Ratan Singh Raypa

Ratan Singh Raypa (Hindi: रतन सिंह रायपा ; also spelled as Ratan Singh Raipa; born c. 1940 - died 2005) was an Indian anthropologist. He is known primarily for his work on the Rung culture of the Mahakali valley, located along the western border of India and Nepal.

Personal life

Raypa belonged to Dharchula, India. He obtained a Masters degree in geography from Agra University.[1] His thesis at the Agra University was titled 'Budi: a geographical survey of a border village' (1965).[2] He served as a lecturer in the Uttar Pradesh State Education Department. He retired as Human Ecologist from the Anthropological Survey of India, Northwest Regional office.[1]

The Kumaon Himalayas near Dharchula, the region traditionally inhabited by the Rung community.

Book on Rung community

Raypa is known for his Hindi book on the Rungs, titled Shauka: Simavarti Janjati (1974), both among academics and the wider public.[3][4][5][6][7]

Christoph Bergmann of Heidelberg University writes that Raypa's book, Shauka: Simavarti Janjati, alongside ones by Draupadi Garbyal and Sher Singh Pangtey, 'delivered new interpretations of the historical, ethnic, cultural, religious and social distinctions that would qualify ‘the Bhotiyas’ of Kumaon as a tribe', or 'janjati' in Hindi. Bergmann adds that Raypa, like the two other Rung scholars he named above, adopted the ethnonym 'Shauka' for the people about whom they wrote, i.e. the Rungs of Kumaon. 'Shauka’ is the preferred self-designation of the Bhotiyas living in the Johar valley and is frequently used by all Kumaoni Bhotiyas when speaking and writing about their community in Hindi. Bergmann remarks that Raypa's book was addressed to a Hindi-speaking readership, since he intended to disprove 'the dominant public perception of ‘the Bhotiyas’ as some sort of ‘crypto-Buddhists ’ (Bergmann et al. 2008 )'. This book also sought to develop new hypotheses about the immigration of the original Bhotiya settlers from places other than the Tibetan plateau.[8] The overall intention of the book was to create a narrative of the Rungs as members of the Indian nation, and to distance this group from its Tibetan affinities.[9]

Model of a traditionally-built Rung home, at the Rung Museum in Dharchula.

Bibliography

References

  1. Chandra, Ramesh; Ahmad, S. I. (2005). Development and Regionalism: Anthropological, Ecological, and Psychological Perspective. Anthropological Survey of India, Ministry of Culture, Government of India. ISBN 978-81-85579-98-6.
  2. Naswa, Sumedha (2001). Tribes of Uttar Pradesh and Uttranchal: Ethnography and Bibliography of Scheduled Tribes. Mittal Publications. ISBN 978-81-7099-767-2.
  3. "Proceedings of the Webinar on Documentation of Cultural Heritage of Rung Community" (PDF). gbpihed.gov.in. 2021.
  4. Kala, Chandra Prakash. "Preserving Ayurvedic Herbal Formulations by Vaidyas: The Traditional Healers of the Uttaranchal Himalaya Region in India". www.herbalgram.org. Retrieved 2023-08-18.
  5. Machhang: A Rung Youth Magazine. Dharchula: Rung Youth Forum. 2011.
  6. Luhar, Sahdev (2023). Folklore Studies in India: Critical Regional Responses. N. S. Patel (Autonomous) Arts College, Anand. ISBN 978-81-955008-4-0.
  7. Fürer-Haimendorf, Christoph von (1981). Asian Highland Societies in Anthropological Perspective. Sterling Publishers. ISBN 978-0-391-02250-8.
  8. Bergmann, Christoph (2016). "The Himalayan Border Region". Springer: Advances in Asian Human-Environmental Research: 105. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-29707-1. ISSN 1879-7180.
  9. Bergmann, Christoph (2016). "The Himalayan Border Region". Springer: Advances in Asian Human-Environmental Research: 104. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-29707-1. ISSN 1879-7180.
  10. Sen, Siba Pada (1989). Sources of the History of India: Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Arunachal Pradesh. Kerala. Madhya Pradesh. Nagaland. Pondicherry. Institute of Historical Studies.
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