The disappearing grasslands and the Toda buffalo
The Hindu
Pastoralists and their animals have been pushed to the margins
Until a couple of hundred years ago, the indigenous Toda community and their buffaloes were as uniquely and inextricably linked to the Nilgiris landscape as any of its native flora and fauna. However, since the first colonial expedition up the slopes, the community of pastoralists and their animals have been gradually pushed to the margins, as previously pristine grasslands, an important source of food for the community’s cattle and also for the community’s cultural ethos, have gradually disappeared from the upper slopes of the Nilgiri hills.
“The Todas’ relationships with their buffaloes began in ancient times when their pre-eminent Goddess ‘ Taihhkirshy’, did the miraculous act of creating the buffaloes from a pool known as ‘ nerykaihhrr’. The story is that she took a cane and tapped at this pool, creating one buffalo with every tap. She continued to perform this act of creation until this line of buffaloes reached what is now known as Governor’s Shola,” said Tarun Chhabra, an expert in the community and author of The Toda Landscape.
The Toda buffalo is one of the 17 known breeds of the water buffalo ( Bubalus bubalis), believed to have been brought up the Nilgiri hills by the Todas themselves, and through more than 5,000 years of selective breeding, has become highly specialised in thriving in the high-altitude Shola-grassland mosaic of the Nilgiri hills.
Each of the Todas’ 15 patrilineal clans has a different order of buffaloes attached to a specific order of a dairy temple. However, the loss of grasslands and waves of disease which hit certain herds of the buffalo have meant that some of the temples have been lost, said Northey Kuttan, president of the Nilgiri Primitive Tribal People’s Federation. According to him, rituals attached to each temple of the community can only be completed with the milk from the buffaloes attached to a specific temple. “For instance, the temple is only opened when the first calf is born, and milk is gathered by the temple priest and made into butter which is used to light the lamps inside the temple. The loss of a group of buffaloes attached to a temple spells the doom for the temple itself,” he explained.
The introduction of alien species, such as pine, wattle and eucalyptus, as well as hydroelectric projects and dams, has led to the destruction of huge swathes of grasslands used by the community to graze their buffaloes.
“The Todas are very well known for their affinity for the buffaloes. I have documented at least 75 different names the community has given to their buffaloes. Even today, children are naturally known to herd and control great, big groups of this semi-wild species of buffalo,” added Mr. Chhabra.
According to estimates by the Department of Animal Husbandry and the community, there are believed to be less than 1,500 Toda buffalo in the Nilgiris.