian, has to make use of this communitarian expression in its research. Tribal Christians seeking knowledge cannot avoid community aspect as it is the community and within this community that their life evolves. The centrality of communality in tribal context demands any research on tribal, and by tribal scholars and intellectuals, to critically utilize communitarian features and elements. This discourse on communitarian methodology is to determine the practicality of the said approach. For this matter, the paper would attempt to review the existing methods in tribal theology, ascertain their feasibilities and drawbacks. Further, it would propose a communitarian methodology as a viable model for tribal theology. For that reason, the study undertaken is explicitly explorative and constructive with few inputs from other domains.
Union Biblical Seminary , 2022
To the question, Jesus asked his disciple Peter, “who do you say that I am?” (Matt 16: 15); triba... more To the question, Jesus asked his disciple Peter, “who do you say that I am?” (Matt 16: 15); tribal Christians have not responded conclusively and holistically up to the present time. The existing Christology in the tribal context is limited and narrow because it has not been constructed in an all-inclusive manner. Secondly, it is a collection of several limited tribal linguistic-conceptual expressions such as Jesus the Lizaba (Ao-Naga), Jesus the rooster of God, ancestor, and elder brother (Tangkhul-Naga), Jesus the pasaltha (Mizo-Kuki-Zou), Jesus the liangtuong (Liangmai-Naga), Jesus the bamboo (Ao-Naga), Jesus the indoi (Kuki), Jesus the arasentsur (Ao-Naga), Jesus the land (tribal), and more. These tribal terms and notions are significant, yet they do not express an all-encompassing nature of Christ from the tribal perspective, as they are derived from particular tribes. Therefore, they lack inclusivity, standardization, or normative value in the whole tribal context. In other words, they are deficient in defining the holistic nature of Jesus Christ in the tribal world. Hence, there is a need to reenvision tribal Christology, which is all-embracing, critical, and relevant to all tribals. Against this background, the attempt in this paper is to redevelop a tribal-indigenous Christology by basically appropriating two aspects: first, the vivid tribal worldview of communitarianism, and second, the tribalness and indigeneity of Jesus Christ in the light of the Biblical teaching and the context of the tribal community.
Journal of Tribal studies, Tribal Study Centre, Jan 2023
In any discipline, epistemology is intently connected with ontology, methodology, and the researc... more In any discipline, epistemology is intently connected with ontology, methodology, and the research outcome or knowledge developed. Epistemology, with no exception of tribal epistemology, begins with various foundational questions: what is knowledge? What is truth? Or, is there (here) something called truth? If it is there (here), how does one know? What knowledge is required to know it? In like manner, how does one attain knowledge, or how does one know what is known? In another way, what are the sources, methods, validity, potentialities, and limits of knowledge (episteme) in the tribal context? Here, tribal worldviews , thought processes, ways of life, and other categories are critical to understanding the notion of knowledge in tribal settings. Against this background, tribal people develop ideas and concepts, which one can call tribal knowledge, tribal ideas, tribology, or tribal study(ies). Here the point is, how do tribals perceive, recognize, understand, and comprehend reality? Is there a proper methodology(ies) from the tribal perspectives to move forward and systematize and discern the truth? Given these circumstances, critical questions arise for further discussion: how do tribals theologize, or in general, create knowledge with the episteme (the way they know and perceive reality) available within them? How could tribal theology reach the truth? What are the critical approaches in tribal theological discourses? And what is the extent and standard of tribal theology? With these few questions in mind, the study undertaken in this paper is explorative research. It examines the significance of tribal episteme in formulating tribal methodology and theology.
Christian World Imprint, 2022
Tribal episteme in general and literature, philosophy, worldview, and theology in particular repr... more Tribal episteme in general and literature, philosophy, worldview, and theology in particular represent an emerging voice in the Indian and world literary scenes. Tribal literature is unique of the unique due to its very nature as communitarian, land-centred, egalitarian, resistant, outspoken, and shared aesthetic values. It is eco-friendly, pastoral, mystical, nondualistic, essential unity of all realities, and spiritual-mythical conscious. This literature is the voice of the tribal people on their lives, cultures, worldviews, and religions.
This book attempts to write and develop hermeneutical tools and literary criticism of Tribal literature. It is a methodological exploration by reading tribal myths and worldviews. The book wrestles with several questions and issues on tribal literature: what is tribal literature? How to formulate tribal hermeneutics and literary criticism? How to systematize or methodize traditional tribal interpretational norms? How the self and the community are connected in tribal literature? How to read text(s) from a woman’s perspective? How to fuse the diverse horizons? And how to liberate and construct the identity and spirituality of the tribal communities in the (post)modern context? This volume asserts that tribal literature is communitarian, mostly folk and oral, liberative, transformative, eco-centred, open-ended, flux, and plurisignal.
SATHRI Journal, 2021
The research attempts to construct a tribal hermeneutics utilizing tribal resources. The study is... more The research attempts to construct a tribal hermeneutics utilizing tribal resources. The study is vital because tribals, as a distinct community, need interpretation models of their own to read or interpret the Gospel and other texts relevantly and transformatively. The study advanced a hermeneutical exploration. The researcher profoundly depends on diverse materials from oral resources, library works, and other sources. The investigation categorically observes and suggests that culture and tradition, such as myths, could provide relevant resources for theological hermeneutics in a given context. The overall argument is that tribal theology has to critically use cultural values to make the Gospel more relevant and liberating.
The Perspective of India's New Education Policy 2020, The Native Tribe, 2020
If education is crucial for any civilization, will the National Education Policy 2020 (NEP 2020) ... more If education is crucial for any civilization, will the National Education Policy 2020 (NEP 2020) improve India's education system in the future? Education in Northeast India (NEI) is unalike from India's rest due to several reasons such as geographical distinction, cultural diversity, religious pluralism, socio-cultural heterogeneity, and linguistic varieties. NEI is a mini world within the world. The multiplicity of life and nature in NEI is a boon for the world to cherish and learn. However, the region has become the most neglected area in the country. This trait has alienated the region's population from the rest of India; it also created a socio-cultural gap. In this given context, can the NEP 2020 improve the education of the people? The vision of NEP 2020, instead of uplifting the NEI from educational slumber, could create more hurdles if the socio-cultural milieu of the people is not taken into consideration. Therefore, an attempt to contextualize the existing education system in NEI and interrelate with NEP 2020 is vital in this paper.
The native Tribe, 2021
Northeast Indians face racial discrimination in the times of covid-19 pandemic is a systemic cont... more Northeast Indians face racial discrimination in the times of covid-19 pandemic is a systemic continuation of exploitation and alienation perpetrated by the mainland Indians on the “others.” Northeast Indians are a target for prejudice, stereotype, and intolerance based on colour, race, caste, and sex(ism) in mainland India. The covid-19 situation has intensified the rate of racial discrimination and exploitation. The issue is that the northeasterners are alienated in their own country and from their own house (state) yards. This state of affairs has led to anger, alienation, mental traumatization, frustration, and fear among the northeast Indians who have migrated and settled in various parts of India. To examine the issue at hand, the researcher employs an explorative, community-based study where an investigation is prepared by collecting a number of lived-experience of the Northeasterners who share about racial discrimination and a survey on the issue both in times of normalcy and the pandemic.
Mar Thoma Seminary Journal of Theology, 2015
Tribal people of Northeast India never experience “racism” until they moved outside of their land... more Tribal people of Northeast India never experience “racism” until they moved outside of their land, or they came in contact with dominant groups. While this may be true for many other people too, and this is because racism is not a new phenomenon, but it is never indoctrinated in tribal cultures.
Indian Theological Journal, JRTS, 2017
Tribal theology needs to engage with postmodernism to enhance its methodologies and perspectives.
Books by M MAISUANGDIBOU
Christian World Imprints, 2023
Hermeneutics is one of the most interdisciplinary branches of knowledge. For any discipline: hist... more Hermeneutics is one of the most interdisciplinary branches of knowledge. For any discipline: history, philosophy, theology, science, ecology, culture, politics, and others, one needs hermeneutics. Likewise, biblical hermeneutics too can be studied from different perspectives namely, Old Testament, New Testament, Biblical Theology, Doctrinal Study, and so on, which makes it multifaceted. Given this circumstance, the objective of this book is to make biblical hermeneutics reader and student-friendly from an interdisciplinary approach (philosophy, biblical, and theology). On the other hand, there are hundreds of well-written books on biblical hermeneutics, however, a large number of books are extremely abstract or philosophical and unsystematic for young readers, in a sense, they bring in different philosophers, hermeneuts, and other scholars without any introductory notes on those experts; thus, making the students confused and difficult to understand. This trait is explicitly shared by numerous theological students from various theological seminaries and colleges in India. Therefore, this book, Biblical Hermeneutics: Methodologies and Perspectives, is a humble attempt to make hermeneutics easy to read, reliable, comprehensive, contextualized, and provides vital information without losing its philosophical, biblical, and theological concepts and implications.
Witinglung Publication, 2015
LIANGMAI AND CHRISTIANITY: FAITH IN SEARCH OF UNDERSTANDING AND TRANSFORMATION IN INDIGENOUS/TRIB... more LIANGMAI AND CHRISTIANITY: FAITH IN SEARCH OF UNDERSTANDING AND TRANSFORMATION IN INDIGENOUS/TRIBAL CONTEXT is a critical and contextual faith reflection of the Gospel in the grass-root Liangmai socio-cultural milieu. It is Liangmais’ faith seeking an understanding of God’s purpose and vision for His people. It is a theological exploration of the Liangmai Christian spirituality in the light of the Gospel and the living realities of the people.
Secondly, this book is not a systematic theology, nor a dogma, nor a doctrine, nor a belief system, nor even a biblical commentary. However, it is an appraisal, an authentic faith investigation on the word of God (Bible) in the Liangmai context. It is the word of God that confronted the Liangmais’ world for a broader synthesis of both the dimensions and for enhancing each other.
M. Maisuangdibou did his Doctoral Studies from Federated Faculty for Research in Religion and Culture (FFRRC), Kottayam, Kerala, affiliated to Senate of Serampore University, Serampore, West Bengal. He is the author of Tribal Theological Hermeneutics: Methodological Issues in Interpretation and Liangmai Narratives: An Integral Look at History, Society and Culture.
This book is available in the e-book: names of the website are pdfdrive.com and b-ok.asia
EMBRACING STRANGERS, 2020
Deimperalization and decolonization are prefixed by the word ‘de-’, which means there is somethin... more Deimperalization and decolonization are prefixed by the word ‘de-’, which means there is something to remove, reduce, and reverse. Deimperalization and decolonization are closely intertwined, and they serve a similar purpose. Deimperialization is the phenomenon of dismantling imperialism, and decolonization is the aspect of resisting colonization , especially the colonial structures left by imperial powers. Before going further, one begins by highlighting what ‘imperialism’ and ‘colonization’ mean. One of the difficulties in defining imperialism and colonialism is that they are hard to distinguish from each other. Frequently, the two concepts are treated as synonyms. However, in the strict sense of the terms, imperialism is an ideological concept which upholds the legitimacy of control of one nation by another; whereas, colonialism is one form of practice that results from the ideology of imperialism. Indeed, it is arguable that while colonialism is virtually over today, imperialism continues promptly as Western nations are still engaged in imperial acts. The impacts of imperialism and colonialism and the present facets of neo-colonialism are mainly felt in the area of colonized mentality, language and culture, academia/theology, economy, and socio-polity.
This paper is an attempt to explore and locate the issues of imperialization and colonization of the tribal mind, language (culture), and academia. It will undertake to dismantle imperialism and colonialism in the natives’ life. Here the methods employed are a blend of postcolonialism , decolonization , and the tribal-natives’ reading. Overall, the paper aims to deconstruct the imperial and colonial legacy, and it tries to reconstruct the natives’ life and culture by infusing their histories, cultures, heritage, and traditions.
Tribal ethics is community ethics, emphasizing the communal over the individual as the primary fo... more Tribal ethics is community ethics, emphasizing the communal over the individual as the primary form of moral actions and principles. This ethics arises from a specific context, i.e., the tribal context. It is in the concrete reality of tribal life that the tribal people formulate their ways of living. Despite being context-specific, one can argue that tribal communitarian ethics has universal relevance because its values are wide-ranging and globally applicable in shaping the world for a better place. For that reason, communitarian ethics has a global vision that goes beyond time, space, and society, and it can be relatively appropriated in other socio-cultural milieus. Fascinatingly, communitarian ethics is available, explicitly or implicitly, in every society of the world, and it can be considered a common property. That means communitarian ethics is not an exclusive entity of the tribal communities; however, the overt emphasis on communitarian living and its values makes this ethics a point of departure in the tribal culture.
For the tribals, community interest always comes first, followed by individual or personal interest. This explicit manifestation of community values in tribal lives makes community ethics the starting point of their relationship and corporate living. This communitarian ethics exists in all the tribal communities in the forms of diverse linguistic terms such as chaliuraobo (Liangmai-Naga), tlawmngaihna (Mizo), sobaliba (Ao-Naga), and a state of moral practice. Nevertheless, notwithstanding its significance, several community ethical values are distorted and rejected with the coming of Christianity and modernity in the tribal world; however, numerous communitarian ideals continue to survive, inculcate, and synthesize with Christian values.
In order to limit the scope of the paper, the discussion is limited to the above three terminologies: chaliuraobo, tlawmngaihna, and sobaliba; however, the practical aspects of communitarian ethics deliberated here will not be restricted only to these three linguistic expressions.
Sahitya Akademi, 2022
Tribal people are one of the most religious people in the world. That is to say that there is no ... more Tribal people are one of the most religious people in the world. That is to say that there is no irreligious person in the tribal community. In fact, they do not know how to live without religion. Their religion and worldview are holistic in nature, as there is no separation between sacred and secular, and body and soul. Thus, everything is connected to their spiritual life. In other words, their whole life is religious and sacred. For instance, cultivating, farming, hunting, fishing, eating, dancing, celebrating, traveling, living, and so on are all sacred and spiritually linked. This religious way is the lifestyle of the tribal people. However, this religious life has undergone radical change beginning from the 19th century with the colonization of the northeast Indian region by the British Empire and the later entrance of Christianity and modernity. Several traditional indigenous tribal religions of northeast India are almost decimated with the introduction and expansion of alien forces. Today, only in the state of Arunachal Pradesh do the majority of the people practice the traditional primal religion, which they call Donyipolo.
The arrival of a foreign religion nearly annihilated the natives’ tribal religions. This critical situation provided a religious transformation from within that led to the rebirth and the avatar of tribal primal religions in the form of religious movements such as the Heraka among the Zeliangrong (Hamai) community beginning from the 1920s in Manipur, Nagaland, Assam, and the Donyipolo among the Arunachalis that was initiated in 1986. These two religious movements are the most well-known religious movements among the tribal communities of northeast India. They are the reformed versions of the indigenous religions. In this paper, the researcher will discuss the tribal religious movements of northeast India; however, it will limit its scope to the Heraka movement (of the Zeliangrong community of Assam, Manipur, and Nagaland) and its basic religious tenets.
Tribal Women's empowerment and self-reliance depend on several factors such as congenial environm... more Tribal Women's empowerment and self-reliance depend on several factors such as congenial environment, patriarchal-less situation, community support, skill development, market accessibility, high self-esteem, mental preparedness, and others. Tribal women in history have experienced both independence and oppression depend on spatial-temporal conditions. Several tribal communities have opened to women's participation in decision-making, politics, agriculture, and economy. However, the tribal value of communitarianism is always overshadowed by patriarchy and its manifestations. These community-centered tribal societies never experienced an ideal state of egalitarianism due to patriarchal-decided social systems. Despite the inequality women faced in tribal society, several cultural practices are liberating and transforming, making tribal women encountered a certain degree of equality compared to their counterparts in the rest of India. Here the Liangmai-Naga tradition of liuleh (women's property or possessions) is significant to appropriate women's empowerment and liberation. This paper attempts to reflect on the traditional concept and the practice of liuleh of the Liangmai-Naga community and contribute to current tribal women's empowerment.
There are five theories available on the historical origin of the Nagas as appropriated from diff... more There are five theories available on the historical origin of the Nagas as appropriated from different sources located in the contemporary Naga society. There theories are (1) mythical origin, (2) originated from Mongolia, (3) originated from China, (4), Originally from Southeast Asia, (5) Present territory origin. The approaches of the study are oral-historical analysis and library works. It takes into consideration the numerous views offered by oral experts, scholars, intellectuals in Naga context. Moreover, the five theories presented are interconnected in several ways therefore to bestow a single theory as a conclusive one is inconceivable at the present stage as the debate on the subject-matter is an ongoing process.
K. Thanzauva (1946- ) from Mizoram is one of the most influential theologians from Northeast Indi... more K. Thanzauva (1946- ) from Mizoram is one of the most influential theologians from Northeast India. He with few others are the pioneers of tribal Christian theology. His works are immense and they continue to make a huge impact in the theological circle in India. The contribution of Thanzauva on tribal theology ranges from the tribal understanding of community, methodology, ecclesiology, social ethics, the concept of humanity, spirituality, and many more. He tries to provide an elaborate methodological presupposition for the construction of theology in the tribal context of Northeast India.
Christianity in contemporary Liangmai-Naga Context needs re-examination. The fact is that Christi... more Christianity in contemporary Liangmai-Naga Context needs re-examination. The fact is that Christianity, which is based on Christ's life and his salvific works has not been deeply contextualized. The community has not experienced radical transformation and social liberation. These elements have led to the question; why Christianity has not brought a social and spiritual revolution in Liangmai Christian life? Given this circumstance, this paper is an attempt to radicalize Liangmai Christian theology as a tool for salvation and liberation. It is to root its theology in a sound contextual methodology. For that purpose, a communitarian approach is viable as a hermeneutical tool for Liangmai theology. Such a local and grounded method can interpret the Gospel to bring social justice and salvific dimensions in the Liangmai community.
UBS Journal , 2021
The ongoing global Covid-19 pandemic is one of the significant challenges the world has ever face... more The ongoing global Covid-19 pandemic is one of the significant challenges the world has ever faced in the last 20 and more centuries. The coronavirus, which is tiny and unseen with the humans' naked eyes, has crushed and ravaged the world and put the latter on war footing to respond to this deadly situation. This extreme state of affairs has left humans' life and their faith in science and technology, such as machinery, equipment, technical know-how, and medicines, to reexamine the idea of human development, progress, and life itself. In such a circumstance, Christian faith, church, and theology have to revisit and reflect on the Word of God to discover life's meanings, mission, and praxis to uplift the spirit of the world, church and faith holistically. Hence, the community of faith should respond sincerely to the current pandemic to make itself relevant to the world now and then and be faithful to the Gospel. For this purpose, the study undertaken is explorative and community-based action-oriented one seeking life's reorientation and commitment.
Union Biblical Seminary Journal, 2023
Tribal theology(ies) can produce appropriate knowledge and praxis for tribal Christians using a p... more Tribal theology(ies) can produce appropriate knowledge and praxis for tribal Christians using a proper methodology(ies). Choosing a suitable methodology is critical for developing relevant and dynamic theology. Here, theology and methodology are interrelated and go hand in hand. In other words, the outcome of any theology is determined by the methodology applied. If an appropriate methodology is not selected, the theology constructed will have a systemic flaw and be irrelevant to the church and society. Therefore, picking an appropriate methodology will decide what kind of theology one produces. And out of several methodologies proposed and applied in tribal theology, the researcher would like to adopt communitarianism as the most realistic approach to tribal theology. Thus, this paper attempts to evaluate the existing methodologies in tribal faith expression. Not only that, but the researcher also once again recommends a communitarian approach as a viable methodology in tribal theology.
Journal of Tribal Studies, 2020
The tribal world, which is overtly communitarian, has to make use of this communitarian expressio... more The tribal world, which is overtly communitarian, has to make use of this communitarian expression in its research. Tribal Christians seeking knowledge cannot avoid community aspect as it is the community and within this community that their life evolves. The centrality of communality in tribal context demands any research on tribal, and by tribal scholars and intellectuals, to critically utilize communitarian features and elements. This discourse on communitarian methodology is to determine the practicality of the said approach. For this matter, the paper would attempt to review the existing methods in tribal theology, ascertain their feasibilities and drawbacks. Further, it would propose a communitarian methodology as a viable model for tribal theology. For that reason, the study undertaken is explicitly explorative and constructive with few inputs from other domains.
Union Biblical Seminary , 2022
To the question, Jesus asked his disciple Peter, “who do you say that I am?” (Matt 16: 15); triba... more To the question, Jesus asked his disciple Peter, “who do you say that I am?” (Matt 16: 15); tribal Christians have not responded conclusively and holistically up to the present time. The existing Christology in the tribal context is limited and narrow because it has not been constructed in an all-inclusive manner. Secondly, it is a collection of several limited tribal linguistic-conceptual expressions such as Jesus the Lizaba (Ao-Naga), Jesus the rooster of God, ancestor, and elder brother (Tangkhul-Naga), Jesus the pasaltha (Mizo-Kuki-Zou), Jesus the liangtuong (Liangmai-Naga), Jesus the bamboo (Ao-Naga), Jesus the indoi (Kuki), Jesus the arasentsur (Ao-Naga), Jesus the land (tribal), and more. These tribal terms and notions are significant, yet they do not express an all-encompassing nature of Christ from the tribal perspective, as they are derived from particular tribes. Therefore, they lack inclusivity, standardization, or normative value in the whole tribal context. In other words, they are deficient in defining the holistic nature of Jesus Christ in the tribal world. Hence, there is a need to reenvision tribal Christology, which is all-embracing, critical, and relevant to all tribals. Against this background, the attempt in this paper is to redevelop a tribal-indigenous Christology by basically appropriating two aspects: first, the vivid tribal worldview of communitarianism, and second, the tribalness and indigeneity of Jesus Christ in the light of the Biblical teaching and the context of the tribal community.
Journal of Tribal studies, Tribal Study Centre, Jan 2023
In any discipline, epistemology is intently connected with ontology, methodology, and the researc... more In any discipline, epistemology is intently connected with ontology, methodology, and the research outcome or knowledge developed. Epistemology, with no exception of tribal epistemology, begins with various foundational questions: what is knowledge? What is truth? Or, is there (here) something called truth? If it is there (here), how does one know? What knowledge is required to know it? In like manner, how does one attain knowledge, or how does one know what is known? In another way, what are the sources, methods, validity, potentialities, and limits of knowledge (episteme) in the tribal context? Here, tribal worldviews , thought processes, ways of life, and other categories are critical to understanding the notion of knowledge in tribal settings. Against this background, tribal people develop ideas and concepts, which one can call tribal knowledge, tribal ideas, tribology, or tribal study(ies). Here the point is, how do tribals perceive, recognize, understand, and comprehend reality? Is there a proper methodology(ies) from the tribal perspectives to move forward and systematize and discern the truth? Given these circumstances, critical questions arise for further discussion: how do tribals theologize, or in general, create knowledge with the episteme (the way they know and perceive reality) available within them? How could tribal theology reach the truth? What are the critical approaches in tribal theological discourses? And what is the extent and standard of tribal theology? With these few questions in mind, the study undertaken in this paper is explorative research. It examines the significance of tribal episteme in formulating tribal methodology and theology.
Christian World Imprint, 2022
Tribal episteme in general and literature, philosophy, worldview, and theology in particular repr... more Tribal episteme in general and literature, philosophy, worldview, and theology in particular represent an emerging voice in the Indian and world literary scenes. Tribal literature is unique of the unique due to its very nature as communitarian, land-centred, egalitarian, resistant, outspoken, and shared aesthetic values. It is eco-friendly, pastoral, mystical, nondualistic, essential unity of all realities, and spiritual-mythical conscious. This literature is the voice of the tribal people on their lives, cultures, worldviews, and religions.
This book attempts to write and develop hermeneutical tools and literary criticism of Tribal literature. It is a methodological exploration by reading tribal myths and worldviews. The book wrestles with several questions and issues on tribal literature: what is tribal literature? How to formulate tribal hermeneutics and literary criticism? How to systematize or methodize traditional tribal interpretational norms? How the self and the community are connected in tribal literature? How to read text(s) from a woman’s perspective? How to fuse the diverse horizons? And how to liberate and construct the identity and spirituality of the tribal communities in the (post)modern context? This volume asserts that tribal literature is communitarian, mostly folk and oral, liberative, transformative, eco-centred, open-ended, flux, and plurisignal.
SATHRI Journal, 2021
The research attempts to construct a tribal hermeneutics utilizing tribal resources. The study is... more The research attempts to construct a tribal hermeneutics utilizing tribal resources. The study is vital because tribals, as a distinct community, need interpretation models of their own to read or interpret the Gospel and other texts relevantly and transformatively. The study advanced a hermeneutical exploration. The researcher profoundly depends on diverse materials from oral resources, library works, and other sources. The investigation categorically observes and suggests that culture and tradition, such as myths, could provide relevant resources for theological hermeneutics in a given context. The overall argument is that tribal theology has to critically use cultural values to make the Gospel more relevant and liberating.
The Perspective of India's New Education Policy 2020, The Native Tribe, 2020
If education is crucial for any civilization, will the National Education Policy 2020 (NEP 2020) ... more If education is crucial for any civilization, will the National Education Policy 2020 (NEP 2020) improve India's education system in the future? Education in Northeast India (NEI) is unalike from India's rest due to several reasons such as geographical distinction, cultural diversity, religious pluralism, socio-cultural heterogeneity, and linguistic varieties. NEI is a mini world within the world. The multiplicity of life and nature in NEI is a boon for the world to cherish and learn. However, the region has become the most neglected area in the country. This trait has alienated the region's population from the rest of India; it also created a socio-cultural gap. In this given context, can the NEP 2020 improve the education of the people? The vision of NEP 2020, instead of uplifting the NEI from educational slumber, could create more hurdles if the socio-cultural milieu of the people is not taken into consideration. Therefore, an attempt to contextualize the existing education system in NEI and interrelate with NEP 2020 is vital in this paper.
The native Tribe, 2021
Northeast Indians face racial discrimination in the times of covid-19 pandemic is a systemic cont... more Northeast Indians face racial discrimination in the times of covid-19 pandemic is a systemic continuation of exploitation and alienation perpetrated by the mainland Indians on the “others.” Northeast Indians are a target for prejudice, stereotype, and intolerance based on colour, race, caste, and sex(ism) in mainland India. The covid-19 situation has intensified the rate of racial discrimination and exploitation. The issue is that the northeasterners are alienated in their own country and from their own house (state) yards. This state of affairs has led to anger, alienation, mental traumatization, frustration, and fear among the northeast Indians who have migrated and settled in various parts of India. To examine the issue at hand, the researcher employs an explorative, community-based study where an investigation is prepared by collecting a number of lived-experience of the Northeasterners who share about racial discrimination and a survey on the issue both in times of normalcy and the pandemic.
Mar Thoma Seminary Journal of Theology, 2015
Tribal people of Northeast India never experience “racism” until they moved outside of their land... more Tribal people of Northeast India never experience “racism” until they moved outside of their land, or they came in contact with dominant groups. While this may be true for many other people too, and this is because racism is not a new phenomenon, but it is never indoctrinated in tribal cultures.
Indian Theological Journal, JRTS, 2017
Tribal theology needs to engage with postmodernism to enhance its methodologies and perspectives.
Christian World Imprints, 2023
Hermeneutics is one of the most interdisciplinary branches of knowledge. For any discipline: hist... more Hermeneutics is one of the most interdisciplinary branches of knowledge. For any discipline: history, philosophy, theology, science, ecology, culture, politics, and others, one needs hermeneutics. Likewise, biblical hermeneutics too can be studied from different perspectives namely, Old Testament, New Testament, Biblical Theology, Doctrinal Study, and so on, which makes it multifaceted. Given this circumstance, the objective of this book is to make biblical hermeneutics reader and student-friendly from an interdisciplinary approach (philosophy, biblical, and theology). On the other hand, there are hundreds of well-written books on biblical hermeneutics, however, a large number of books are extremely abstract or philosophical and unsystematic for young readers, in a sense, they bring in different philosophers, hermeneuts, and other scholars without any introductory notes on those experts; thus, making the students confused and difficult to understand. This trait is explicitly shared by numerous theological students from various theological seminaries and colleges in India. Therefore, this book, Biblical Hermeneutics: Methodologies and Perspectives, is a humble attempt to make hermeneutics easy to read, reliable, comprehensive, contextualized, and provides vital information without losing its philosophical, biblical, and theological concepts and implications.
Witinglung Publication, 2015
LIANGMAI AND CHRISTIANITY: FAITH IN SEARCH OF UNDERSTANDING AND TRANSFORMATION IN INDIGENOUS/TRIB... more LIANGMAI AND CHRISTIANITY: FAITH IN SEARCH OF UNDERSTANDING AND TRANSFORMATION IN INDIGENOUS/TRIBAL CONTEXT is a critical and contextual faith reflection of the Gospel in the grass-root Liangmai socio-cultural milieu. It is Liangmais’ faith seeking an understanding of God’s purpose and vision for His people. It is a theological exploration of the Liangmai Christian spirituality in the light of the Gospel and the living realities of the people.
Secondly, this book is not a systematic theology, nor a dogma, nor a doctrine, nor a belief system, nor even a biblical commentary. However, it is an appraisal, an authentic faith investigation on the word of God (Bible) in the Liangmai context. It is the word of God that confronted the Liangmais’ world for a broader synthesis of both the dimensions and for enhancing each other.
M. Maisuangdibou did his Doctoral Studies from Federated Faculty for Research in Religion and Culture (FFRRC), Kottayam, Kerala, affiliated to Senate of Serampore University, Serampore, West Bengal. He is the author of Tribal Theological Hermeneutics: Methodological Issues in Interpretation and Liangmai Narratives: An Integral Look at History, Society and Culture.
This book is available in the e-book: names of the website are pdfdrive.com and b-ok.asia