Working with Community: The Wancho of eastern Arunachal Pradesh, India
The Wancho are a tribal community with a population of 56,866 (Census 2011), living in Longding District, in the Patkai range of eastern Arunachal Pradesh in India. The landscape is considered remote even within the Northeast region, and limited contact with outsiders, apart from neighbouring tribal groups, has helped to preserve the indigenous cultural heritage and the traditional design of local dwellings and community structures.
The Wancho villages (Nok) are dense settlements that were typically isolated from one another. Four villages were selected for this study of architecture: Kamhua Noknu, Kamhua Noksa, Khasa and Jagan. The traditional buildings in the villages are made of local materials: wood, bamboo and palm leaf thatch. The use of organic materials and the impact of heavy annual rainfall accounts for the ephemeral nature of buildings that must be reconstructed every 8-10 years. Each rebuilding represents a significant event that brings the community together to revitalise age old practices of knowledge transmission, reciprocity and social bonding as they work cooperatively and quickly to erect a new house.
The
Adivasi Arts Trust, based in London, recently completed a project to survey traditional architecture in some of the Wancho villages in Arunachal Pradesh. The recorded material is now available on the EWAP archive:
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Gangpoh Gangsa’s House, Jagan. EWAP2017SG-STR-JGN02 © Doulas and AAT, 2023 |
https://ewap.brookes.ac.uk/report/6dacf7d8-8660-494c-bfb9-601484a62d0e. The survey was done in collaboration with some of the village people, and the project was to return to the local the community in the last phase of the project. I travelled to Longding District in November 2024 to organise a series of workshops that were designed to share the outputs and prompt discussions with any interested Wancho people. Unfortunately, it has become more difficult to visit the district with shorter 14 day permits but it is still possible to apply for an extension. The journey is over 2400 km from Delhi to Longding and we had to carry all our workshop materials! But finally we travelled on from Itanagar to Longding, and then to Kamhua Noknu village with Jatwang Wangsa, who is the local collaborator for the project.
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The project team © Douglas, 2023 |
‘Vernacular architecture and sustainability’
A short promotional film that was edited for screening at the workshops:
Each village is governed by the authority of a powerful chief who is referred to as Wangham (or Raja), and the second workshop on 6 December that took place at the Wangkam (Chief’s house) in Kamhua Noknu, was for the village community. This was the first time that our two senior guests had travelled to the site of field research. The Wangkam was one of the buildings that had been surveyed, and I was witness to its reconstruction in 2021. It had been an impressive, large community event that assembled most of the people from Kamhua Noknu, as well as those from the neighbouring villages who were expected to contribute building materials, food for the feast and labour. A video montage of the event is now available for viewing in the archive.
Community event © Douglas, 2023 |
“People living in the village have deep connections among themselves they come to help when it is needed. Especially Paa and chief's house should remain traditional, otherwise we will lose songs and dance which are part of the construction event. We get the chance to assemble whenever it is rebuilt.”
During regular visits to the area I was witnessing the accelerated pace of change and its impact on the traditional way of life. The village settlements are transforming as contemporary house owners show preference for new adaptations. The modern adaptation of the traditional house, with its frame elevated on large stones, has become popular among many families due to its durability compared to the original design, where columns and posts are set directly into the soil. However, younger generations are interested in further modifying the house structure, with some envisioning future homes constructed from concrete. The number of structures of concrete and galvanized iron sheets in the villages is steadily increasing. In Kamhua Noknu there are half a dozen such constructions, and in 10 years it is realistic to expect a broadly modified village character and vista. It is hoped that the archive will promote interest and value of the indigenous architecture that might inspire local people to sustain their cultural heritage.
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Aerial view of Kamhua Noksa © Doulas and AAT, 2023 |
This blog was written by Tara Douglas, Adivasi Arts Trust (tarapurnima1@gmail.com).
Reference
Douglas , T and AAT (2023). Photographs of Gangpoh Gangsa's traditional house, Jagan, including drone photographs, details, aspects, and use | EWAP2017SG-STA-0067. Traditional Architecture in the Wancho Villages (India) collection. Endangered Wooden Architecture Programme. https://doi.org/10.60491/ewap2017sg112024018
Douglas , T and Adivasi Arts Trust, London (2023). Photographs of Nyaiwang Wangsa's traditional house in Kamhua Noksa, including drone photographs, details, aspects, and use | EWAP2017SG-STA-0034. Traditional Architecture in the Wancho Villages (India) collection. Endangered Wooden Architecture Programme. https://doi.org/10.60491/ewap2017sg112024008
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