Page 1
Tribal Folk Dances of Northeast India
Home to over two hundred tribes and ethnic communities, India's North-eastern Region is
often referred to as a region of festivals, music and dance. Every tribe or community has its
own set of distinct festivals, most of which centre round sowing, harvesting and the New Year.
Folk dances are an inseparable part of these festivals which not only display the culture of
the tribes, but also reflect their colourful fabrics, musical instruments, and above all, their
intrinsic love for Nature.
* Dr. Samudra Gupta Kashyap
Author is a Guwahati-based journalist and writer. Email: sgkashyap@gmail.com
ome to over two hundred tribes and
ethnic communities, the northeast
region of India is often referred to
as a region of festivals, music and
dance. Every tribe or community has
its own set of distinct festivals, most of which centres
around sowing, harvesting and New Year. Here is a
glimpse of a few folk dances from different states of
the region.
H
Arunachal Pradesh
Over 25 tribes and 100 sub tribes of Arunachal
Pradesh are broadly divided into two categories –
Buddhists and non-Buddhists or followers of various
indigenous faiths. For the Nishyie people who follow
an indigenous faith, the most important folk dance is
Rikham Pada. A medley of dances and songs performed
during every community festival, the dancers wear
elaborate cane headgears, and an antique waist-belt
Page 2
Tribal Folk Dances of Northeast India
Home to over two hundred tribes and ethnic communities, India's North-eastern Region is
often referred to as a region of festivals, music and dance. Every tribe or community has its
own set of distinct festivals, most of which centre round sowing, harvesting and the New Year.
Folk dances are an inseparable part of these festivals which not only display the culture of
the tribes, but also reflect their colourful fabrics, musical instruments, and above all, their
intrinsic love for Nature.
* Dr. Samudra Gupta Kashyap
Author is a Guwahati-based journalist and writer. Email: sgkashyap@gmail.com
ome to over two hundred tribes and
ethnic communities, the northeast
region of India is often referred to
as a region of festivals, music and
dance. Every tribe or community has
its own set of distinct festivals, most of which centres
around sowing, harvesting and New Year. Here is a
glimpse of a few folk dances from different states of
the region.
H
Arunachal Pradesh
Over 25 tribes and 100 sub tribes of Arunachal
Pradesh are broadly divided into two categories –
Buddhists and non-Buddhists or followers of various
indigenous faiths. For the Nishyie people who follow
an indigenous faith, the most important folk dance is
Rikham Pada. A medley of dances and songs performed
during every community festival, the dancers wear
elaborate cane headgears, and an antique waist-belt
41 Kurukshetra June 2024
made of beaten bell metal (which is a family heirloom
handed down through generations). The songs are in
ballad form, sung in honour of gods and ancestors, as
also some love stories.
could be created for observing the Torgya festival and
usher in good health and prosperity. Shanag cham,
on the other hand, is performed by twelve dancers
who represent Tantric priests, wearing phodka (a
richly embroidered gown flowing to the ankles) and
pang kheb (a colourful embroidered apron), apart
from a black, broad-brimmed hat called Shanag.
Gon-Nyin Cham is performed by eleven dancers each
holding a ritual bell in one hand and damaru in the
other and represent dakinis who are protectors of
the Buddhist faith. This dance is generally performed
during the construction of a monastery or installation
of a holy statue, in order to ward off demons who
create obstacles to the advancement of the Buddhist
doctrine.
Assam
Meeting point of cultures, Assam has as many as
23 Scheduled Tribes, of which twelve are called Plains
Tribes, and eleven Hills Tribes, each having its own
respective folk dances.
Bagrumba is performed by young Bodo women
dressed in traditional attire like dokhona (body wrapper)
and phali (scarf) to the rhythm of the kham (drum),
serja (a string instrument) and siphung (flute) played by
young men. It is generally performed in Spring to pray
for the community’s prosperity and well-being. The
dancers look like butterflies when they hold up their
phali sideways and flutter to the beat of the music.
Another spring time Bodo folk dance called Bardwisikhla
is performed to welcome the wind goddess.
Bagrumba Dance, Assam
For the Adi tribe, Ponung is the most important
folk dance. Part of the Solung festival to seek a bumper
crop, this dance is exclusively performed by women
with one male person called Miri guiding them. While
the Miri shakes a Yoksa (sword) to make a rattling
sound, the women gather around him in a beautifully
arranged pattern repeating the same lines in a chorus
initiated by him and move around in unison following
the rhythm of the song, making delicate movement of
the hands. The women wear a Gale (traditional skirt),
a Galup (traditional top or blouse), cover their heads
with a piece of conical shaped cloth and wear various
traditional ornaments. In contrast, Delong is an all-male
Adi folk dance performed during the Etor festival. This
dance depicts making or mending of fences around
village farms to protect them from animals.
Among the Apatani people, Daminda, a folk dance,
is performed to mark the beginning and end of Dree
festival. Performed by women, it depicts various aspects
of traditional agriculture, and is marked by wonderful
footwork and hand gestures of the dancers.
The Monpa people, who profess Mahayana
Buddhism, have twenty-two different types of folk
dances called Cham, some of which are performed
during Torgya, a three-day monastic festival. Among
them, Pha Cham is performed by a single person in a
monk’s dress wearing a pha (boar) mask. It is performed
to pacify the gods and spirits so that perfect conditions
Among the Mising people, Gumrag Soman is the
most popular folk dance, which is part of Ali-a-ye Ligang
(the Springtime seed-sowing festival). Young men
dressed in traditional mibu galug (sleeveless jacket),
Page 3
Tribal Folk Dances of Northeast India
Home to over two hundred tribes and ethnic communities, India's North-eastern Region is
often referred to as a region of festivals, music and dance. Every tribe or community has its
own set of distinct festivals, most of which centre round sowing, harvesting and the New Year.
Folk dances are an inseparable part of these festivals which not only display the culture of
the tribes, but also reflect their colourful fabrics, musical instruments, and above all, their
intrinsic love for Nature.
* Dr. Samudra Gupta Kashyap
Author is a Guwahati-based journalist and writer. Email: sgkashyap@gmail.com
ome to over two hundred tribes and
ethnic communities, the northeast
region of India is often referred to
as a region of festivals, music and
dance. Every tribe or community has
its own set of distinct festivals, most of which centres
around sowing, harvesting and New Year. Here is a
glimpse of a few folk dances from different states of
the region.
H
Arunachal Pradesh
Over 25 tribes and 100 sub tribes of Arunachal
Pradesh are broadly divided into two categories –
Buddhists and non-Buddhists or followers of various
indigenous faiths. For the Nishyie people who follow
an indigenous faith, the most important folk dance is
Rikham Pada. A medley of dances and songs performed
during every community festival, the dancers wear
elaborate cane headgears, and an antique waist-belt
41 Kurukshetra June 2024
made of beaten bell metal (which is a family heirloom
handed down through generations). The songs are in
ballad form, sung in honour of gods and ancestors, as
also some love stories.
could be created for observing the Torgya festival and
usher in good health and prosperity. Shanag cham,
on the other hand, is performed by twelve dancers
who represent Tantric priests, wearing phodka (a
richly embroidered gown flowing to the ankles) and
pang kheb (a colourful embroidered apron), apart
from a black, broad-brimmed hat called Shanag.
Gon-Nyin Cham is performed by eleven dancers each
holding a ritual bell in one hand and damaru in the
other and represent dakinis who are protectors of
the Buddhist faith. This dance is generally performed
during the construction of a monastery or installation
of a holy statue, in order to ward off demons who
create obstacles to the advancement of the Buddhist
doctrine.
Assam
Meeting point of cultures, Assam has as many as
23 Scheduled Tribes, of which twelve are called Plains
Tribes, and eleven Hills Tribes, each having its own
respective folk dances.
Bagrumba is performed by young Bodo women
dressed in traditional attire like dokhona (body wrapper)
and phali (scarf) to the rhythm of the kham (drum),
serja (a string instrument) and siphung (flute) played by
young men. It is generally performed in Spring to pray
for the community’s prosperity and well-being. The
dancers look like butterflies when they hold up their
phali sideways and flutter to the beat of the music.
Another spring time Bodo folk dance called Bardwisikhla
is performed to welcome the wind goddess.
Bagrumba Dance, Assam
For the Adi tribe, Ponung is the most important
folk dance. Part of the Solung festival to seek a bumper
crop, this dance is exclusively performed by women
with one male person called Miri guiding them. While
the Miri shakes a Yoksa (sword) to make a rattling
sound, the women gather around him in a beautifully
arranged pattern repeating the same lines in a chorus
initiated by him and move around in unison following
the rhythm of the song, making delicate movement of
the hands. The women wear a Gale (traditional skirt),
a Galup (traditional top or blouse), cover their heads
with a piece of conical shaped cloth and wear various
traditional ornaments. In contrast, Delong is an all-male
Adi folk dance performed during the Etor festival. This
dance depicts making or mending of fences around
village farms to protect them from animals.
Among the Apatani people, Daminda, a folk dance,
is performed to mark the beginning and end of Dree
festival. Performed by women, it depicts various aspects
of traditional agriculture, and is marked by wonderful
footwork and hand gestures of the dancers.
The Monpa people, who profess Mahayana
Buddhism, have twenty-two different types of folk
dances called Cham, some of which are performed
during Torgya, a three-day monastic festival. Among
them, Pha Cham is performed by a single person in a
monk’s dress wearing a pha (boar) mask. It is performed
to pacify the gods and spirits so that perfect conditions
Among the Mising people, Gumrag Soman is the
most popular folk dance, which is part of Ali-a-ye Ligang
(the Springtime seed-sowing festival). Young men
dressed in traditional mibu galug (sleeveless jacket),
42 Kurukshetra June 2024
gonro ugon (loin cloth) and dumer (turban), and women
dressed in ege (lower garment flowing to the ankles)
and ribi (upper body wrapper) dance to the rhythm
of amorous Oinitom songs to the accompainment
of drums, cymbals and flutes. In the Karbi tribal
community, Ritnong Chingdi, Lingpum Sokchon
and Hacha Hekan are folk dances associated with
agriculture, while Nimso Kerung and Banjar Kekan are
associated death rituals. The Karbis believe that it was
a divine personality called Rangsina Sarpo who had
first taught them to dance and sing.
Meghalaya
In Meghalaya, the Khasis perform Nongkrem
dance during the Nongkrem festival. Dedicated to the
indigenous deity called U Lei Shyllong, the dance is
performed by young women clad in their best colourful
traditional jewelry who move gracefully in synchronised
patterns to the rhythmic beats of drums and flutes.
Wangala or the Hundred Drums dance is part of the
Wangala Festival of the Garos held to mark the end of
a period of toil, and pray for a good harvest. While the
men beat the drums, other men and women dance in
two parallel queues, moving forward in rhythmic accord
to the music of traditional drums, gongs and flutes,
punctuated by the sonorous music of a primitive flute
made of buffalo horn.
Mizoram
The Mizo folk dances too are expressions of their
joyful carefree spirit. Almost all Mizo folk dances
like Cheraw, Khuallam, Chhieh Lam, Chai, Rallu Lam,
Solakia, Sarlamkai and Par Lam are closely related to
the agricultural cycle. Cheraw, often also called Bamboo
dance, is the oldest Mizo dance believed to have existed
even in the 1
st
century AD. While eight young men hold
four pairs of bamboo poles, two crossing the other two,
and tap the bamboos open and close in rhythmic beats,
young women dancers step alternately in and out from
between and across them. It is amazing to see the
dancers step in and out to the beats of the bamboos
with ease and grace. Watching closely, one will find that
the stepping the dancers are sometimes in imitation of
movement of birds, sometimes of swaying of trees.
Khuallam – meaning “Dance of the Guest” – is a Mizo
folk dance which is part of Khuangchawi, a ceremony
comprising of community feasting, dance and music.
Invited guests are required to enter the Khuangchawi
arena by performing a dance which is called Khuallam.
It is generally performed by men who have to wear a
particular traditional dress called Puandum with red
and green stripes and keep pace to the rhythm of a set
of gongs which are known as Darbu.
Chheih Lam is a dance which embodies the spirit
of joy and exhilaration. A group of people sit in a circle
and sing a song called Chheih hla which is sung to the
beats of a drum or a bamboo tube or just clapping of
hands. Only one or two persons take part in the dance,
and perform it with various movements of the limbs
and body. As the dance reaches its climax, all the people
around also join the dance.
Children of Nature as they are, young Mizo men
Chheih Lam
Khasi Damsels Taking Part in Nongkrem Dance, Meghalaya
and women on the other hand celebrate the beauty of
mountains and rivers through the Par Lam dance. While
the girls are dressed in colourful attire with flowers
tucked in their hair sing the glory of Nature, a couple of
boys play a gong and a string musical instrument. The
Page 4
Tribal Folk Dances of Northeast India
Home to over two hundred tribes and ethnic communities, India's North-eastern Region is
often referred to as a region of festivals, music and dance. Every tribe or community has its
own set of distinct festivals, most of which centre round sowing, harvesting and the New Year.
Folk dances are an inseparable part of these festivals which not only display the culture of
the tribes, but also reflect their colourful fabrics, musical instruments, and above all, their
intrinsic love for Nature.
* Dr. Samudra Gupta Kashyap
Author is a Guwahati-based journalist and writer. Email: sgkashyap@gmail.com
ome to over two hundred tribes and
ethnic communities, the northeast
region of India is often referred to
as a region of festivals, music and
dance. Every tribe or community has
its own set of distinct festivals, most of which centres
around sowing, harvesting and New Year. Here is a
glimpse of a few folk dances from different states of
the region.
H
Arunachal Pradesh
Over 25 tribes and 100 sub tribes of Arunachal
Pradesh are broadly divided into two categories –
Buddhists and non-Buddhists or followers of various
indigenous faiths. For the Nishyie people who follow
an indigenous faith, the most important folk dance is
Rikham Pada. A medley of dances and songs performed
during every community festival, the dancers wear
elaborate cane headgears, and an antique waist-belt
41 Kurukshetra June 2024
made of beaten bell metal (which is a family heirloom
handed down through generations). The songs are in
ballad form, sung in honour of gods and ancestors, as
also some love stories.
could be created for observing the Torgya festival and
usher in good health and prosperity. Shanag cham,
on the other hand, is performed by twelve dancers
who represent Tantric priests, wearing phodka (a
richly embroidered gown flowing to the ankles) and
pang kheb (a colourful embroidered apron), apart
from a black, broad-brimmed hat called Shanag.
Gon-Nyin Cham is performed by eleven dancers each
holding a ritual bell in one hand and damaru in the
other and represent dakinis who are protectors of
the Buddhist faith. This dance is generally performed
during the construction of a monastery or installation
of a holy statue, in order to ward off demons who
create obstacles to the advancement of the Buddhist
doctrine.
Assam
Meeting point of cultures, Assam has as many as
23 Scheduled Tribes, of which twelve are called Plains
Tribes, and eleven Hills Tribes, each having its own
respective folk dances.
Bagrumba is performed by young Bodo women
dressed in traditional attire like dokhona (body wrapper)
and phali (scarf) to the rhythm of the kham (drum),
serja (a string instrument) and siphung (flute) played by
young men. It is generally performed in Spring to pray
for the community’s prosperity and well-being. The
dancers look like butterflies when they hold up their
phali sideways and flutter to the beat of the music.
Another spring time Bodo folk dance called Bardwisikhla
is performed to welcome the wind goddess.
Bagrumba Dance, Assam
For the Adi tribe, Ponung is the most important
folk dance. Part of the Solung festival to seek a bumper
crop, this dance is exclusively performed by women
with one male person called Miri guiding them. While
the Miri shakes a Yoksa (sword) to make a rattling
sound, the women gather around him in a beautifully
arranged pattern repeating the same lines in a chorus
initiated by him and move around in unison following
the rhythm of the song, making delicate movement of
the hands. The women wear a Gale (traditional skirt),
a Galup (traditional top or blouse), cover their heads
with a piece of conical shaped cloth and wear various
traditional ornaments. In contrast, Delong is an all-male
Adi folk dance performed during the Etor festival. This
dance depicts making or mending of fences around
village farms to protect them from animals.
Among the Apatani people, Daminda, a folk dance,
is performed to mark the beginning and end of Dree
festival. Performed by women, it depicts various aspects
of traditional agriculture, and is marked by wonderful
footwork and hand gestures of the dancers.
The Monpa people, who profess Mahayana
Buddhism, have twenty-two different types of folk
dances called Cham, some of which are performed
during Torgya, a three-day monastic festival. Among
them, Pha Cham is performed by a single person in a
monk’s dress wearing a pha (boar) mask. It is performed
to pacify the gods and spirits so that perfect conditions
Among the Mising people, Gumrag Soman is the
most popular folk dance, which is part of Ali-a-ye Ligang
(the Springtime seed-sowing festival). Young men
dressed in traditional mibu galug (sleeveless jacket),
42 Kurukshetra June 2024
gonro ugon (loin cloth) and dumer (turban), and women
dressed in ege (lower garment flowing to the ankles)
and ribi (upper body wrapper) dance to the rhythm
of amorous Oinitom songs to the accompainment
of drums, cymbals and flutes. In the Karbi tribal
community, Ritnong Chingdi, Lingpum Sokchon
and Hacha Hekan are folk dances associated with
agriculture, while Nimso Kerung and Banjar Kekan are
associated death rituals. The Karbis believe that it was
a divine personality called Rangsina Sarpo who had
first taught them to dance and sing.
Meghalaya
In Meghalaya, the Khasis perform Nongkrem
dance during the Nongkrem festival. Dedicated to the
indigenous deity called U Lei Shyllong, the dance is
performed by young women clad in their best colourful
traditional jewelry who move gracefully in synchronised
patterns to the rhythmic beats of drums and flutes.
Wangala or the Hundred Drums dance is part of the
Wangala Festival of the Garos held to mark the end of
a period of toil, and pray for a good harvest. While the
men beat the drums, other men and women dance in
two parallel queues, moving forward in rhythmic accord
to the music of traditional drums, gongs and flutes,
punctuated by the sonorous music of a primitive flute
made of buffalo horn.
Mizoram
The Mizo folk dances too are expressions of their
joyful carefree spirit. Almost all Mizo folk dances
like Cheraw, Khuallam, Chhieh Lam, Chai, Rallu Lam,
Solakia, Sarlamkai and Par Lam are closely related to
the agricultural cycle. Cheraw, often also called Bamboo
dance, is the oldest Mizo dance believed to have existed
even in the 1
st
century AD. While eight young men hold
four pairs of bamboo poles, two crossing the other two,
and tap the bamboos open and close in rhythmic beats,
young women dancers step alternately in and out from
between and across them. It is amazing to see the
dancers step in and out to the beats of the bamboos
with ease and grace. Watching closely, one will find that
the stepping the dancers are sometimes in imitation of
movement of birds, sometimes of swaying of trees.
Khuallam – meaning “Dance of the Guest” – is a Mizo
folk dance which is part of Khuangchawi, a ceremony
comprising of community feasting, dance and music.
Invited guests are required to enter the Khuangchawi
arena by performing a dance which is called Khuallam.
It is generally performed by men who have to wear a
particular traditional dress called Puandum with red
and green stripes and keep pace to the rhythm of a set
of gongs which are known as Darbu.
Chheih Lam is a dance which embodies the spirit
of joy and exhilaration. A group of people sit in a circle
and sing a song called Chheih hla which is sung to the
beats of a drum or a bamboo tube or just clapping of
hands. Only one or two persons take part in the dance,
and perform it with various movements of the limbs
and body. As the dance reaches its climax, all the people
around also join the dance.
Children of Nature as they are, young Mizo men
Chheih Lam
Khasi Damsels Taking Part in Nongkrem Dance, Meghalaya
and women on the other hand celebrate the beauty of
mountains and rivers through the Par Lam dance. While
the girls are dressed in colourful attire with flowers
tucked in their hair sing the glory of Nature, a couple of
boys play a gong and a string musical instrument. The
43 Kurukshetra June 2024
dance is slow yet very attractive, and mainly comprises
of movement of their hands as if resembling the wave
of a flowing river.
Manipur
Manipur has a number of tribal communities.
For the Mao tribe, Asharai Odo is a colourful folk
dance known for its vocal rhythms and mellifluous
movements. The Tangkhul people on the other hand
consider Luivat Pheizak as their most important folk
dance. Depicting different stages of cultivation and
the simple tribal lifestyle, this dance is performed
during all traditional festivals like Luira Phanit (seed
sowing festival), Manei Phanit (festival of tools and
equipments), and Chumphu (harvest festival). While
both men and women wear traditional attire, some
men also hold spears and swords as they dance to
the rhythm of Phung (drum), Tala (trumpet), Paren
(bamboo pipe) and Sipa (flute).
Among the Kabui tribals, Shim Lam or Fly Dance
and Kit Lam are two most popular folk dances. Shim
Lam is performed during the Gang-Ngai festival and
depicts the story of Tajuibon, a flying insect with shiny
wings, which moves around from one flower to another
drinking nectar. Kit Lam dance, on the other hand, is a
harvest festival in which the rhythmic dance imitates
the movement of the crickets.
Nagaland
Home to seventeen major and several minor tribes,
Nagaland is a land of folk dances. While it is not possible
to describe the folk dances of every tribe, here are a few
interesting ones.
The most popular folk dance of the Angami tribe is
Sovi Kehu. It is a community dance which takes place
at an open space in the centre of the village. An elder
takes the lead with an “ohh-hoo ohh-hoo” sound, and
others follow him in a circular motion. Once a big circle
is formed, the leader raises his right hand and makes a
small leap jump which all others follow in a rhythmic
order. The leader continues with his leap steps, and
in every leap the circle becomes smaller and smaller.
At one point, the leader takes a complete u-turn and,
without breaking the line the circle intertwines back
bigger and bigger until it becomes a single big circle
again. Once the big circle is complete, the leader signals
to end the leap jump, and the dance ends with a big
ululation by the whole group in unison.
Yimdongsu Tsungsang is a famous folk dance
of the Ao tribe. It is a celebration of heritage and
spirituality, and the dancers traverse the village
streets in intricate movements, wearing several
traditional items like the Langtem (loin-cloth adorned
with sea shells), Hokomangzutsu (sash decorated
Hega Festival, Nagaland
Page 5
Tribal Folk Dances of Northeast India
Home to over two hundred tribes and ethnic communities, India's North-eastern Region is
often referred to as a region of festivals, music and dance. Every tribe or community has its
own set of distinct festivals, most of which centre round sowing, harvesting and the New Year.
Folk dances are an inseparable part of these festivals which not only display the culture of
the tribes, but also reflect their colourful fabrics, musical instruments, and above all, their
intrinsic love for Nature.
* Dr. Samudra Gupta Kashyap
Author is a Guwahati-based journalist and writer. Email: sgkashyap@gmail.com
ome to over two hundred tribes and
ethnic communities, the northeast
region of India is often referred to
as a region of festivals, music and
dance. Every tribe or community has
its own set of distinct festivals, most of which centres
around sowing, harvesting and New Year. Here is a
glimpse of a few folk dances from different states of
the region.
H
Arunachal Pradesh
Over 25 tribes and 100 sub tribes of Arunachal
Pradesh are broadly divided into two categories –
Buddhists and non-Buddhists or followers of various
indigenous faiths. For the Nishyie people who follow
an indigenous faith, the most important folk dance is
Rikham Pada. A medley of dances and songs performed
during every community festival, the dancers wear
elaborate cane headgears, and an antique waist-belt
41 Kurukshetra June 2024
made of beaten bell metal (which is a family heirloom
handed down through generations). The songs are in
ballad form, sung in honour of gods and ancestors, as
also some love stories.
could be created for observing the Torgya festival and
usher in good health and prosperity. Shanag cham,
on the other hand, is performed by twelve dancers
who represent Tantric priests, wearing phodka (a
richly embroidered gown flowing to the ankles) and
pang kheb (a colourful embroidered apron), apart
from a black, broad-brimmed hat called Shanag.
Gon-Nyin Cham is performed by eleven dancers each
holding a ritual bell in one hand and damaru in the
other and represent dakinis who are protectors of
the Buddhist faith. This dance is generally performed
during the construction of a monastery or installation
of a holy statue, in order to ward off demons who
create obstacles to the advancement of the Buddhist
doctrine.
Assam
Meeting point of cultures, Assam has as many as
23 Scheduled Tribes, of which twelve are called Plains
Tribes, and eleven Hills Tribes, each having its own
respective folk dances.
Bagrumba is performed by young Bodo women
dressed in traditional attire like dokhona (body wrapper)
and phali (scarf) to the rhythm of the kham (drum),
serja (a string instrument) and siphung (flute) played by
young men. It is generally performed in Spring to pray
for the community’s prosperity and well-being. The
dancers look like butterflies when they hold up their
phali sideways and flutter to the beat of the music.
Another spring time Bodo folk dance called Bardwisikhla
is performed to welcome the wind goddess.
Bagrumba Dance, Assam
For the Adi tribe, Ponung is the most important
folk dance. Part of the Solung festival to seek a bumper
crop, this dance is exclusively performed by women
with one male person called Miri guiding them. While
the Miri shakes a Yoksa (sword) to make a rattling
sound, the women gather around him in a beautifully
arranged pattern repeating the same lines in a chorus
initiated by him and move around in unison following
the rhythm of the song, making delicate movement of
the hands. The women wear a Gale (traditional skirt),
a Galup (traditional top or blouse), cover their heads
with a piece of conical shaped cloth and wear various
traditional ornaments. In contrast, Delong is an all-male
Adi folk dance performed during the Etor festival. This
dance depicts making or mending of fences around
village farms to protect them from animals.
Among the Apatani people, Daminda, a folk dance,
is performed to mark the beginning and end of Dree
festival. Performed by women, it depicts various aspects
of traditional agriculture, and is marked by wonderful
footwork and hand gestures of the dancers.
The Monpa people, who profess Mahayana
Buddhism, have twenty-two different types of folk
dances called Cham, some of which are performed
during Torgya, a three-day monastic festival. Among
them, Pha Cham is performed by a single person in a
monk’s dress wearing a pha (boar) mask. It is performed
to pacify the gods and spirits so that perfect conditions
Among the Mising people, Gumrag Soman is the
most popular folk dance, which is part of Ali-a-ye Ligang
(the Springtime seed-sowing festival). Young men
dressed in traditional mibu galug (sleeveless jacket),
42 Kurukshetra June 2024
gonro ugon (loin cloth) and dumer (turban), and women
dressed in ege (lower garment flowing to the ankles)
and ribi (upper body wrapper) dance to the rhythm
of amorous Oinitom songs to the accompainment
of drums, cymbals and flutes. In the Karbi tribal
community, Ritnong Chingdi, Lingpum Sokchon
and Hacha Hekan are folk dances associated with
agriculture, while Nimso Kerung and Banjar Kekan are
associated death rituals. The Karbis believe that it was
a divine personality called Rangsina Sarpo who had
first taught them to dance and sing.
Meghalaya
In Meghalaya, the Khasis perform Nongkrem
dance during the Nongkrem festival. Dedicated to the
indigenous deity called U Lei Shyllong, the dance is
performed by young women clad in their best colourful
traditional jewelry who move gracefully in synchronised
patterns to the rhythmic beats of drums and flutes.
Wangala or the Hundred Drums dance is part of the
Wangala Festival of the Garos held to mark the end of
a period of toil, and pray for a good harvest. While the
men beat the drums, other men and women dance in
two parallel queues, moving forward in rhythmic accord
to the music of traditional drums, gongs and flutes,
punctuated by the sonorous music of a primitive flute
made of buffalo horn.
Mizoram
The Mizo folk dances too are expressions of their
joyful carefree spirit. Almost all Mizo folk dances
like Cheraw, Khuallam, Chhieh Lam, Chai, Rallu Lam,
Solakia, Sarlamkai and Par Lam are closely related to
the agricultural cycle. Cheraw, often also called Bamboo
dance, is the oldest Mizo dance believed to have existed
even in the 1
st
century AD. While eight young men hold
four pairs of bamboo poles, two crossing the other two,
and tap the bamboos open and close in rhythmic beats,
young women dancers step alternately in and out from
between and across them. It is amazing to see the
dancers step in and out to the beats of the bamboos
with ease and grace. Watching closely, one will find that
the stepping the dancers are sometimes in imitation of
movement of birds, sometimes of swaying of trees.
Khuallam – meaning “Dance of the Guest” – is a Mizo
folk dance which is part of Khuangchawi, a ceremony
comprising of community feasting, dance and music.
Invited guests are required to enter the Khuangchawi
arena by performing a dance which is called Khuallam.
It is generally performed by men who have to wear a
particular traditional dress called Puandum with red
and green stripes and keep pace to the rhythm of a set
of gongs which are known as Darbu.
Chheih Lam is a dance which embodies the spirit
of joy and exhilaration. A group of people sit in a circle
and sing a song called Chheih hla which is sung to the
beats of a drum or a bamboo tube or just clapping of
hands. Only one or two persons take part in the dance,
and perform it with various movements of the limbs
and body. As the dance reaches its climax, all the people
around also join the dance.
Children of Nature as they are, young Mizo men
Chheih Lam
Khasi Damsels Taking Part in Nongkrem Dance, Meghalaya
and women on the other hand celebrate the beauty of
mountains and rivers through the Par Lam dance. While
the girls are dressed in colourful attire with flowers
tucked in their hair sing the glory of Nature, a couple of
boys play a gong and a string musical instrument. The
43 Kurukshetra June 2024
dance is slow yet very attractive, and mainly comprises
of movement of their hands as if resembling the wave
of a flowing river.
Manipur
Manipur has a number of tribal communities.
For the Mao tribe, Asharai Odo is a colourful folk
dance known for its vocal rhythms and mellifluous
movements. The Tangkhul people on the other hand
consider Luivat Pheizak as their most important folk
dance. Depicting different stages of cultivation and
the simple tribal lifestyle, this dance is performed
during all traditional festivals like Luira Phanit (seed
sowing festival), Manei Phanit (festival of tools and
equipments), and Chumphu (harvest festival). While
both men and women wear traditional attire, some
men also hold spears and swords as they dance to
the rhythm of Phung (drum), Tala (trumpet), Paren
(bamboo pipe) and Sipa (flute).
Among the Kabui tribals, Shim Lam or Fly Dance
and Kit Lam are two most popular folk dances. Shim
Lam is performed during the Gang-Ngai festival and
depicts the story of Tajuibon, a flying insect with shiny
wings, which moves around from one flower to another
drinking nectar. Kit Lam dance, on the other hand, is a
harvest festival in which the rhythmic dance imitates
the movement of the crickets.
Nagaland
Home to seventeen major and several minor tribes,
Nagaland is a land of folk dances. While it is not possible
to describe the folk dances of every tribe, here are a few
interesting ones.
The most popular folk dance of the Angami tribe is
Sovi Kehu. It is a community dance which takes place
at an open space in the centre of the village. An elder
takes the lead with an “ohh-hoo ohh-hoo” sound, and
others follow him in a circular motion. Once a big circle
is formed, the leader raises his right hand and makes a
small leap jump which all others follow in a rhythmic
order. The leader continues with his leap steps, and
in every leap the circle becomes smaller and smaller.
At one point, the leader takes a complete u-turn and,
without breaking the line the circle intertwines back
bigger and bigger until it becomes a single big circle
again. Once the big circle is complete, the leader signals
to end the leap jump, and the dance ends with a big
ululation by the whole group in unison.
Yimdongsu Tsungsang is a famous folk dance
of the Ao tribe. It is a celebration of heritage and
spirituality, and the dancers traverse the village
streets in intricate movements, wearing several
traditional items like the Langtem (loin-cloth adorned
with sea shells), Hokomangzutsu (sash decorated
Hega Festival, Nagaland
44 Kurukshetra June 2024
with dyed animal hair, worn diagonally across the
chest from right shoulder to waist), Wamulung
(similar sash worn diagonally from left shoulder to
waist), and Ozumi (tail feather of the Hornbill bird)
etc, with a dao (machete) hanging from the waist.
With every step, every sway, and every beat of the
drum, the village comes alive, reverberating with the
pulse of unity and cultural pride.
Among the Chakesang people, Oh Hio is a popular
folk dance performed by the men folk during festivals
and celebrations. The dancers imitate actions of
different birds and animals, like rooster fights, and
flapping of wings by the ducks.
Tripura
In Tripura, the Reang tribals perform the Hozagiri
dance during Hozagiri festival or Lakshmi puja. While a
group of men sign the lyric and play the Kham (drum)
and Sumui (flute), four to six women perform the dance
during which they depict the entire cycle of jhum (slash-
and-burn) cultivation. The Jamatia and Kalai tribes on
Hornbill Festival, Nagaland
the other hand perform Garia dance during Garia or
Shiva puja, in which young men and women go from
house to house, place a symbol of Lord Garia in the
middle of the courtyard, and sing and dance in an anti-
clockwise circle around it. ?
References
1. A Handbook of Folklore Material of North-East India.
Birendranath Datta. Anundoram Borooah Institute of Language,
Art and Culture, Guwahati. 1994.
2. Call of the Northeast: Folk Dances of Northeast India. Complied
& Edited by Gouri Basu. EZCC, Kolkata. 2011.
3. Hills Are Alive. Department of Tourism, Karbi Anglong
Autonomous Council, Assam.
4. Hornbill Cultural Festival brochure. Department of Art &
Culture, Nagaland.
5. Scheduled Tribes of Assam. Tabu Ram Taid. Directorate of
Information & Public Relations, Government of Assam. 2015.
6. Tribes of Assam. Tribal Research Institute, Government of
Assam. 1987.
7. Website of East Zone Cultural Centre.
8. Website of North East Zone Cultural Centre.
9. Websites of the State Governments.
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