Kurukh Banna
Kũṛux Bannā, or the Kurukh Banna or simply Banna Lipi is an alphasyllabic neography used for writing the Kurukh language of the Oraon people in eastern India. It was invented by Basudeo Ram Khalkho based on Brahmic writing systems, and was released in 1991. The Banna script is written left-to-right and is composed of 48 primary characters and 10 numerals.
Since its creation in 1991, the Banna script has been revised twice, first in 1995, and latest in 1998. The script is mostly used in northern Odisha, with some users also in Jharkhand and West Bengal. The Banna script is the medium of instruction in a few Kurukh language schools. A number of educational materials, newspapers, magazines and literary works have been published in the Banna script. Some Kisan people have also adopted the script.
The Banna script has a 24% resemblance with northern Indic scripts. It is one of two competing scripts used to write the Kurukh language, the other being the alphabetical Tolong Siki, another neography which developed independently.
Demands have been made for the Banna script along with the Kurukh language to be given constitutional recognition in India. The script has also been proposed for Unicode inclusion.
Etymology
The word bannā refers to the 'designs, figures and patterns' made on traditional clothes and tattooed on skin.History
The earliest documented version of the Banna script dates back to 1991 in an unpublished primer, the Kũṛux Banna Lipi Arā Bakka Gaṛhan Part-1, handwritten by Basudeo Ram Khalkho himself. The script was subsequently revised in 1995, and then latest in 1998, which remains the current version.1991–1994
The 1991 version, that is, the very first version of the Banna script, with the arrangement of letters called toṛan, introduced with 10 vowels along with the ṭippā sign and the selā sign. It also included a glottal stop sign called talā, a halant, and a visarga. This version had 31 consonants, and one ligature for tr . Notably, this version had only one nasal consonant, the na. Another notable difference from the current version is that vowels were called tāl toṛ and consonants were called rayā toṛ in this initial version.1995–1997
The Banna script was revised in 1995, reshaping a few vowels, a few vowel diacritics, the prolongation sign, the glottal stop sign and a few consonants. The prolongation sign was now called raṭā, and the glottal stop sign was now called phaṭā. This revision notably introduced the candoṭippā sign for vowel nasalization. The halant was re-positioned. New consonants were added, like the ṣa, and nasal consonants like ṅa, the ña, and the ṇa. A notable addition was the consonant xa introduced for the first time in this script with the 1995 revision. Two new ligatures were added for kṣa and gya . The number of consonants now totaled to 36. The earliest documented version of numerals in the Banna script is from a 1995 unpublished primer, the Kũṛux Lipi Ṭuṛnā Paṛhnā by Basudeo Ram Khalkho, which included the digits from 0 to 9.In October 1997, a two-day conference was organized by the Interstate Kurukh Samaj Vikas Parishad in Jamshedpur, where the inventors of both Kurukh scripts were present, Basudeo Ram Khalkho and Dr. Narayan Oraon. A major topic of discussion was on the language and its script. The conference was inconclusive on choosing one script out of the contesting two, and that task remains incomplete till date.
1998–present
The Banna script was last revised in 1998, and this version remains in use till date. A number of vowels, vowel diacritics, consonants were reshaped. Numerals too were reshaped for compatibility with seven-segment displays. The ṭippā sign was re-positioned. The visarga sign was removed. Notably, a nukta sign was introduced in this version. The prolongation sign was renamed back to selā, and the glottal stop sign has since been called heckā. With the 1998 revision, vowels are called sarah toṛ and consonants are called harah toṛ.In October 2012, the Banna script was consecrated with rituals at the Adi Dharam Parha Manda at Balijori, Rourkela. On the same occasion, the Kurukh Bhasha Vikas Parishad was established, which pledged to promote and develop the Kurukh language and the Banna script.
In 2016–19, the Kurukh Banna script was digitized by Shyam Murmu, who also designed multiple fonts for it. In 2023 and 2024, proposals were made to the Unicode Consortium for encoding the script.
In recent years, tribal organizations like the All India Kurukh Parha Yubak Sangh in Rourkela have been demanding official recognition of the Kurukh language in Banna script in the Indian constitution's eighth schedule.
Letters
The Banna script follows the arrangement order of most Brāhmic scripts, arranging its letters based on phonetic characteristics like the manner and place of articulation. This arrangement is called the toṛan.Vowels
The vowels are called sarah toṛ. There are 12 independent vowel characters with 11 diacritics:- The vowel does not have a diacritic, since all consonants have a as an inherent vowel.
- The character is a representation of the ṭippā sign. Like the Anusvara, it is used to represent nasal consonants.
- The character is a representation of the candoṭippā sign used for vowel nasalization.
- The selā sign is used to elongate short vowels, particularly the vowels and .
- The heckā sign is used to represent the glottal stop sound.
- The halant sign is used to mute the inherent vowel of consonants.
Consonants
The consonants are called harah toṛ and have an inherent vowel a. There are 36 consonant characters, which are arranged so:- Apart from the above 36 consonant chracters, there are 3 consonant ligatures:
- * kṣa or khya.
- * tra.
- * jña or gya.
- The consonants śa, ṣa, kṣa / khya, tra and jña / gya are foreign sounds.
- The Banna script also has an ewā̃ sign used to modify certain consonants for foreign sounds. For example, ka, ga, ja, and pha can be modified into qa, ġa, za, and fa respectively.
Diacritics
The table below shows the consonant ka with combined with diacritics and their transliteration. Vowels in their independent form on the top and in their corresponding diacritic combined with the consonant on the bottom.In the absence of any diacritic affixed, the consonant takes the form of being inherently combined with the vowel a.
Numerals
The numbers, called gan or ganatī, are:| nidī | ond | ẽṛ | mūnd | nāx | pañce | soy | say | āx | nay |
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |