The latest confrontation between converted and non-converted tribals unfolded in Haldi Pokhar village under the Jagannathpur block of Jharkhand’s West Singhbhum district, where four tribal families were socially ostracised after embracing Christianity. The affected families alleged that members of the Sarna community barred them from accessing common village resources, including the pond, wells, handpumps, local shops and even forest produce such as firewood and leaves, effectively cutting them off from daily life in the village.
Members of the non-converted tribes (Sarna) justified the action as a collective decision taken to protect their religion, customs and ancestral belief systems. They argued that unchecked religious conversions were disturbing the village’s spiritual equilibrium and offending forest deities traditionally worshipped by the community, warning that continued conversions could weaken the social and cultural fabric that binds the village together.
As tensions escalated, police and revenue officials intervened. Kumardungi police station in-charge Ranjit Oraon travelled to the remote village to mediate between the parties. Officials made it clear that social boycott on religious grounds is illegal and unconstitutional, warning that FIRs and criminal prosecution would follow any further violations. A compromise was eventually reached, allowing the converted families access to separate facilities, although they continue to remain barred from the main village pond and well.
For Sarna groups, however, the Haldi Pokhar episode is not an isolated incident but part of a deeper and long-running civilisational conflict. They argue that such confrontations emerge not from intolerance but from a sustained experience of cultural erosion following religious conversions.
Organiser has constantly documented how tribal conversions in Jharkhand and neighbouring states rarely end with a mere change of personal belief. Multiple ground reports have consistently pointed out that once conversion takes place, the first institutional demand made by missionaries is the complete abandonment of indigenous practices. According to these reports, converts are expected to sever their ties with rituals and festivals, withdraw from village worship of nature spirits, distance themselves from traditional burial practices and disengage from the authority of the village munda and customary councils, effectively rebranding their identity under a pan-Christian framework.
Organiser’s reportage has repeatedly noted that after conversion, traditional symbols and practices are often described as pagan, superstitious or demonic. This labelling creates a deep psychological rupture between the convert and the larger community, reinforcing social divisions that did not previously exist. From the tribal perspective, this process is not an exercise of religious freedom but a systematic dismantling of an indigenous way of life.
Investigations published by Organiser have also detailed the methods by which missionary groups operate in tribal areas. Rather than directly confronting tribal belief systems, missionaries initially interweave Biblical narratives with local folklore, reinterpret tribal spirits through a Christian lens, use hymns in local dialects that resemble Tribal chants and organise prayer meetings that mirror traditional village assemblies. This gradual intermixing of faith lowers resistance and creates familiarity.
However, once formal conversion is completed, often marked by baptism, the syncretism ends and converts are instructed to completely disengage from Sarna festivals, sacred groves and community rituals.
Tribal leaders argue that this creates a one-way process in which tribal culture is used as a bridge but never preserved. Christianity, they contend, temporarily absorbs indigenous elements only to eventually demand exclusivity, leaving little room for coexistence of belief systems.
At the heart of the conflict lies a fundamental question that Organiser has consistently raised in its reporting: can a tribal individual be both a tribal and Christian? Tribal groups insist the answer is no, not out of hostility but based on lived experience. They maintain that Tribal culture is not merely a religion but a community-based and land-linked civilisational system rooted in collective worship, shared ecology, ancestral continuity and village-level authority. Christianity, by its institutional nature, replaces these collective structures with church-centric authority and individual salvation.
Tribal communities therefore, ask on what basis a convert who rejects these rituals, deities, festivals and governance structures can continue to claim tribal identity. Allowing such dual identity, they argue, risks hollowing out their culture from within, leaving behind only names without substance.
While the Constitution guarantees religious freedom and state authorities were correct in intervening against illegal social boycotts, Tribal (Sarna) groups contend that community boundaries are being misrepresented as persecution. They question why the right of an individual tribal to convert is treated as inviolable, while the right of a community to preserve its cultural continuity is often criminalised or dismissed as regressive.
The Haldi Pokhar incident exposes a reality that Jharkhand can no longer afford to ignore. This is not merely a law-and-order issue but a civilisational debate over identity, faith and survival. As long as conversions are accompanied by cultural erasure, friction with tribal communities is likely to persist. And as long as the state addresses the issue purely through a constitutional lens without acknowledging the asymmetrical impact of missionary activity on indigenous societies, such flashpoints will continue to surface.


















