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Cultural Diversity
Mountain areas are generally considered
as refuges or havens for minority peoples (Plate 21).
Yet it was from the highlands of Central Asia that nomadic
hordes spilled over to the south and west to create
vast empires, culminating in the Mongol conquests that
reached their zenith in China during the time of Kublai
Khan (1215-94) and in India during the time of Akbar
(1542-1605). That mountains do not constitute a barrier
to human movement is evident from the ethnic pattern
in the Himalayas where the Caucasoid-Mongoloid interface
is at a tangent to the crest line. In the west, Caucasoid
people predominate, including in the trans-Himalaya,
while, to the east, Mongoloids descend down to the Brahmaputra
Plain. Indeed, some mountain ranges provide passages
for migration, as for example the highlands of Yunnan,
which constitute another epicentre of Mongoloid dispersal.
Although 27 out of China's 55 so-called national minorities
still reside there, the area has been the source of
migratory waves of people that diverged west along the
Himalayan Range and to the South-East impinging on the
farthest islands.
The ethnic distribution of Asia's mountain
people has a general pattern of mainly Mongoloid in
the east and Caucasoid in the west. Both have southern
regional variants; Malay in the former and Semitic in
the latter. In West Asia, the dominant groups are Iranian,
Turki, and Semitic (Table 5). South Asia is predominantly
Caucasoid with Mongoloids in the east and Dravid-Negrito
in the Peninsula. Central Asia is mostly Tartar with
some Mongol, while North-East and South-East Asia are
decidedly Mongoloid. The Austro-Dravid, Melanesian,
and Polynesian people of Australasia have only a hoary
connection with some mainland groups.
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Asian cultural diversity is most pronounced
in terms of languages and dialects. Their complexity
is illustrated by two legends, one from Daghestan and
another from Sikkim. According to the former, an angel
sent to distribute a bag full of languages over the
earth flew too close to a Caucasus crag that ripped
the bag. A hundred languages dropped out before the
hole could be closed (Townsend 1972, p9). The latter
legend is an East Himalayan version of the story of
the Tower of Babel. When the Lepcha tribe of Maong were
building a tower to seize the heaven, those above asked
the helpers for grappling irons. Workers below misheard
the message and, assuming that heaven had been reached,
pulled away the main support, and the tower collapsed.
Those who survived the disaster suddenly noticed that
each spoke a different language (Leifer 1962, p7). Languages
do tend to diverge into various dialects due to their
mountain isolation. Island interiors show a similar
propensity for linguistic differentiation _ Indonesian
Malay has over 30 regional variants. The major language
groups of mountainous Asia are Indo-Aryan in the west,
Tungusic and Samoyed in the north, Chinese in the east,
Tibeto-Burman in the South-East mainland, and Malay
in the archipelago (Table 5). Peninsular India and Australia
are distant outposts of the Dravidian and Austric languages
respectively.
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© Greta
Rana |
| 21. Women of Hunza, Pakistan |
Compared to the ethnic and linguistic
complexity, religious realms have a much broader sweep
(Table 5). The plateau of Tibet and adjoining Mongolia
is Buddhist (Lamaism). Parts of mainland South-East
Asia are also Buddhist (Theravad). East Asia is mostly
a mixture of Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism in China
and Korea and Buddhism and Shinto in Japan. West Asia
and part of Central Asia are Islamic with Iran as a
Shia island amidst the sea of Sunnis. South Asia is
predominantly Hindu and the archipelagoes of South-East
Asia mostly Islamic, leaving The Philippines as a Christian
outpost. But whatever the regional pattern of higher
religions, mountain areas demonstrate a persistence
of primitive beliefs. Living close to raw nature, the
spiritual mould of the people continues to be dominated
by the older substratum of anonymous gods and demons,
as indicated by their animistic proclivity. Indigenous
cultures are, however, being eroded by the dominant
cultures intruding from the neighbouring lowlands. These
civilisational influences include the Arabic in the
west, Indic in the south, Russo and Sinic in the north,
Sinic in the east, and Anglo-Saxon in Australasia.
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