India's Northeast – Culture of Extremes

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India's Northeast – Culture of Extremes


The ‘Seven Sisters’ in India include Nagaland and six other federal states in the northeast. It’s a cultural melting pot full of extremes.


Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur, Mizoram, Nagaland and Tripura, also known as the Seven Sister States of India, are tribal areas which are captivatingly exotic and full of superlatives. Hardly any tourists go there due to the poor infrastructure and violent conflicts between clans and the government.


The Seven Sisters are full of extremes. The world’s hottest chili grows there; the world’s rainiest place is there; the region can lay claim to the world’s longest-ever hunger strike and also to the family with the most children. There are bounty hunters as relics of an old macho culture – and the opposite: areas where women are in charge and the men do as they are told. And there’s the country’s largest rhino and tiger reserve, although poachers and the effects of climate change are a threat to both animals. Major problems include mass poverty and widespread human trafficking, particularly of young women. Filmmaker Markus Spieker reports from an extraordinary region – sometimes times idyllic, at other times hellish and torn between tradition and modernity.


India’s Northeast – Culture of Extremes



©DW Documentary



India's Northeast – Culture of Extremes▶http://www.truefinder.in/indias-northeast-culture-extremes/

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