Salute bro.... doot ka doot pani ka pani apuni sob dekhuwale Axomor raij aru bujiboloi baki nai kun hosa kun misa. Thank you so much......for ground reporting.
Etiya raije gom pale ne????Aimee e kuwa kotha 100000% misa, Hoityo Tu janibo pari bhal palu,.bohut bohut dhoinyobaad🙏Pronoy Bordoloi dangoriya apuni luwa haikhyatkar t Aimee e kuwa kothabur misa🙏
Britishers were bewildered when they came in contact with Semsas for the first time. Britishers like J.P mills considered that they could be descendents of Konyak Nagas who used to form the bodyguards of Dimasa kings. According to him Semsa Dimasas r very different from the Zemi Nagas that surround them. Just like konyaks they, practiced head hunting, wore cane beads n the association of pipal tree with the corpse platform. But Dimasa version of their history is quite different from Britishers.
Yes, but we can't solely rely on the British reports all the time. There must be some sort of connection between the Semsas and the Zeme. Semsas sing Zeme folk song during Bushu as well as during community work in the field. I still remember my hostel mate during my school days from Semkhor. Rana Langthasa, Sindhu Phonglo, Prahlad Langthasa etc... they were well verse in Zeme dialect and can even sing Zeme folk songs. One can't ignore this cultural connection and rely on Mills reports only.
Such a beautiful village and such lovely people! Rather than the inhabitants not being welcome to change and modernisation, I believe they are people who are deprived of facilities by the government!
All Semkhor videos from male visitors...in all Semkhor videos between 13- 18 y girl are missing...there is only boys have capacity to say something or intract with people on camera....🙄🙄🙄🙄
They didn't convert to zeme. They are dimasas and have dimasa shengfong and their julu isn't ma-gam-gufu-dzi. Those zeme who coverted to dimasa have their jilik or julu as ma-gam-gu-fu-dzi, but none of the semkhor people have that jilik.
Also knowing zeme language isn't that of a big deal, in olden days almost all of the dimasa knew how to speak zeme. My grandparents and many other old relatives can speak zeme, zeme people also knew how to speak dimasa language in olden days. It's in colonial and modern era with the introduction of new languages, the people have lost the fluency in local languages like dimasa, zeme, hrangkhol and speak mostly in their own language and hindi and English.
Amiee ji dekhaise ekdam faltu Assam name hunile out of state beya pai sidha koi tat manhubr bohut dangerous naki a bur jodi educated woman dekhai to manhue assam anekuwa buli vhabibo