Basar is located at. It has an average elevation of 578 meters above mean sea level and has pleasantly cold weather.
Demographics
According to the 2001 India census, Basar has a population of 3834 Galo people. Males make up 56% of the population and females form 44%. Basar has a mean literacy rate of 72%, higher than the countrywide mean of 59.5%. 61% of the males and 39% of the females are literate. 16% of the population is made up of children less than 6 years of age. It has a population density of 11 person per km2. The staple crop of the Galo people of Basar is rice, maize in slash-and-burn agricultural practice. The plains of the Basar valley has wet rice cultivation. Oranges and pineapple have grown abundantly and kiwifruit and apple are tried in the higher ridges of the mountainous ranges. Basar is the original place of Riba, Basar, and Riram clans of Galo tribe and they live in over 65 hill villages, traditionally each keeping to itself under a selected chief styled Gaon Burra who moderates the village council, which acts even as the traditional court. The olden day councils consist of all the village elders and decisions were taken in a dere.
The language spoken by Galo people in Basar is GALO, which is related to the Chinese and Tibetan languages. The dress of the Galo people in Basaris worn by both sexes is self-woven beke tied around the bosom and gale wrapped around the body below the navel region to toes completely covering the lower portion in women. The men wear a self-woven sleeveless shirt called galuk which is covered by a raw silk cloth zera wrapped over the shoulder. The lower portion is covered by a loincloth called haabe which is passed in between the buttock, folded towards the pubis, and which hangs on a belt-like deerskin leather embedded with semiprecious stones and corals. The head is covered with a cap-like covering called bolup hand-crafted from cane, which acted as a helmet during olden warfighting. Tattooing in any form was not practiced in the Galo people of the Basar area. The economy of a family is measured on the possession of animals called "hobe" or mithun.
Festivals and dances
The mother of festival "Mopin," an agricultural festival performed before or after the sowing of seeds for bumper crops, is celebrated in Basar in wider ways. Popir song and dance of "Mopin" are performed during this festival. The BASCON festival is held annually in November, celebrating the tribal art and culture of the local Galo tribe.
Religion
The "Donyi-Polo" practice of the Galo people have the majority following, which involves the chanting of rhymes to appease the ancestors to invoke the blessings of the sun and the moon, where the priest called "Nyibu" plays a crucial role as an intermediary between the Donyi-polo and the people. Basar is yet to be circumscribed by any independent government media agency.