Man can create babies from skin cells without woman

Having shared and immersed, gluten-intolerance style, about political developments in Manipur with a bunch of strangers with their Pride and Prejudice  and with intimate conflicts about class and tribalism, like JaneAusten-go-to Imphal, I am back to my favourite subject of science with the greatest hidden secrets, parking silently in the most unlikely places, like people […]


Amazon Great Indian Festival October


The post Man can create babies from skin cells without woman appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Having shared and immersed, gluten-intolerance style, about political developments in Manipur with a bunch of strangers with their Pride and Prejudice  and with intimate conflicts about class and tribalism, like JaneAusten-go-to Imphal, I am back to my favourite subject of science with the greatest hidden secrets, parking silently in the most unlikely places, like people […]


Amazon Great Indian Festival October


The post Man can create babies from skin cells without woman appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/man-can-create-babies-skin-cells-without-woman/

The rise, fall and rise of mosquitoes and malaria

The buzz of mosquito (Spanish for little fly) has become louder again since some sporting people got malaria during Rio 2016 Olympics in Brazil, and Zika virus has reached Florida in the US.
The post The rise, fall and rise of mosquitoes and malaria a…

The buzz of mosquito (Spanish for little fly) has become louder again since some sporting people got malaria during Rio 2016 Olympics in Brazil, and Zika virus has reached Florida in the US.

The post The rise, fall and rise of mosquitoes and malaria appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/rise-fall-rise-mosquitoes-malaria/

Latest hype in the west for ‘superfoods’

A superfood is a nutrient-rich diet containing balanced ingredients of proteins, fats, carbohydrates, minerals and vitamins, that is beneficial for health and well-bring. In modernity, a diet is no longer “foreign” to any global region. You can eat continental food or Chinese and Indian food in any global region.

The post Latest hype in the west for ‘superfoods’ appeared first on The Sangai Express.

A superfood is a nutrient-rich diet containing balanced ingredients of proteins, fats, carbohydrates, minerals and vitamins, that is beneficial for health and well-bring. In modernity, a diet is no longer “foreign” to any global region. You can eat continental food or Chinese and Indian food in any global region.

The post Latest hype in the west for ‘superfoods’ appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/latest-hype-west-superfoods/

Would you like to live 100 years – in Manipur

TRIBUTES: The day Manipur stood still: Tuesday, August 9 2016, when Irom Sharmila Chanu gave up her fast after 16 years, by overcoming the mental conundrum she was faced with, without her mind scarred and heart damaged as an ‘Iron Lady’. She is the bravest of the brave. The true essence of courage for a person is to feel the terror and manage to overcome it. She has done the right thing.

The post Would you like to live 100 years – in Manipur appeared first on The Sangai Express.

TRIBUTES: The day Manipur stood still: Tuesday, August 9 2016, when Irom Sharmila Chanu gave up her fast after 16 years, by overcoming the mental conundrum she was faced with, without her mind scarred and heart damaged as an ‘Iron Lady’. She is the bravest of the brave. The true essence of courage for a person is to feel the terror and manage to overcome it. She has done the right thing.

The post Would you like to live 100 years – in Manipur appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/like-live-100-years-manipur/

Six Manipuri athletes in team India for Rio Summer Olympics 2016

Rio de Janeiro or simply Rio is hosting the 2016 Games of the XXXI Olympiad from August 5-21. Rio de Janeiro is the coastal capital city of the state of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, whose best known landmark is the statue of Christ the Redeemer.
The post …

Rio de Janeiro or simply Rio is hosting the 2016 Games of the XXXI Olympiad from August 5-21. Rio de Janeiro is the coastal capital city of the state of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, whose best known landmark is the statue of Christ the Redeemer.

The post Six Manipuri athletes in team India for Rio Summer Olympics 2016 appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/dr-irengbam-mohendra-singh/

Advantages of private school education in Manipur

This coming-of-age story of Manipur feels like a familiar terrain to my own life. The best gift parents can give to their children is a good education. When one’s children fail educationally, a dustbowl of disappointment opens up before the parents.
There is now evidence in Manipur that private (independent) schools are better than state schools as presented by trends in parental choice of private school education.

The post Advantages of private school education in Manipur appeared first on The Sangai Express.

This coming-of-age story of Manipur feels like a familiar terrain to my own life. The best gift parents can give to their children is a good education. When one’s children fail educationally, a dustbowl of disappointment opens up before the parents.
There is now evidence in Manipur that private (independent) schools are better than state schools as presented by trends in parental choice of private school education.

The post Advantages of private school education in Manipur appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/advantages-private-school-education-manipur/

The fastest growing religion – irreligion

‘And Then There Were None’. In my attempt for TSE readers to catch up with topical tips in the world of “irreligion”, I am borrowing for effect, a cheerless title from Agatha Christie’s novels – ‘And then there were none’. Like the plot of her novel it is about the complete disappearance of European nuns and probably religion?

The post The fastest growing religion – irreligion appeared first on The Sangai Express.

‘And Then There Were None’. In my attempt for TSE readers to catch up with topical tips in the world of “irreligion”, I am borrowing for effect, a cheerless title from Agatha Christie’s novels – ‘And then there were none’. Like the plot of her novel it is about the complete disappearance of European nuns and probably religion?

The post The fastest growing religion – irreligion appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/fastest-growing-religion-irreligion/

History in the making – Manipur’s future’s bright with ST Meitei

Have I Got News For You? Manipur’s history might change its course from source to mouth. The Schedule Tribe Demand Committee of Manipur (STDCM) wants to integrate “equality with diversity” in that, they want to remove discrimination while recognising and respecting differences among the communities. This is to a create a culture where everyone can take part, contribute what one can, and thrive together as Manipuris.

The post History in the making – Manipur’s future’s bright with ST Meitei appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Have I Got News For You? Manipur’s history might change its course from source to mouth. The Schedule Tribe Demand Committee of Manipur (STDCM) wants to integrate “equality with diversity” in that, they want to remove discrimination while recognising and respecting differences among the communities. This is to a create a culture where everyone can take part, contribute what one can, and thrive together as Manipuris.

The post History in the making – Manipur’s future’s bright with ST Meitei appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/history-making-manipurs-futures-bright-st-meitei/

Meiteis as ‘OBC’ – cheated out

The way I write my columns is intended to educate youngsters, remembering my college days, and even more importantly, to entertain, with a mix of informative texts and imagination, achieving a balance between humour and fact. I am not usually scared by little things. Little does not cut me to the core or strikes a visceral fear. But, an order of the president of India that impugns Meiteis to the OBC caste, strikes me endless fear of irrationality. Because Meiteis are helpless.

The post Meiteis as ‘OBC’ – cheated out appeared first on The Sangai Express.

The way I write my columns is intended to educate youngsters, remembering my college days, and even more importantly, to entertain, with a mix of informative texts and imagination, achieving a balance between humour and fact. I am not usually scared by little things. Little does not cut me to the core or strikes a visceral fear. But, an order of the president of India that impugns Meiteis to the OBC caste, strikes me endless fear of irrationality. Because Meiteis are helpless.

The post Meiteis as ‘OBC’ – cheated out appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/meiteis-obc-cheated/

A Christian thought for Manipur from a Bible reader

In Manipur, do we still need missionaries from the outside, like The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – widely known as Mormons, who vigorously engage in proselytising? Mia culpa – if we do. These missionaries make us look dense “unreached…

In Manipur, do we still need missionaries from the outside, like The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – widely known as Mormons, who vigorously engage in proselytising? Mia culpa – if we do. These missionaries make us look dense “unreached people”.

The post A Christian thought for Manipur from a Bible reader appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/christian-thought-manipur-bible-reader/

Scheduled Tribe makeover will end hill-valley divide

Please release me, let me go; for I don’t love you anymore. To live a lie will bring us pain; so release me and let me live again (Englebert Humperdinck).
The post Scheduled Tribe makeover will end hill-valley divide appeared first on The Sangai Expr…

Please release me, let me go; for I don’t love you anymore. To live a lie will bring us pain; so release me and let me live again (Englebert Humperdinck).

The post Scheduled Tribe makeover will end hill-valley divide appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/scheduled-tribe-makeover-will-end-hill-valley-divide/

This Manipur – so much of knuckle dusting

I see friends shaking hands, saying how do you do and I say to myself what a wonderful world – sang Frank Sinatra. This is what we want to see in Manipur; chingmee (hill people) and Tammee (valley people) shaking hands as friends and equals; and we say to ourselves what a wonderful Manipur.

The post This Manipur – so much of knuckle dusting appeared first on The Sangai Express.

I see friends shaking hands, saying how do you do and I say to myself what a wonderful world – sang Frank Sinatra. This is what we want to see in Manipur; chingmee (hill people) and Tammee (valley people) shaking hands as friends and equals; and we say to ourselves what a wonderful Manipur.

The post This Manipur – so much of knuckle dusting appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/manipur-much-knuckle-dusting/

The burgeoning Imphal city – bird’s eye view

PROLOGUE: Pursuant to news – Ibobi trumpets Sports & Culture (TSE, April 29 2016), could the development of Ningthoukhong Temple complex include a memorial plaque to Manipur’s first doctor Thokchom Goberdon Singh, who hails from Ningthoukhong. I attended him when he breathed his last and died of a good old age.

The post The burgeoning Imphal city – bird’s eye view appeared first on The Sangai Express.

PROLOGUE: Pursuant to news – Ibobi trumpets Sports & Culture (TSE, April 29 2016), could the development of Ningthoukhong Temple complex include a memorial plaque to Manipur’s first doctor Thokchom Goberdon Singh, who hails from Ningthoukhong. I attended him when he breathed his last and died of a good old age.

The post The burgeoning Imphal city – bird’s eye view appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/burgeoning-imphal-city-birds-eye-view/

How I became a freethinker – Discomfited by religious constraints

By: Dr Irengbam Mohendra Singh The theme redux of this article is the message that… more »

By: Dr Irengbam Mohendra Singh

The theme redux of this article is the message that all the people in Manipur should be united in the same mind and judgement regardless of different Gods or no Gods. This brings me to this topic of mine ie I am a freethinker who looks at every religion with an external perspective.

A freethinker is one who forms one’s own opinions rather than depends upon authority, especially about social and religious issues. ‘Freethinking’ is a term made popular during the Age of Enlightenment in the 18th Century England, by a philosopher, Anthony Collins in his book – Discourse of Freethinking in 1713.

Collins wrote: “Perfection of the sciences is only to be attained by free-thinking and the stories of the devil’s power were founded on lies of some and credulity of the others.”

In Germany, Frederic the Great became a great freethinker. Voltaire, Jean Jacques Rousseau and others made it popular in France while in America, Abraham Lincoln, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson made the impact.

Thomas Jefferson, the 4th American President (1809-1817) in his ‘Works’, wrote to his school boy nephew: “The God of the Old Testament – the God which Christians worship – a being of terrific character, cruel, vindictive, capricious and unjust” (Works Vol. IV, P 325).

In another letter he wrote to John Adams, a short time previous to his death: “The day will come when the mystical generation of Jesus by the Supreme Being as his father, in the womb of a virgin will be classified with the fable of the generation of Minerva in the brain of Jupiter” (Works Vol. IV, P 365).

These men were indeed very brave people to wage war against the powerful religious establishment, which the Church jealously guarded. Any dissent was regarded as a criminal act. In 1702, Daniel Defoe (author of Robinson Crusoe) wrote a pamphlet – The Shortest Way with Dissenter, mocking the Anglican intolerance. He was arrested, fined, imprisoned and pilloried.

For a freethinker, Reason supersedes Authority, such as Stephen Hawkins’s attempt to solve the beginning of the universe, or the Origin of man in Africa by Christopher Stringer, in contradiction to the established view that God created the universe and man, with emphasis on the experimental method of science.

FREETHINKING should be distinguished from FREETHOUGHT, which is a Catholic Jesuit invention to free God from his association with the evil of this world. It is the same for other religions. For all the man-made or natural disasters, the Hindus will dissociate God and say ‘Ishwar ki leela’ (the God’s play); for Muslims – Allah ki meharbani (the grace of Allah), and for Christians – the will of God.

It was about thirty years ago when I was stirred by a feverish dissent against the authority of religion by the steady triumph of historic events created by freethinkers. It was an expression of decay of imaginative joy and rapt wonder stimulated by the lack of evidence of God’s presence in this visible world.

Now, a post-modernist (apparent realities are only social constructs and therefore subject to change) and relativist (truth and justification are somehow relative to something else) eras
(2)
have begun to shape my view of the reality of God.

The 20th century will be remembered more for the failure of communism than any other disaster. The Soviet Union, which was launched with high hopes for the proletariat, soon became one of the most oppressive states in the world.

With the collapse of the Soviet Communist regime in 1991 due to economic failure there has been restoration of religion in Russia. Though no more than 5-10 per cent takes their faith seriously it is fashionable to be religious in Russia to identify themselves in a new society.

Oxford’s McGrath, atheist turned religionist, discerns that the cause of the collapse was because, for once in power, atheism delivered not enlightenment in utopia but rather barbarism in the gulag. Politically discredited and imaginatively exhausted, atheism has been forced into an astonishing defeat before advancing Pentecostal preachers and Christian fabulists.

Those who believe in the rights of dissenters like me have considered the unreality of God from his long history of inability to protect humanity from inter-ethnic murders, Jihadis, natural and man-made disasters.

My religious indignation at the lack of divine retribution for all these atrocities that must be an offence against ‘God’s truth’ gives me an intellectual challenge in the authenticity of his existence.

The conflicting human imagination of the active commitment of God in the welfare of humanity is petering out by advances in science.

The 20th century witnessed the discovery of many wonderful advances in physics and cosmology, starting with Stephen Hawkins’s Theory of the Big Bang and the Blake Hole.
The world woke up to the sound of drumbeat of the discovery of the scientific universe for the first time. Now we are witnessing the exploration of the relationship of humanity to the Newtonian Universe.

Newton’s universe was based on absolute space and time, to which we have no direct access. It is similar to God’s existence. How would we know what God says if we hear him only through what some people say. Only the very pious and schizophrenics can claim to have heard God speak.

As Newton’s theory of motion, partly relying on god’s help was unsatisfactory it was replaced by a new theory of motion by Albert Einstein. The application of Einstein’s Theory of Relativity has led us to our understanding of the cosmos. We have seen the technology of the lasers and semiconductors based on Quantum mechanics and new physics.

The Theory of Quantum Dynamics and the application of photons have allowed us to look deeper into what we have until now called the mysteries of God. Unlike laser that can slice through solid steel, photon beams allow us to transmit thousands of telephone conversations and myriads of internet connections to inhabit the same fibre optic cable without destroying it.

We do know that the universe is not only expanding but also accelerating, as observed by Edwin Hubble’s telescope. We know the existence of Quasars which are extremely distant star-like objects. They are the power source of radio-waves and other forms of energy.

A Black Hole is a region of space that has so much concentration of massive dense objects generating so much strong gravity that nothing, not even light can escape its grip.
(3)
Unlike scientists, asking theologians and philosopher about the existence of God will end up with slapstick answers such as, everybody has a father and thus there must a God, but God does not have a father; because God is God.

It’s like asking someone how long a piece of string is. Back comes the answer that it is twice the half of its length. When I was a trainee doctor in Newcastle, I went to buy a refill for my
Parker ball pen. I asked the girl shop assistant how long it will write. She thought I was daft
and gave me a daft reply – it depends how fast you write. The correct scientific answer should be 5 miles.

In the 4th century, St Augustine who was a philosopher and theologian posed the question of the beginning of the universe in his book ‘Confession’. He came up with a strikingly modern daft answer: “Before God created the world there was no time and thus ‘no before’. There was no ‘then”. It cuts no ice for me.

Nothing slips more glibly from the tongue than the word God – Omigod. The image of God is avant-garde of early human thoughts, dreamed up in the febrile minds in search of an audience. Others were simply brain-stormed. They were longing to find if there was anything beyond their world, someone so powerful who could create the universe. They thought for an answer.

From time out of mind, men always had a quest for the unknown and untried, death, and life after death. The emergence of man-made unified God was of fairly recent origin but before the beginning of science.

The ancient writings of religious people were simply passionate outbursts of their idea of a supernatural something to which they gave a name – the ever-elusive God. The Sanskrit Vedas were such outbursts.

I am painfully aware of my religious heterodoxy that might be regarded by many as a kind of innuendo as well as a dastardly dose of mockery. That is not the intention. We live in democracy and in a democracy we are allowed to think and act differently.

People should have freedom to think and question in all subjects ranging from the theories of science to the origin of Meitei language. But everyone should be able to explain in what he believes in. Anybody who thinks Meiteilon is Tibetoburman should be able to explain why, as I have done the opposite. I am also conscious that more reasons will certainly be needed to sort out this problem.

However, the problem of the origin of the universe no longer belongs to the metaphysics or religion, and the laws of science may hold even at the beginning of the universe.

It is the high noon for God to come out and explain himself why we should believe in him/her/neuter. Until then I will keep my options open to myself, if you do not mind.

The writer is based in the UK
Email: imsingh@onetel.com
Website: www.drimsingh.co.uk

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/05/how-i-became-a-freethinker-discomfited-by-religious-constraints/

Wise old Socrates

Socrates is such an important figure in the root history of modernity. His famous aphorism, “The unexamined life is not worth living” is a central tenet of modern times. He dared those around him to question their lives, to take nothing for granted, to accept no authority but that of their mind.

By: Dr Irengbam Mohendra Singh

Many years ago while I was researching to write a book, I studied many theologians and philosophers. Among them I liked Socrates best. He mixed pleasure with his studies as I did. It is more than 2,400 years since his death, but his philosophies are remarkably relevant today.

Socrates is such an important figure in the root history of modernity. His famous aphorism, “The unexamined life is not worth living” is a central tenet of modern times. He dared those around him to question their lives, to take nothing for granted, to accept no authority but that of their mind.

At his trial Socrates was asked to retract his teachings in order to save his life. “Go and f… yourself” was his reply. He taunted the jury, saying that he should get free dinners for life for his service to the city of Athens. He believed in the type of life he led, the life of thinking for himself, and was willing to die for this value. Indeed he died for it.

Socrates was sentenced to death, mainly because he was thought to be against ‘democracy’. He did say that he thought most intelligent people should make decisions for everybody. However, he could not be charged for these opinions.
He was formally charged for two reasons: (1) for corrupting youth and (2) piety – not acknowledging the gods of the city and introducing new gods.

The jury in his trial was chosen by lottery from male citizen volunteers. After the jury decided he was guilty, his punishment was also voted on. It was decided by the majority that he would be forced to drink hemlock (a poisonous liquid) to kill himself.

After the sentence was heard he took a mouthful of hemlock and addressed the court. His last words were, “The hour of departure has arrived, and we go our ways – I to die and you to live. Which is better, only God knows?”

When the last hour came; his chains were taken off, and he was allowed to converse freely with his friends. He sent away his weeping wife in order that her grief might not interfere with the discussion.

The records of Socrates’ philosophical works are like the Bible in that he left no writings behind him. The only records are through the Dialogues of Plato, and the records and works of Xenophon, an Ancient Greek historian. Plato was his disciple.

Socrates lived from 469 -399 BCE. There was democracy in Greece at that time. As a young man he served in the Peloponnesian War. Later he worked as a stone mason to support his wife and three children. When he inherited some money from his father, he had spare time to try to understand one’s values and motivations.

He said he was wise because he admitted he was ignorant, and that it was imperative to pursue knowledge all of one’s life. He also believed that a person had to do what he thought was right, no matter what. To be happy and fulfilled, a person had to keep his soul healthy. This was done by always learning, self-examination, and gaining wisdom.

Socrates was a man of the streets, drinking, partying and sweating out in the gym in Athens. He had many young men who listened to him and participated in dialogue with him. It was through this dialogue that he guided them to see things in a different way and delve into the true nature of things.

Through the dialogue, he would help students think for themselves and figure out the basic meaning of concepts like friendship, truth, and democracy. This method later became the “Socratic method”, and is sometimes called “guided reasoning.”

He was indifferent to worldly success. He berated his peers for a selfish pursuit of material gain. He questioned the value of going to fight under an ideological banner of “democracy”. He questioned many things, such as religion, governments, and ethics. Socrates’ main mission was to find the best way to live on earth. Some of his main philosophies are:

“It is not living that matters, but living rightly.”
“All men’s souls are immortal, but the souls of the righteous are immortal and divine.”
“False words are not always evil in themselves, but they infect the soul with evil.”
“The unexamined life is not worth living.”
“One who is injured ought not to return the injury, for on no account can it be right to an injustice; and is not right to return an injury, or to do evil to any man, however much we have suffered from him.”

Socrates was not really against democracy. He meant that the word “democracy” is not a magician’s aba kadabra (Arabic meaning ‘let the things be destroyed’) that with the mumble of this word all ills of the humanity will automatically disappear.

The famous “Socratic method” of debate (Method Elenchus or Socratic debate) is a dialectical method, which I used in my book, the Origin of the Meiteis of Manipur. It is a form of debate between individuals with opposing viewpoints based on asking and answering questions to stimulate critical thinking and to illuminate ideas.

Socrates is described by some as the world’s first ideological martyr. Plato was a student of Socrates and the teacher of Aristotle. Socrates was almost certainly an atheist. He argued reason should prevail over religion/spirituality. He would toss religious dogma if it did not meet the reason test. Like a scientist, he would be prepared to change his views based on modern thinking and new technology.

The Poet Mellitus prosecuted Socrates at his trial as questioning ‘what is above and below’. In another sense, Socrates was questioning the Gods. Mellitus calls Socrates an atheist in which he does not believe in any God such as Zeus, Chronis and Uranus. who were believed by many people in Athens at that time. Socrates not only questioned their existence but also their accomplishments.

Socrates is famous for many thought-provoking short-sayings. The one I like best: To fear death, my friends, is only to think ourselves wise, without being wise; for it is to think that we know what we do not know.

For anything that men can tell, death may be the greatest good that can happen to them; but they fear it as if they knew quite well that it was the greatest of evils. And what is this but that shameful ignorance of thinking that we know what we do not know?

Death, says Socrates, is the separation of soul and body – the separation of mind and body. This is similar to the Hindu philosophy of Dualism (Dvaita). In theology, there is the concept that human has two basic natures: the physical and the spiritual

Socrates describes the fate of souls after death: the good go to heaven, the bad to hell, the intermediate to purgatory

Socrates was considered the wisest man of his time, but he is a bit off the track by modern standards. I think it was because he lived long before science. He was not scientific in thinking.

He said “No one who has not studies philosophy and who is not entirely pure at the time of his departure is allowed to enter the company of the gods, but the lover of knowledge only.” That is only the true philosopher goes to heaven when he dies.

His courage in the face of death would have been more remarkable if he had not believed that he was going to enjoy eternal bliss in the company of gods. So, he remained calm, humorous and devoid of fear to the last moment, caring more for what he believed to be true than for anything else whatever.

The write is based in the UK
e-Mail: imsingh@onetel.com
Website: www.drimsingh.co.uk

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/05/wise-old-socrates/

The Origin of Manipur

By: Dr Irengbam Mohendra Singh The empirical demands of history, much worse, prehistory, when it is allowed to assert them by its practitioners, drawing us to empirical evidence from archaeological… Read more »

By: Dr Irengbam Mohendra Singh

The empirical demands of history, much worse, prehistory, when it is allowed to assert them by its practitioners, drawing us to empirical evidence from archaeological evidence (if there is any) or texts, at least writings from non-archaeological contexts, is flawed with mistrust especially when it has taken a few decades emphasising the evidence. However, the usefulness of empirical work is that a hypothesis can be made from data collected that is essential to the research.

The present Manipur is home to the majority Meiteis who live in the Imphal valley. Manipur is also home to a variety of ethnic groups such as Tangkhuls, Kabuis, Kukis (Thadous), Paites, Gangtes and Hmars, koms and so on, altogether 36 tribes, who inhabit the surrounding mountain ranges.

I use the word ‘tribe’ as a biological noun to mean – a group of people related by blood or marriage, united by language and culture with shared lineages, and not as used in anthropological literature, which some people regard it as derogatory. This was exactly the concept of Nikhil Manipuri Mahasabha/Congress Party, during the merger of Manipur with India.

As we know the total area of Manipur is 23.327 sq km. The valley accounts for only 2.238 sq km. Manipur shares 350 km of international border with Myanmar in the east.

The Meiteis constitute 60 per cent of the population but occupy less than one tenth of Manipur’s area in the valley only, because of ‘protective racism’. Immigrants from the eastern part of undivided Bengal during the British period, known as Pangals forming about 8 per cent, settle in the Imphal valley. The rest known as Mayangs (non-Manipuri Indians) came from different parts of India and also settle in the plain.

How the Meteis and other tribal peoples of Manipur came to live in Manipur is speculative. In the absence of a more cogent explanation, this article attempts to reconstruct the origin of Manipur from a geo/archaeological perspective.

To emphasise the prehistoric nature of Manipur – a Mayang word coined in the early part of the 18th century, I prefer to use the original name Kangleipak instead, until I come to the 18th century Kangleipak

To quote W Ibohal in his great book, The History of Manipur (An Early Period) – “The mountain chain where Manipur is situated belongs to the great Himalayas.” To prove his geological point he writes that ‘in 1952-53 AD one fossil of a sea living creature, cuttle fish, now extinct, was found at Kangpokpi in the northern part of Manipur.’

Further, he cites that recent findings in the tunnelling for Loktak Hydro-electric project, clays (representing the bottom of the sea) were discovered instead of hard rocks (expected from mountain ranges). The examination of different layers in the soil profile of the diggings strongly indicates that some 5,000 BCE the entire valley was submerged in water. He concludes: “so the land masses of Manipur is now 60 million years old since its birth from the bottom of the sea.”

I agree with Yumjao in the new light of the Theory of Plate Tectonics. What I try to do in this paper is to individuate a few aspects of geological and zoological analysis to draw a modicum picture of how Kangleipak was formed. Recent scholarship suggests that Manipur was part of the Himalayan belt.

Read more / Original news source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Kanglaonline/~3/GjQsSSm4oX4/