
A
bird's eye view shows this
cluster of 350 small and large
island as small, green speaks
staggered on the vast blue
waters. Situated midway between
India and Burma, in the Bay of
Bangal, the Andaman and Nicobar
Islands were at one time
inhabited by various tribes
which strongly resisted any
efforts at civilization. some of
these tribes are perhaps among
the oldest tribal communities in
the world, and tourists are
prohibited from establishing
contact with them. Owing to
prolonged isolation they are
somewhat hostile and are also
under the danger of catching
infection from outsiders.
Indian legend traces the name
Andaman to a derivation of
Handuman or Hanuman the Monkey
God of the epic Ramayana, who is
said to have used these islands
as stepping stones on his way to
Sri Lanka, to save Goddess Sita,
consort of Lord Rama.
Modern history perhaps dates to
1789 when Lord Cornwallis, the
British Governer -General
commissioned a survey of the
islands.
Later, after the First War of
Independence in 1857 the British
established a penal colony here
and Andamans and Port Blair, the
capital, came to be a dreaded
word. For, known as 'Kala Pani'
of 'Black Water', the city was
the site of the Cellular Jail -
a panel colony where political
prisoners were banished, perhaps
never to be seen again.
During world War II, the
Japanese occupied the Islands
and held them from 1944-1945.
The Andamans today present a
totally different picture. Some
tribes have opened up, and the
British rule is no more. The
islands are now fast becoming an
attractive holiday
destination-for the
anthropologist and the beach
lover.
The Islands are a living museum
of planet earth. Dense rain
forests, and canopies of
luxuriant green branches host a
variety of birds, insects, and
all kind of life. There are
beautiful tropical flowers and
orchids. The jungles shelter
about 242 species of birds, 46
species of mammals and 78
species of reptiles comprising
the wild cat, iguana, green
lizsards, deer, wild pig, goats
and a wide variety of snakes.
The water are clear and
beautiful, and the beaches at
Corbyn's Cove, Wandoor, Jolly
Boy and Cinque offer an
excellent sea for swimming.
Numerous other beaches are open
to holidayers out to enjoy water
sports. Tourists can surf, ski,
scuba dive, snorkel, sail, fish
or just enjoy the sea, the sun
and the sand. For the more
adventurous, deep-sea diving
unfolds precious treasures of
corals, vegetation, sponges and
fish life.
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