Book- Tangams: An Ethnolinguistic Study Of The Critically Endangered Group of Arunachal Pradesh

Question:Who released the book Tangams: An Ethnolinguistic Study Of The Critically Endangered Group of Arunachal Pradesh?
(a) Sarbananda Sonowal
(b) Pema Khandu
(c) Biplab Kumar Deb
(d) N. Biren Singh
Answer:(b)
Related facts:

  • Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Pema Khandu released a book titled Tangams: An Ethnolinguistic Study Of The Critically Endangered Group of Arunachal Pradesh.
  • The book will help the future generations of the Tangam community.

Who are the Tangams?

  • Tangams are a little-known community within the larger Adi tribe of Arunachal Pradesh which reportedly 253 speakers.
  • They are concentrated in one small hamlet of Kugging in Upper Siang district’s Paindem circle.
  • In bureaucrat Tarun Kumar Bhattacharjee’s book, Tangams (1975),the community’s population was pegged at 2,000 spread across 25 villages.

Critically Endangered Language:

  • As per the UNESCO World Atlas of Endangered Languages (2009), Tangam — an oral language that belongs to the Tani group, under the greater Tibeto-Burman language family — is marked ‘critically endangered’.

Reasons for Language Loss:

  • Cultural erosion is the reason of Language loss.
  • Kugging is surrounded by a number of villages inhabited by Adi subgroups such as Shimong, Minyongs, as well as the Buddhist tribal community of Khambas, among others.
  • To communicate with their neighbours over the years, the Tangams have become multilingual, speaking not just Tangam, but other tongues such as Shimong, Khamba and Hindi.
  • Their neighbours are various Adi subgroups, so they have picked up other Adi languages and their own is slowly disappearing.

Languages in Arunachal Pradesh:

  • The languages of Arunachal Pradesh have been classified under the Sino-Tibetan language family, and more specifically under the Tibeto-Burman and Tai group of languages, such as Lolo-Burmish, Bodhic, Sal, Tani, Mishmi, Hruissh and Tai.
  • While the education system has introduced Devanagari, Assamese and Roman scripts for most tribal languages, new scripts such as Tani Lipi and Wancho Script have been developed by native scholars.
  • Despite there being a plethora of languages in the state, almost all are endangered.
  • According to the UNESCO Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger (2009) more than 26 languages of Arunachal Pradesh have been identified as endangered.
  • The degrees range from ‘unsafe’, ‘definitely endangered’ to ‘critically endangered’.

By-Amar Mani Upadhyay

Links:
https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/the-language-of-the-tangams-with-just-253-speakers-6503165/#:~:text=Last%20week%20Arunachal%20Pradesh%20Chief,Endangered%20Group%20of%20Arunachal%20Pradesh.