Toda people
{{Short description|Ethnic group of Tamil Nadu, India}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2021}}
{{use Indian English|date=September 2020}}
{{Infobox ethnic group
| group = Toda
| total = 2,002 (2011 census)
| image = Elderly Toda Couple, William E. Marshall, 1873.jpg
| image_caption = Elderly Toda Couple, 1873
| total_ref = {{Cite web|url=http://www.censusindia.gov.in/2011census/PCA/ST.html|title=A-11 Individual Scheduled Tribe Primary Census Abstract Data and its Appendix|publisher=Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India|website=www.censusindia.gov.in|access-date=2017-11-03}}
| popplace = Nilgiris district, Tamil Nadu
| languages = Toda
| native_name =
| native_name_lang =
| religions = Predominantly Hinduism
| related = Kota people and other Dravidian speakers
}}
The Toda people are a Dravidian ethnic group who live in the state of Tamil Nadu in southern India. Before the 18th century and British colonisation, the Toda coexisted locally with other ethnic communities, including the Kota, Badaga and Kurumba. During the 20th century, the Toda population has hovered in the range 700 to 900. A small fraction of the large population of India, since the early 19th century the Toda have attracted "a most disproportionate amount of attention from anthropologists and other scholars because of their ethnological aberrancy" and "their unlikeness to their neighbours in appearance, manners, and customs".{{sfnp|Emeneau|1984|pp=1–2}}
The Toda traditionally live in settlements called {{lang|tcx|mund}}, consisting of three to seven small thatched houses, constructed in the shape of half-barrels and located across the slopes of the pasture, on which they keep domestic buffalo. Their economy was pastoral, based on the buffalo, whose dairy products they traded with neighbouring peoples of the Nilgiri Hills. Toda religion features the sacred buffalo; consequently, rituals are performed for all dairy activities as well as for the ordination of dairymen-priests. The religious and funerary rites provide the social context in which complex poetic songs about the cult of the buffalo are composed and chanted.[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9072718"Toda"], Encyclopædia Britannica. (2007)
Fraternal polyandry in traditional Toda society was fairly common; this practice has been totally abandoned, as has female infanticide. During the last quarter of the 20th century, some Toda pasture land was lost due to outsiders using it for agriculture or afforestation by the State Government of Tamil Nadu. This has threatened to undermine Toda culture by greatly diminishing the buffalo herds. Since the early 21st century, Toda society and culture have been the focus of an international effort at culturally sensitive environmental restoration.{{sfnp|Chhabra|2006}} The Toda lands are a part of The Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, a UNESCO-designated International Biosphere Reserve; their territory is declared UNESCO World Heritage Site.[https://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/2103/ World Heritage sites, Tentative lists, April 2007]. Whc.unesco.org (27 June 2013) in 2012.
Population
File:Toda Tribal Hut (5008551878).jpg]]
According to M. B. Emeneau in 1984, the successive decennial Census of India figures for the Toda are: 1871 (693), 1881 (675), 1891 (739), 1901 (807), 1911 (676) (corrected from 748), 1951 (879), 1961 (759), 1971 (812). In his judgment, these records
"justif[y] [sic] concluding that a figure between 700 and 800 is likely to be near the norm, and that variation in either direction is due on the one hand to epidemic disaster and slow recovery thereafter (1921 (640), 1931 (597), 1941 (630)) or on the other hand to an excess of double enumeration (suggested already by census officers for 1901 and 1911, and possibly for 1951). Another factor in the uncertainty in the figures is the declared or undeclared inclusion or exclusion of Christian Todas by the various enumerators ... Giving a figure between 700 and 800 is highly impressionistic, and may for the immediate present and future be pessimistic, since public health efforts applied to the community seem to be resulting in an increased birth rate and consequently, one would expect, in an increased population figure. However, earlier predictions that the community was declining were overly pessimistic and probably never well-founded."{{sfnp|Emeneau|1984|pp=1–2}}
Culture and society
{{more citations needed|section|date=September 2020}}
The Toda are most closely related to the Kota both ethnically and linguistically.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}}
=Clothing=
The Toda dress consists of a single piece of cloth, which is worn as a wrap over a dhoti for men and as a skirt for women along with a shawl wrap.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}}
=Economy=
Their sole occupation is cattle-herding and dairy-work. Holy dairies are built to store the buffalo milk.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}}
=Marriage=
{{See also|Polyandry among Toda people}}
They once practiced fraternal polyandry, a practice in which a woman marries all the brothers of a family, but no longer do so.{{sfnp|Walker|2004}}{{sfnp|Walker|1998}} All the children of such marriages were deemed to descend from the eldest brother. The ratio of females to males is about three to five. The culture historically practiced female infanticide. In the Toda tribe, families arrange contracted child marriage for couples.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}}
=Houses=
The Todas live in small hamlets called {{lang|tcx|mund}}s.{{cite book |last1=Kasturi |first1=Prema |title=South India Heritage: An Introduction |date=2007 |publisher=East West Books |isbn=978-81-88661-64-0 |page=194 |language=English |quote=The Todas are among the most ancient tribes of the Nilgiris. Their total population is less than 2000. They live in small villages or hamlets locally called munds.}} The Toda huts, called {{lang|tcx|dogle}}s, are of an oval, pent-shaped construction with sliding door. This sliding door is placed inside the hut, and is arranged and fixed on two stout stakes, as to be easily moved back and forth.{{cite book |title=The Siddhanta Deepika Or the Light of Truth |date=1994 |publisher=Asian Educational Services |isbn=978-81-206-0884-9 |page=232 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HegSAQAAMAAJ|quote=The entrance is closed by means of a solid slab or plank of wood, and sufficient dimensions to entirely block up the entrance. This sliding door is inside the hut, and so arranged and fixed on two stout stakes buried in the earth as to be easily moved to and fro. The houses are built of bamboo closely laid together, fastened with rattan and covered with thatch.|language=en}} These huts called dogles are usually {{convert|10|ft|m}} high, {{convert|18|ft|m}} long and {{convert|9|ft|m}} wide. They are built of bamboo fastened with rattan and are thatched. Thicker bamboo canes are arched to give the hut its basic bent shape. Thinner bamboo canes (rattan) are tied close and parallel to each other over this frame. Dried grass is stacked over this as thatch. Each hut is enclosed within a wall of loose stones.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}}
The front and back of the hut are usually made of dressed stones (mostly granite). The hut has a tiny entrance at the front, about {{convert|3|ft|cm}} wide and {{convert|3|ft|cm}} tall, through which people must crawl to enter the interior. This unusually small entrance is a means of protection from wild animals. The front portion of the hut is decorated with the Toda art forms, a kind of rock mural painting.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}}
=Food=
The Todas are vegetarians and do not eat meat, eggs that can hatch, or fish. The buffalo were milked in a holy dairy, where the priest/milkman also processed their gifts. Buffalo milk is used in a variety of forms: butter, butter milk, yogurt, cheese and drunk plain. Rice is a staple, eaten with dairy products and curries.{{cite book |last1=Singh |first1=K. S. |title=The Scheduled Tribes |date=1994 |publisher=Oxford University Press in collaboration with the Anthropological Survey of India |isbn=978-0-19-563255-2 |page=6 |language=en}}
Religion
File:Cathredral of Todas in 1900s.jpg
File:Toda green funeral1871.jpg
Toda religious life and practices stem from a pantheon of gods. The heads of this pantheon are the goddess Tökisy and the god of the underworld Ön.{{Cite journal |last=Walker |first=Anthony R. |date=2018 |title=The Diverse Faces of Toda Religion |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0257-9774-2018-2-395 |journal=Anthropos |volume=113 |issue=2 |pages=395–422 |doi=10.5771/0257-9774-2018-2-395 |issn=0257-9774|url-access=subscription }} These two deities form the basis of many religious practices and rituals, but each Toda clan has their own nòdrochi, a deity seen as that clan’s ruler during the time that the Todas and gods lived together.{{Cite book |last=Rivers |first=William H.R. |title=The Todas |publisher=Macmillan Company |year=1906 |page=183}} In total, there are between 1,600 and 1,800 gods.{{Cite book |last=Rivers |first=William H.R. |title=The Todas |publisher=Macmillan Company |year=1906 |page=443}}
According to the Toda religion, Ön and his wife Pinârkûrs went to a part of the Nilgiri hills, known as the Kundahs, and set up an iron bar from one end to the other. Ön stood at one end and pulled buffalos out from the earth, which became the sacred buffalos. Pinârkûrs stood on the other end, and she pulled out the buffalos that would form the ordinary herd. The first Toda man also came from the earth, holding onto the tail of the last buffalo Ön pulled out. He then pulled out a rib from the man and created the first Toda woman.{{Cite book |last=Rivers |first=William H.R. |title=The Todas |publisher=Macmillan Company |year=1906 |page=184}}
The mountains and hills of their home region are a large part of their religion for two reasons: the importance of grass for buffalo herds and the belief that the hills are the homes of the gods.{{Cite journal |last1=Ganesh |first1=Balasubramanian |last2=Rajakumar |first2=Thangarasu |last3=Acharya |first3=SubhenduKumar |last4=Vasumathy |first4=Sridharan |last5=Sowmya |first5=Sridharan |last6=Kaur |first6=Harpreet |date=2021 |title=Particularly vulnerable tribal groups of Tamil Nadu, India: A sociocultural anthropological review |journal=Indian Journal of Public Health |volume=65 |issue=4 |page=403 |doi=10.4103/ijph.ijph_2_21 |issn=0019-557X|doi-access=free }} There is a belief that the gods lived on the hills prior to the creation of the Todas, and that special meetings would take place on a single hill. Each hill associated with a god features a stone circle called a pun. It is unknown who created the puns, but it seems that the Todas did not due to their lack of traditions associated with the stone monuments.{{Cite book |last=Rivers |first=William H.R. |title=The Todas |publisher=Macmillan Company |year=1906 |page=446}}
Toda religious tradition is directly tied to the buffalo herding practices. Every part of the dairy process is ritualized including “the twice daily milking and churning of butter to the great seasonal shifting of pastures, the burning over of the dry pastures, and the giving of salt to the herd.”{{Cite journal |last=Emeneau |first=M. B. |date=July 1958 |title=Oral Poets of South India: The Todas |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/538564 |journal=The Journal of American Folklore |volume=71 |issue=281 |pages=312–324 |doi=10.2307/538564 |jstor=538564 |issn=0021-8715 |url-access=subscription }} Dairies take up the role of temples in Toda religion. At the dairies, the milk of the buffalos is separated into two qualities: low grade milk, called tarvali, and high grade milk, called kudrpali. There is not a distinction between what buffalos can produce tarvali or kudrpali other than a sacred bell worn by buffalos used to make kudrpali.{{Cite book |last=Rivers |first=William H.R. |title=The Todas |publisher=Macmillan Company |year=1906 |page=40}} Additionally, the Todas practice ritual calf sacrifice. The practice is derived from a story where the god Kwoto tricked the gods into eating the flesh of a slain buffalo calf. Since then, this ceremony has taken place every year.{{Citation |last=Peter |first=Prince |title=The Calf Sacrifice of the Todas of the Nilgiris (South India) |date=1960-12-31 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9781512819526-079 |work=Men and Cultures |pages=485–489 |access-date=2023-11-25 |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |doi=10.9783/9781512819526-079 |isbn=978-1-5128-1952-6|url-access=subscription }}
Funerals in the Toda religion are far more celebratory compared to western funerals. The dead are prepared with slaughtered buffalo to accompany them to the afterworld. The buffalos for this process are chased and captured before slaughter as an opportunity for the men to demonstrate their prowess. People also gather in their best clothes for festivities and dancing. There are specific areas dedicated to funeral ceremonies separated for men and women. A hut is made in these areas where the body is prepared. Due to the celebratory nature of Toda funerals, outsiders are typically invited to participate in the festivities.{{Cite book |last=Rivers |first=William H.R. |title=The Todas |publisher=Macmillan Company |year=1906 |page=340}}
In Toda religion, divination exists as a separate entity from the buffalo centric practices. Diviners work in pairs and explain misfortunes that have occurred in the Toda villages like the burning down of a dairy. The reasons typically would be that the one seeking explanation committed some offense or that a sorcerer caused the misfortune. In the case of one committing an offense, the diviner would offer a ritual or prayer to make amends for their offense. In the case of a sorcerer, the diviner would identify which sorcerer cast the spell that caused the misfortune.{{Cite book |last=Rivers |first=William H.R. |title=The Todas |publisher=Macmillan Company |year=1906 |page=252}} Information about sorcery and sorcerers is limited as it seems to be a taboo practice in Toda culture. Sorcery is believed to be a familial practice that is passed down from father to son. Toda sorcery is feared by the Todas themselves as well as other tribes like the Badagas.{{Cite book |last=Rivers |first=William H.R. |title=The Todas |publisher=Macmillan Company |year=1906 |pages=255–261}}
Language
The Toda language is a member of the Dravidian family. The language is typologically aberrant and phonologically difficult. Linguists have classified Toda (along with its neighbour Kota) as a member of the southern subgroup of the historical family proto-South-Dravidian. It split off from South Dravidian, after Kannada, but before Malayalam. In modern linguistic terms, the aberration of Toda results from a disproportionately high number of syntactic and morphological rules, of both early and recent derivation, which are not found in the other South Dravidian languages (save Kota, to a small extent.){{sfnp|Emeneau|1984|pp=1–2}}
Traditional houses
Many Toda abandoned their traditional distinctive huts for houses made of concrete,{{sfnp|Walker|2004}} in the early 21st century, and a movement developed to build the traditional barrel-vaulted huts. From 1995 to 2005, forty new huts were built in this style.{{Harvp|Chhabra|2005a}} Quote: "... over the past ten years, we have approached government and private agencies for sponsoring traditional houses. Today, we have been able to assist in funding over forty barrel-vaulted houses. Added to these are the scores of existing temples – two are conical and the rest barrel-vaulted."
Embroidery
File:Toda people in front of their hut in the Nilgiri Hills (c. 1870).jpg
Registrar of Geographical Indication gave GI status for this unique embroidery, a practice which has been passed on to generations. The status ensures uniform pricing for Toda embroidery products and provides protection against low-quality duplication of the art.[http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-newdelhi/gi-certificate-for-toda-embroidery-formally-handed-over-to-tribals/article4816085.ece "GI certificate for Toda embroidery formally handed over to tribals"], The Hindu (15 June 2013).
Notes
{{Reflist}}
References
;Classic Ethnographies
- {{cite book | title=The Toda of South India: A New Look| last=Walker| first=Anthony R.| year=1986| publisher=Hindustan Publishing Corp.| location=Delhi}}
;Toda Music, Linguistics, Ethnomusicology
- {{Citation| last=Emeneau| first=M. B.| author-link=Murray Barnson Emeneau| title=Oral Poets of South India: Todas| journal=Journal of American Folklore|volume=71|issue=281| year=1958| pages=312–324| jstor=538564| doi=10.2307/538564}}
- {{Citation| last=Emeneau| first=M. B.| author-link=Murray Barnson Emeneau| title=Toda Songs|publisher=Oxford: Clarendon Press|pages= xvii, 1003|year=1971 }}
- {{Citation | last = Hockings | first = Paul | title = Reviewed Work(s): Toda Songs, by M. B. Emeneau | journal = The Journal of Asian Studies | volume = 31 | issue = 2 | page = 446 | jstor=2052652 | doi=10.2307/2052652| year = 1972 | s2cid = 162001485 }}
- {{Citation| last1=Emeneau| first1=Murray B.| title=Ritual Structure and Language Structure of the Todas| publisher=Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society|page=103| year=1974| isbn=0-87169-646-0}}.
- {{Citation| last=Tyler| first=Stephen A.| title=Reviewed Work(s): Ritual Structure and Language Structure of the Todas by M. B. Emeneau| journal=American Anthropologist|volume=77|issue=4| year=1975| pages=758–759|doi=10.1525/aa.1975.77.4.02a00930 | jstor=674878
| doi-access=free}}.
- {{Citation| last1=Emeneau| first1=Murray B.| title=Toda Grammar and Texts
| publisher=Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society|pages=xiii, 410, index (16)
| year=1984| isbn=0-87169-155-8| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-B94uj2p4hQC}}.
- Nara, Tsuyoshi and Bhaskararao, Peri. 2003. Songs of the Toda. Osaka : ELPR Series A3-011.91pp [+3CDs with sound files of the songs].
- {{Citation| last1=Nettl| first1=Bruno| last2=Bohlman| first2=Phillip Vilas
| title=Comparative Musicology and Anthropology of Music: Essays on the History of Ethnomusicology| publisher=Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press
| year=1991| pages=438–449| isbn=0-226-57409-1}}.
- Shalev, M. Ladefoged, P. and Bhaskararao, P. 1994. "Phonetics of Toda." PILC Journal of Dravidic Studies, 4:1. 19–56 pp. (Earlier version in: University of California Working Papers in Phonetics. 84. 89–126 pp.). 1993.
- Spajic', S. Ladefoged, P. and Bhaskararao, P. 1996. "The Trills of Toda." Journal of International Phonetic Association, 26:1. 1–22 pp.
;Modern Anthropology, Sociology, History
- {{Citation
| last=Walker
| first=Anthony
| title=Between Tradition and Modernity, and Other Essays on the Toda of South India
| publisher=Delhi: B. R. Publishing Corporation
| year=1998
| url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_go2081/is_200210/ai_n9206528
}}.
- {{Citation
| last1=Emeneau
| first1=M. B.
| title=A Century of Toda Studies: Review of 'The Toda of South India: A New Look' by Anthony R. Walker; M. N. Srinivas
| journal=Journal of the American Oriental Society
|volume=108
|issue=4
| year=1988
| pages=605–609
| jstor=603148
| doi=10.2307/603148
}}.
- {{Citation
| last1=Sutton
| first1=Deborah
| chapter='In this the land of the Todas': Imaginary Landscapes and Colonial Policy in Nineteenth-Century Southern India
| year=2003
| editor1-last=Dorrian
| editor1-first=M.
| editor2-last=Rose
| editor2-first=G.
| title=Deterritorialisations, Revisioning Landscape and Politics
| publisher=London: Black Dog Press
}}.
- {{Citation
| last=Sutton
| first=Deborah
| title='Horrid Sights and Customary Rights': The Toda Funeral on the Colonial Nilgiris
| journal=Indian Economic and Social History Review
|volume=39
|issue=1
| year=2002
| pages=45–70
| doi=10.1177/001946460203900102
| s2cid=144011673
}}.
- {{Citation
|last=Walker
|first=Anthony R.
|title=The Truth About The Toda
|journal=Frontline, the Hindu
|year=2004
|url=http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/fl2105/stories/20040312000206600.htm
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071013183019/http://hinduonnet.com/fline/fl2105/stories/20040312000206600.htm
|url-status=usurped
|archive-date=13 October 2007
}}.
;Toda Traditional Knowledge, Environment, and Modern Science
- From: Chhabra, Tarun. 15 August 2002. [https://web.archive.org/web/20080921214245/http://www.downtoearth.org.in/full6.asp?foldername=20020815&filename=life&sec_id=8&sid=1 "Toda's Traditions In Peril"], Down to Earth. Quote: {{cquote| Toda's quaint barrel vaulted houses, which symbolise the Nilgiris, are today hard to spot. These images have been dry transferred on T-shirts and other products as logos. Seven years ago, there were just a couple of traditional houses remaining in the permanent hamlets. One day, a Toda wanted to build a traditional house for his ailing father. The administration agreed to provide the funds. Quite soon, it was ready and one Sunday morning, the Collector, additional Collector and the Superintendent of police inaugurated the house. The construction was so impressive that advances were paid on the spot for two more houses. Nine houses came up that year. Today, over 35 traditional houses have been constructed.|Chhabra, Tarun}}
- {{Citation
|last=Chhabra
|first=Tarun
|title=How Traditional Ecological Knowledge addresses Global Climate change: the perspective of the Todas – the indigenous people of the Nilgiri hills of South India
|journal=Proceedings of the Earth in Transition: First World Conference
|year=2005a
|url=http://www.ser.org/iprn/pdf/Tarun_Chhabra.pdf
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120904232848/http://www.ser.org/iprn/pdf/Tarun_Chhabra.pdf
|archive-date=4 September 2012
}}.
- {{Citation
| last=Chhabra
| first=Tarun
| title=How Traditional Ecological Knowledge addresses Global Climate change: the perspective of the Todas – the indigenous people of the Nilgiri hills of South India
| journal=Proceedings of the Earth in Transition: First World Conference (PPT)
| year=2005b
| url=http://www.ser.org/files/ppt/Tarun%20Chhabra%20PPT.pdf
| url-status=dead
| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011092940/http://www.ser.org/files/ppt/Tarun%20Chhabra%20PPT.pdf
| archive-date=11 October 2007 }}.(Pictures of a new house being built on pp. 57–60, and new house, with decorative art, being blessed on p. 70)
- {{Citation
| last=Chhabra
| first=Tarun
| title=Restoring the Toda Landscapes of the Nilgiri Hills in South India
| journal=Plant Talk
| volume=44
| year=2006
| url=http://www.plant-talk.org/stories/44toda.html
| url-status=dead
| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071010004339/http://www.plant-talk.org/stories/44toda.html
| archive-date=10 October 2007 }}.
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20070813082338/http://www.india-environment-trust.org.uk/index.shtml India Environmental Trust]. 2005. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070525141343/http://www.india-environment-trust.org.uk/projects.shtml Supported Projects: Edhkwehlynawd Botanical Refuge (EBR) – Reforestation in a Tribal Area]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20010602182013/http://www.nciucn.nl/homepagenciucn.htm National Committee for the Netherlands for the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN-NL)]. 2006. [https://web.archive.org/web/20060811234517/http://www.nciucn.nl/english/funds/purchase/engels/projecten_eng.htm Funded Projects:], [https://web.archive.org/web/20060811234517/http://www.nciucn.nl/english/funds/purchase/engels/projecten_eng.htm#in06 India: Nilgiri Hills, NGO (EBR), 8 Hectares].
- {{Citation
| last1=Rajan
| first1=S.
| last2=Sethuraman
| first2=M.
| last3=Mukherjii
| first3=Pulok K.
| title=Ethnobiology of the Nilgiri Hills, India
| journal=Phytotherapy Research
|volume=16
|issue=2
| year=2002
| pages=98–116
| doi=10.1002/ptr.1098
| pmid=11933110
| s2cid=46735024
}}.
External links
{{Commons category-inline}}
- The Society for Ecological Restoration and Indigenous Peoples' Restoration Network. [https://web.archive.org/web/20071010032919/http://www.ser.org/iprn/eitproject.asp EIT PROJECT SHOWCASE: The Edhkwehlynawd Botanical Refuge (EBR)]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20070813082338/http://www.india-environment-trust.org.uk/index.shtml India Environmental Trust]. 2005. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070525141343/http://www.india-environment-trust.org.uk/projects.shtml Supported Projects: Edhkwehlynawd Botanical Refuge (EBR) – Reforestation in a Tribal Area]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20070820100053/http://www.nciucn.nl/homepagenciucn.htm National Committee for the Netherlands for the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN-NL)]. 2006. [https://web.archive.org/web/20060811234517/http://www.nciucn.nl/english/funds/purchase/engels/projecten_eng.htm Funded Projects:], [https://web.archive.org/web/20060811234517/http://www.nciucn.nl/english/funds/purchase/engels/projecten_eng.htm#in06 India: Nilgiri Hills, NGO (EBR), 8 Hectares].
- [http://manitravel.wordpress.com/2008/11/24/15/ Toasting the Todas]{{snd}}2008. Travelogue with pictures of ceremonies.
- [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=tcx Ethnologue: Toda, A language of India]
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Toda People}}
Category:Scheduled Tribes of India
Category:Social groups of Tamil Nadu