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India

ভারতবর্ষ  সম্পর্ক  পরুন  Introduction Our motherland India is a great country geographically and historically. Its size is so vast that it is sometimes called a 'subcontinent'. It is part of the Asian continent. But sometimes India itself seems like a continent. It extends from the ice-capped Himalayas to the coast of the Indian Ocean. The Indian Ocean stretches for thousands of kilometers from the Ganga delta to the Kutch and Indus valleys in Gujarat. It consists of the Great Plains in the north, the Khu Desert in the west, the Indo-Myanmar Highlands in the east, the Bandhu Plateau, the Ancient Highlands, the coconut-producing coastal plains in the south, and the high snow-capped mountains in the north. As it is located in the tropical region, the solar heat is high here. Monsoon rains increase the humidity of the region. Extreme heat and heavy monsoon rains continue to affect millions of Indians. This is our India, our destiny.  In the words of Kavi Guru - O Bhuvanamanomohini

Jarwa tribe

  Introduction The Jaroa are an isolated tribe of the Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal, India. In the Andamanese language "Jaroa" means "Stranger", and at the same time the Jaroas identify themselves as "Ang". The life-tradition and culture of the Jaroas was almost unknown to us until the early eighteenth century. Later, when the British came to India at that time and started collecting research information about the Jaroah group, the Jaroah group came to be known to us as a distinct people.   Identity:  Although there is considerable disagreement about the original habitat of the Jaroads from the traditional point of view, some prominent anthropologists believe that the original home of the Jaroads was Africa. Descendants of the 'Jungil' tribe, the Jaroas migrated to the Andaman Islands about 55,000 years ago across a long sea route and have maintained their pure ethnic identity even today through adaptation. General introduction to  Jarawas:

santal

  Introduction : Santals are the most numerous of the tribes in India. The word Santal comes from Sawantar . This name they used even after coming to this country. According to some, they came to be known as Saostar or Santal because of their long residence in the Samantabhoomi or Saost country adjacent to Medinipur. At present most of the Santals live around the Santal Parganas. The topography of this vast region is full of diversity.  On the west lies the rugged undulating terrain of Jharkhand, and on the other (east) the alluvial plains. In this vast land, the Santal population has largely merged to survive. 1 Habitat  Santals live in the tea estates of Bihar Santal Parganas, Dhaka, Munger, Bhagalpur, Hazaribagh, Purnia, Manbhum, Singhbhum, Odisha's Mayurbhanj, West Bengal's Medinipur, Purulia, Malda, North Bengal and Assam. 2.Ethic identity According to the caste theory, the Santals are descendants of the Dravidian group, whose main source is the Austro-Asiatic