Minicoy and the Maldives are distant neighbors, united by ancestry and divided by history. Today, the 70 miles from the Maldives to Minicoy may seem further than the two thousand miles to Malaysia; but it was not always so.
To most Maldivians of the present generation Minicoy is an abstraction as far removed from reality as a fairy-tale kingdom. But to Maldivians of just a few hundred years back, Minicoy was very real �as much so as Addu, as seen in the old expression �Malik-Addu� that described the length of the territory. However, throughout known history, Minicoy remained a bone of contention between the Maldives and its neighbors. The once-there, once-here territory became finally there when British forces defeated the Arackal Kingdom (ruled by Ali Rajas) of Cannanore in 1783. As fate would have it, at that crucial point in history Minicoy was under the Ali Raja, and so it went under British suzerainty, becoming a directly ruled part of the British Empire in 1908.
Like two brothers separated after childhood, the Maldives Holidays and Minicoy shared a common ancestry, spoke the same language, believed the same religion, followed the same trades and sailed the same seas before they went their separate ways. Due to the closed nature of the two territories till recently, it is quite likely that they retain many of the original commonalties. This is more likely to be true of Minicoy that has remained in relative isolation up to the present. Minicoy therefore could be a mirror that reflects the Maldives of a bygone era.
Minicoy dhoni race Note the distinctive bow unique to the Minicoy-Maldive archipelago |
Bandodis were sea-worthy two-mast vessels about 70 tons in size. Local carpenters built them with native timbers such as aani, funa and bread-fruit.Manikfans owned the bandodis and operated them with the help of malmis andkhalasis.
The sailing season in Minicoy began in mid-August or early September and went up to early May, when the onset of the Monsoon was expected. Bandodisfirst sailed to Sri Lanka with fish and copra, taking about six to seven days to reach Colombo or Gally. From there they sailed eastwards with textiles reaching Nicobar in 12 to 13 days. While based in Nicobar they made several round trips to Burma carrying copra on the onward journey and rice on the return journey. Then they sailed to Calcutta with copra and shells. Finally thebandodis returned to Minicoy with rice and provisions taking about 25 days on the sea.
Bandodis also made shorter trips to the Indian mainland for provisions. Huvafenfushi Maldives But always, the malmis made sure that they returned home before the onset of monsoons, a powerful force that had continued to dominate their lives from time immemorial.
