In mid-November 2018, a Bible-clutching American evangelist trespassed onto the forbidden North Sentinel Island in the Andamans and laid eyes on the 바카라world바카라s most isolated바카라 indigenous people바카라the Sentinelese. 바카라My name is John [Chau] ... Jesus Christ gave me the authority to come to you,바카라 he hollered. The Sentinelese, who live in voluntary isolation, repelled him. The evangelist, however, was resolute to 바카라declare Jesus바카라 to the inhabitants of 바카라Satan바카라s last stronghold.바카라 And the rest is history.
Two decades earlier, another American바카라a telescope and camera-clutching journalist바카라had illegally visited North Sentinel and published The Last Island of the Savages (2000), a long-form story that would later inspire Chau.
About a year after the evangelist바카라s tragic killing at the hands of the Sentinelese, the author (now a historian), Adam Goodheart, returned to the Andamans. His latest book, The Last Island: A Story of the Andamans and the Most Elusive Tribe in the World, draws from these expeditions, besides published texts and other primary sources.
Part travelogue and part narrative history, The Last Island is touted as 바카라the first full-length book바카라 on North Sentinel. However, it hardly offers substantial insights on the island beyond existing knowledge. The book unfolds across four chapters, covering around 180 pages of text and over a dozen black-and-white photographs and maps. Nearly half of it diverges from the Sentinelese, while a large portion merely reiterates Goodheart바카라s 2000 article, with added corrections and information.


The Last Island endeavours to navigate the extensive history of the Andaman islanders, connecting their colonial past to contemporary times. However, it lacks rigour. The narrative often falters due to inadequate details and perspectives, causing confusion and distorted comprehension, especially for readers unfamiliar with the complex history of the Andamans.
The absence of proper citations makes the verification of the author바카라s claims difficult, diminishing the book바카라s credibility and impeding readers바카라 ability to engage with its contents critically.
The Last Island exposes Goodheart바카라s disregard for research ethics, raising serious concerns about researchers바카라 responsibility while conducting studies in sensitive and protected environments. The author바카라s deliberate criminal trespass into the Sentinelese tribal reserve by enticing a hesitant and economically disadvantaged local fisherman with significant monetary incentives is particularly disquieting, among others.
The Andaman Islanders thrived in complete isolation until the British colonised them. Goodheart delves into their history but barely learns anything from it.
In the 19th and 20th centuries, scores of thrill-seeking Europeans thronged the 바카라Human Zoos바카라 where 바카라savages바카라 (indigenes) of the world were exhibited. Goodheart바카라s 바카라wild adventure바카라 to the North Sentinel was fuelled by similar sentiments바카라the exhilaration of a human safari바카라that he wanted to narrate to his friends for decades. 바카라Chau바카라s and my dreams were perhaps more similar than I would like to admit... Unlike him ... my quest was not to shift the course of history, just to witness it,바카라 he writes.
Goodheart was aware that trespassing into a protected reserve endangered a highly vulnerable Sentinelese people without providing him any opportunity to deepen his understanding of their society. Over two decades later, he perversely justifies his illegal action thus: 바카라To seek such a moment of sublime experience 바카라 may be a foundational human desire. A pardonable sin.바카라
Goodheart also gives a detailed account of his first contact (a criminal offence) with the Jarawa in the late 1990s and of another human safari during his second visit to the Andamans. 바카라I violated the rules and lowered a window ... Right alongside the road ... was a man. Naked, perfect, as taut and upright as the bow ... It felt suddenly intimate to have our faces so close ... The hunter looked right through me, his eyes as cold as any I have ever seen,바카라 Goodheart narrates his encounter with the Jarawa.
For centuries, indigenous communities have endured the theft of their ancestral remains and cultural artifacts. The UNESCO 1970 Convention attempts to curb the illicit trafficking of cultural property globally. Similarly, in the United States, the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, 1990, facilitates the return of stolen cultural objects to their rightful owners.
The Last Island recounts how the colonists robbed the sacred and cultural possessions of the Andaman islanders. However, it also reveals another disconcerting fact. During a conversation, a scrap dealer in Port Blair proudly shows his most coveted possession바카라a Sentinelese bow바카라to Goodheart. Enthralled by its craftsmanship, Goodheart instantly attempts to purchase it. Such an unethical and illegal act바카라trafficking of cultural property of the Sentinelese바카라undermines their survival and spiritual well-being, perpetuating the historical injustices inflicted upon the Andaman islanders by the colonists.
A litmus test for any work on North Sentinel is how it impacts the Sentinelese or the discourse on such societies. Globally, approximately 200 indigenous communities, comprising around 10,000 people, live in voluntary isolation, with a majority of them concentrated in the western hemisphere. The social, economic, spiritual, and cultural well-being of these communities depends on their relationship with their ancestral lands and natural resources.
India바카라s 바카라eyes-on, hands-off바카라 policy respects the Sentinelese바카라s right to self-determination and no contact, thus guaranteeing them the right to land and to live freely according to their culture and without any discrimination. It aligns well with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) guidelines for the protection of indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation and initial contact.
Contrastingly, The Last Island strips the Sentinelese of their agency, and confuses its readers. 바카라Chau바카라s secular critics바카라all the well-meaning bloggers, tweeters, and activists who want the outside world to leave North Sentinel Island in eternal isolation 바카라are just as delusional, just as much in thrall to their own mythology,바카라 argues Goodheart.
Having migrated out of Africa some 70,000 years ago, the Andaman islanders thrived in complete isolation on these islands until the British colonised and ravaged them in the 19th century. The Sentinelese continue to hold their last bastion.Goodheart delves into the history of the Andaman islanders but barely learns anything from it.
(Views expressed are personal)
(This appeared in the print as 'Silencing The Sentinelese')
Ajay Saini is Assistant Professor at IIT Delhi. He works with remote indigenous Communities