Madhumala Chattopadhyay

Birthday March 16, 1961

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Shibpur, Kolkata, India

Age 62 years old

Nationality India

#11773 Most Popular

1961

Madhumala Chattopadhyay (born 16 March 1961) is an Indian anthropologist who specializes in the Indigenous peoples of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.

1991

In 1991, Chattopadhyay and her colleagues were the first outsiders to make peaceful contact with the Sentinelese people.

Chattopadhyay was brought up in Shibpur, a small suburb in Kolkata, West Bengal.

Her father was an accounts officer with the South Eastern Railway.

Her mother was Pronoti Chattopadhyay.

She first became interested in the Indigenous peoples of the Andaman Islands when she was twelve years old.

She graduated Bhabani Balika Vidyalaya from in Shibpur.

Afterward, she obtained her Bachelor of Sciences (with honors) in Anthropology from the University of Calcutta.

She wrote a dissertation, Genetic Study among the Aborigines of the Andaman.

She applied for a PhD fellowship with the Anthropological Survey of India (AnSI) in order to do field research with the tribes of the Andaman Islands.

Chattopadhyay obtained her PhD on the tribes of the Andamans.

AnSI was reticent to grant her a fellowship because she was female, and they worried she wouldn't be safe while doing field work with potentially hostile tribes.

However, they granted the fellowship in light of her academic record.

Before Madhumala Chattopadhyay was allowed to do field work in the Andaman Islands, the Anthropological Survey of India required her and her parents to sign contracts confirming they knew the dangers of work with uncontacted peoples and would not hold the government responsible if Chattopadhyay was injured or killed while doing research.

She spent six years researching the various tribes of Andaman and Nicobar islands.

On 4 January 1991, Madhumala Chattopadhyay was part of a team that made the first peaceful contact with the Sentinelese tribe of Andamans.

She was also the first female outsider to contact the Sentinelese.

Chattopadhyay at that time was a research associate with the Anthropological Survey of India.

She went to the North Sentinel Island with the support of local administration's ship MV Tarmugli.

She was a part of a team of 13.

The key team members were S. Awaradi (Director, Tribal Welfare, A&NI administration), who was the team leader; Arun Mullick, who was the medical officer (for providing medical attention in case of sickness or injury); and Chattopadhyay herself, the team anthropologist.

The rest of the team were support crew.

The team initiated contact by going toward the island on a smaller vessel and dropping coconuts into the water as gifts.

A few armed men came into the water to collect coconuts.

This repeated until the team ran out of coconuts, at which point they returned to the main ship to resupply.

The second time, a young man aimed his bow at Chattopadhyay, but a Sentinelese woman made him drop his weapon.

Chattopadhyay escaped from this attack and the team retreated.

When the team returned for a third time, Chattopadhyay and colleagues jumped into the water near the boat and handed the islanders coconuts in person.

One of the crew took photographs of crew members handing coconuts to the islanders, which were widely circulated in the press.

Writer Vishvajit Pandya notes that these photographs made the public rethink their mental image of the Sentinelese.

On 21 February of the same year, a larger team came back to another successful contact with the tribe.

Some Sentinelese saw them approach and went over, unarmed, to meet the team.

The Sentinelese party boarded the AnSI ship and took coconuts.

Reflecting on her work with the Sentinelese, Chattopadhyay said, "You feel that you are there to study, but actually, they are the ones who study you. You are foreign in their lands."

She also observed, "Never ever in my six years of doing research alone with the tribes of Andamans did any man ever misbehave with me. The tribes might be primitive in their technological achievements, but socially they are far ahead of us."

The Indian government later banned any more expeditions, citing the possibility of the tribe contracting disease due to frequent visits by outsiders.

In an interview with National Geographic decades later, Chattopadhyay discouraged further attempts to contact the Sentinelese.

She said, "The tribes have been living on the islands for centuries without any problem. Their troubles started after they came into contact with outsiders...The tribes of the islands do not need outsiders to protect them, what they need is to be left alone."

She also argued that the people of the Andaman Islands suffered greatly during the British occupation, and that Indians should not make the same mistake and try to assimilate the Sentinelese into the larger world.

1999

She last visited Andamans in 1999.