Kunbi

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Kunbis: 1916

This article was written in 1916 when conditions were different. Even in
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From The Tribes And Castes Of The Central Provinces Of India

By R. V. Russell

Of The Indian Civil Service

Superintendent Of Ethnography, Central Provinces

Assisted By Rai Bahadur Hira Lal, Extra Assistant Commissioner

Macmillan And Co., Limited, London, 1916.

NOTE 1: The 'Central Provinces' have since been renamed Madhya Pradesh.

NOTE 2: While reading please keep in mind that all articles in this series have been scanned from the original book. Therefore, footnotes have got inserted into the main text of the article, interrupting the flow. Readers who spot these footnotes gone astray might like to shift them to their correct place.

The Kunbis in 1916

The great agricultural caste of the Maratha country. In the Central Provinces and Berar the Kunbis numbered nearly 1,400,000 persons in 1911 ; they belong to the Nagpur, Chanda, Bhandara, Wardha, Nimar and Betul Districts of the Central Provinces. In Berar their strength was 800,000, or nearly a third of the total popula- tion. Here they form the principal cultivating class over the whole area except in the jungles of the north and south, but muster most strongly in the Buldana District to the west, where in some taluks nearly half the population


belongs to the Kunbi caste. In the combined Province they are the most numerous caste except the Gonds. The name has various forms in Hombay, beinc; Kunbi or Kulambi in the Dcccan, Kulwadi in the south Konkan, Kanbi in Gujarat, and Kulbi in l^elgaum. In Sanskrit inscriptions it is given as Kutumbika (householder), and hence it has been derived from kutmnba^ a family. A chronicle of the eleventh century quoted by Forbes speaks of the Kutumbiks or cultivators of the grams or small villages.^ Another writer describing the early Rajput dynasties says : " " The villagers were Koutombiks (householders) or husbandmen (Karshuks) ; the village headmen were Putkeels (patels)."

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Another suggested derivation is from a Dravidian root kiil^ a husbandman or labourer ; while that favoured by the caste and their neighbours is from kun, a root, or kan^ grain, and bif seed ; but this is too ingenious to be probable. It is stated that the Kunbis entered Khandesh from 2. Settie- Gujarat in the eleventh century, being forced to leave |he"centrai Gujarat by the encroachments of Rajput tribes, driven Provinces. south before the early Muhammadan invaders of northern India.^ From Khandesh they probably spread into Berar and the adjoining Nagpur and Wardha Districts. It seems probable that their first settlement in Nagpur and Wardha took place not later than the fourteenth century, because during the subsequent period of Gond rule we find the offices of Deshmukh and Deshpandia in existence in this area.

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The Deshmukh was the manager or headman of a circle of villages and was responsible for apportioning and collecting the land revenue, while the Deshpandia was a head patwari or accountant. The Deshmukhs were usually the leading Kunbis, and the titles are still borne by many families in Wardha and Nagpur. These offices "* belong to the Maratha country, and it seems necessary to suppose that their intro- duction into Wardha and Berar dates from a period at least as early as the fourteenth century, when these territories were included in the dominions of the l^ahmani kings of Bijapur. A subsequent large influx of Kunbis into Wardha ^ Rdsmdia, i. p. 100. '^ Bombay Gazetteer, vol. i. part ii. - Ibidem, p. 241. p. 34. ^ Khandesh Gazetteer, p. 62. VOL. IV C castes.


and Nagpur took place in the eighteenth century with the conquest of Raghuji Bhonsla and the establishment of the Maratha kingdom of Nagpur. Traces of these separate immigrations survive in the subdivisions of the caste, which will now be mentioned. 3. Sub- The internal structure of the Kunbi caste in the Central Provinces shows that it is a mixed occupational body recruited from different classes of the population. The Jhare or jungly ^ Kunbis are the oldest immigrants and have no doubt an admixture of Gond blood. They do not break their earthen vessels after a death in the house. With them may be classed the Manwa Kunbis of the Nagpur District ; these appear to be a group recruited from the Manas, a primitive tribe who were dominant in Chanda perhaps even before the advent of the Gonds. The Manwa Kunbi women wear their cloths drawn up so as to expose the thigh like the Gonds, and have some other primitive practices.

They do not employ Brahmans at their marriages, but consult a Mahar Mohturia or soothsayer to fix the date of the ceremony. Other Kunbis will not eat with the Manwas, and the latter retaliate in the usual manner by refusing to accept food from them ; and say that they are superior to other Kunbis because they always use brass vessels for cooking and not earthen ones. Among the other subcastes in the Central Provinces are the Khaire, who take their name from the khair" or catechu tree, presumably because they formerly prepared catechu ; this is a regular occupa- tion of the forest tribes, with whom it may be supposed that the Khaire have some affinity. The Dhanoje are those who took to the occupation of tending dhaii ^ or small stock, and they are probably an offshoot of the Dhangar or shepherd caste whose name is similarly derived. Like the Dhangar women they wear cocoanut-shell bangles, and the Manwa

Kunbis also do this ; these bangles are not broken when

a child is born, and hence the Dhanojes and Manwas are I looked down on by the other subcastes, who refuse to remove their leaf-plates after a feast.

The name of the ' VromJiJidr, a tree or shrub. ^ Dhan properly means wealth, cj. the two meanings of tlie word stock ^ Acacia catechu. in English.

Khedule subcaste may be derived from kheda a village, while another version given by Mr. Kitts ' is that it signifies ' A beardless )outh.' The highest subcaste in the Central Provinces are the Tirole or Tilole, who now claim to be Rajputs. They say that their ancestors came from Thcrol in Rajputfma, and, taking to agriculture, gradually became merged with the Kunbis. Another more probable deriva- tion of the name is from the /// or sesamum plant.

The families who held the hereditary office of Dcshmukh, which conferred a considerable local position, were usually members of the Tirole subcaste, and they have now developed into a sort of aristocratic branch of the caste, and marry among themselves when matches can be arranged. They do not allow the remarriage of widows nor permit their women to accompany the wedding procession. The Wandhekars are another group which also includes some Deshmukh families, and ranks next to the Tiroles in position. Mr. Kitts re- cords a large number of subcastes in Berar.^ Among them are some groups from northern India, as the Hindustani, Pardesi, Dholewar, Jaiswar and Singrore ; these are prob- ably Kurmis who have settled in Eerar and become amalgamated with the Kunbis.

Similarly the Tailanges and Munurwars appear to be an offshoot of the great Kapu caste of cultivators in the Telugu country. The Wanjari subcaste is a fairly large one and almost certainly repre- sents a branch of the Banjara caste of carriers, who have taken to agriculture and been promoted into the Kunbi community. The Lonhare take their name from Lonar Mehkar, the well-known bitter lake of the Buldana District, whose salt they may formerly have refined.

The Ghatole are those who dwelt above the ghats or passes of the Saihadri range to the south of the Berar plain. The Baone are an important subcaste both in Berar and the Central Provinces, and take their name from the phrase Bawan Berar,^ a term applied to the province by the Mughals because it paid fifty-two lakhs of revenue, as against only eight lakhs realised from the adjoining Jhadi or hill country in the Central Provinces. In Chhindwara is found a small local ^ Berar Census Re/iort {i^Zi), \)S.ra. ' Ibidem. 180. 3 JBdwan = Mly-iwo. cultivatin status,

subcaste called Gadhao because they formerly kept donkeys, though they no longer do so ; they are looked down on by the others who will not even take water from their hands. In Nimar is a group of Gujarati Kunbis who are considered to have been originally Gujars/ Their local subdivisions are Leve and Karwa and many of them are also known as Dalia, because they made the ddl or pulse of Burhanpur, which had a great reputation under native rule. It is said that it was formerly despatched daily to Sindhia's kitchen.


4- The It appears then that a Kunbi has in the past been synonymous with a cultivator, and that large groups from other castes have taken to agriculture, have been admitted into the community and usually obtained a rise in rank. In many villages Kunbis are the only ryots, while below them are the village menials and artisans, several of whom perform functions at weddings or on other occasions denot- ing their recognition of the Kunbi as their master or employer ; and beneath these again are the impure Mahars or labourers. Thus at a Kunbi betrothal the services of the barber and washerman must be requisitioned ; the barber washes the feet of the boy and girl and places vermilion on the foreheads of the guests.

The washerman spreads a sheet on the ground on which the boy and girl sit. At the end of the ceremony the barber and washerman take the bride and bridegroom on their shoulders and dance to music in the marriage-shed ; for this they receive small presents. After a death has occurred at a Kunbi's house the impurity is not removed until the barber and washer- man have eaten in it. At a Kunbi's wedding the Gurao or village priest brings the leafy branches of five trees, the mango, j'dinun," wnar^ and two others and deposits them at Maroti's temple, whence they are removed by the parents of the bride. Before a wedding again a Kunbi bride must go to the potter's house and be seated on his wheel while it is turned round seven times for good luck.


At seed-time and harvest all the village menials go to the cultivator's field and present him with a specimen of their wares or make obeisance to him, receiving in return a small present of ' Bombay Gazetteer, Hindus of ^ Eug'em'a jai/ibolatia. Gujarat, p. 490, App. B, Gujar. •' Ficiis glomcrata.

grain. This state of things seems to represent the primitive form of Hindu society from which the present widely ramified system of castes may have expanded, and even now the outHnes of the original structure may be discernible under all subsequent accretions. Each subcaste has a number of exogamous septs or clans s- Exo- which serve as a table of affinities in regulating marriage, septs." The vernacular term for these is kul. Some of the septs are named after natural objects or animals, others from titles or nicknames borne by the reputed founder of the group, or from some other caste to which he may have belonged, while others again are derived from the names of villages which maybe taken to have been the original home of the sept or clan. The following are some septs of the Tirole subcaste : Kole, jackal; V\^nkhede, a village; Kadu, bitter; Jagthap, famous; Kadam, atree; Meghe, a cloud; Lohekari, a worker in iron; Ughde,a child who has been exposed at birth ; Shinde, a palm- tree ; Hagre, one who suffers from diarrhoea ; Aglawe, an incendiary; Kalamkar, a writer; Wani (Bania), a caste; Sutar, a carpenter, and so on.

A few of the groups of the Baone subcaste are :—Kantode, one with a torn ear ; Dokarmare, a killer of pigs ; Lute, a plunderer ; Titarmare, a pigeon-killer ; and of the Khedule : Patre, a leaf-plate ; Ghoremare, one who killed a horse ; Bagmare, a tiger-slayer ; Gadhe, a donkey ; Burade, one of the Burud or Basor caste ; Naktode, one with a broken nose, and so on. Each subcaste has a number of septs, a total of 66 being recorded for the Tiroles alone. The names of the septs confirm the hypothesis arrived at from a scrutiny of the subcastes that the Kunbis are largely recruited from the pre-Aryan or aboriginal tribes. Con- clusions as iio the origin of the caste can better be made in its home in Bombay, but it may be noted that in Canara, according to the accomplished author of A Naturalist on the Prowl} the Kunbi is quite a primitive forest-dweller, who only a few years back lived by scattering his seed on patches of land burnt clear of vegetation, collecting myrobalans and other fruits, and snaring and trapping animals exactly like the Gonds and Baigas of the Central Provinces.

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Similarly in Nasik it is stated that a large proportion of the Kunbi ' See the article entitled 'An Anthropoid.'

6. Restric- tions on marriage of relatives. caste are probably derived from the primitive tribes.^ Yet in the cultivated plains which he has so largely occupied, he is reckoned the equal in rank of the Kurmi and other culti- vating castes of Hindustan, who in theory at any rate are of Aryan origin and of so high a grade of social purity that Brahmans will take water from them. The only reasonable explanation of this rise in status appears to be that the Kunbi has taken possession of the land and has obtained the rank which from time immemorial belongs to the hereditary cultivator as a member and citizen of the village community.

It is interesting to note that the Wanjari Kunbis of Berar, who, being as already seen Banjaras, are of Rajput descent at any rate, now strenuously disclaim all connection with the Banjara caste and regard their reception into the Kunbi community as a gain in status. At the same time the refusal of the Maratha Brahmans to take water to drink from Kunbis may perhaps have been due to the recognition of their non- Aryan origin. Most of the Kunbis also eat fowls, which the cultivating castes of northern India would not usually do. A man is forbidden to marry within his own sept or kid, or in that of his mother or either of his grandmothers. He may marry his wife's younger sister but not her elder sister.

Alliances between first and second cousins are also prohibited except that a sister's son may be married to a brother's daughter. Such marriages are also favoured by the Maratha Brahmans and other castes, and the suitability of the match is expressed in the saying Ato ghari bhdsi sun, or 'At a sister's house her brother's daughter is a daughter-in-law.' The sister claims it as a right and not unfrequently there are quarrels if the brother decides to give his daughter to some- body else, while the general feeling is so strongly in favour of these marriages that the caste committee sometimes imposes a fine on fathers who wish to break through the rule. The fact that in this single case the marriage of near relatives is not only permitted but considered almost as an obligation, while in all other instances it is strictly prohibited, probably points to the conclusion that the custom is a survival of the matriarchate, when a brother's property would pass to his sister's son. Under such a law of inheritance


he would naturally desire that his heir should be united to his own daughter, and this union might gradually become customary and at length almost obligatory. The custom in this case may survive when the reasons which justified it have entirely vanished. And while formerly it was the brother who would have had reason to desire the match for his daughter, it is now the sister who insists on it for her son, the explanation being that among the Kunbis as with other agricultural castes, to whom a wife's labour is a valuable asset, girls are expensive and a considerable price has to be paid for a bride.

Girls are usually married between the ages of five and 7- eleven and boys between ten and twenty. The Kunbis still and think it a mark of social distinction to have their daughters marriage. married as young as possible. The recognised bride-price is about twenty rupees, but much larger sums are often paid. The boy's father goes in search of a girl to be married to his son, and when the bride-price has been settled and the match arranged the ceremony of Mangni or betrothal takes place.

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In the first place the boy's father proceeds to his future daughter-in-law's house, where he washes her feet, smears her forehead with red powder and gives her a present of a rupee and some sweetmeats. All the party then eat together. This is followed by a visit of the girl's father to the boy's house where a similar ceremony is enacted and the boy is presented with a cocoanut, 2. pagri and cloth, and a silver or gold ring. Again the boy's relatives go to the girl's house and give her more valuable presents of jewellery and clothing. A Brahman is afterwards consulted to fix the date of the marriage, but the poorer Kunbis dispense with his services as he charges two or three rupees.

Prior to the ceremony the bodies of the bride and bridegroom are well massaged with vegetable oil and turmeric in their respective houses, partly with a view to enhance their beauty and also perhaps to protect them during the trying period of the ceremony when maleficent spirits are particularly on the alert. The marriage-shed is made of eleven poles festooned with leaves, and inside it are placed two posts of the sdleJi {Bosivcllia serratd) or tniiar {Ficus gloinerata) tree, one longer than the other, to represent the bride and bridegroom.

Two jars

filled with water are set near the posts, and a small earthen platform called baola is made. The bridegroom wears a yellow or white dress, and has a triangular frame of bamboo covered with tinsel over his forehead, which is known as bdsmg and is a substitute for the maur or marriage-crown of the Hindustani castes. Over his shoulder he carries a pick- axe as the representative implement of husbandry with one or two wheaten cakes tied to it. This is placed on the top of the marriage -shed and at the end of the five days' ceremonies the members of the families eat the dried cakes with milk, no outsider being allowed to participate.

The bardt or wedding procession sets out for the bride's village, the women of the bridegroom's family accompanying it except among the Tirole Kunbis, who forbid the practice in order to demonstrate their higher social position. It is received on the border of the girl's village by her father and his friends and relatives, and conducted to the janwdsa or temporary lodging prepared for it, with the exception of the bridegroom, who is left alone before the shrine of Maroti or Hanuman. The bridegroom's father goes to the marriage-shed where he washes the bride's feet and gives her another present of clothes, and her relatives then proceed to Maroti's temple where they worship and make offerings, and return bringing the bridegroom with them. As he arrives at the marriage pavilion he touches it with a stick, on which the bride's brother who is seated above the shed pours down some water and is given a present of money by the bridegroom.

The bridegroom's feet are then washed by his father-in-law and he is given a yellow cloth which he wears. The couple are made to stand on two wooden planks opposite each other with a curtain between them, the bridegroom facing east and the bride west, holding some Akshata or rice covered with saffron in their hands. As the sun sets the officiating Brahman gets on to the roof of the house and repeats the marriage texts from there. At his signal the couple throw the rice over each other, the curtain between them is withdrawn, and they change their seats. The assembled party applaud and the marriage proper is over. The Brahman marks their foreheads with rice and turmeric and presses them together. He then seats them on the earthen platform or baola^ and ties their

clothes together, this being known as the Brahma Ganthi or Brahman's knot.

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The wedding usually takes place on the day after the arrival of the marriage procession and another two days are consumed in feasting and worshipping the deities. When the bride and bridegroom return home after the wedding one of the party waves a pot of water round their heads and throws it away at a little distance on the ground, and after this some grain in the same manner. This is a provision of food and drink to any evil spirits who may be hovering round the couple, so that they may stop to consume it and refrain from entering the house. The ex- penses of the bride's family may vary from Rs. 60 to Rs. 100 and those of the bridegroom's from Rs. i 60 to Rs. 600.

A wedding carried out on a lavish scale by a well-to-do man is known as Lrd Biah or a red marriage, but when the parties are poor the expenses are curtailed and it is then called Safed Biah or a white marriage. In this case the bridegroom's mother does not accompany the wedding procession and the proceedings last only two days. The bride goes back with the wedding procession for a few days to her husband's house and then returns home. When she arrives at maturity her parents give a feast to the caste and send her to her husband's house, this occasion being known as Bolvan (the calling). The Karwa Kunbis of Nimar have a peculiar rule for the celebration of marriages.

They have a gum or priest in Gujarat who sends them a notice once in every ten or twelve years, and in this year only marriages can be performed. It is called Singliast ki sal and is the year in which the planet Guru (Jupiter) comes into conjunction with the constellation Sinh (Leo). But the Karwas themselves think that there is a large temple in Gujarat with a locked door to which there is no key. But once in ten or twelve years the door unlocks of itself, and in that year their marriages are celebrated. A certain day is fixed and all the weddings are held on it together. On this occasion children from infants in arms to ten or twelve years are married, and if a match cannot be arranged for them they will have to wait another ten or twelve years. A girl child who is born on the day fixed for weddings may, however, be married twelve days afterwards, the twelfth night being called Mando Rat, and on this

occasion any other weddings which may have been unavoid- ably postponed owing to a death or illness in the families may also be completed. The rule affords a loophole of escape for the victims of any such contretemps and also insures that every girl shall be married before she is fully twelve years old. Rather than not marry their daughter in the Singhast ki sal before she is twelve the parents will accept any bridegroom, even though he be very poor or younger than the bride. This is the same year in which the celebration of marriages is forbidden among the Hindus generally.

The other Kunbis have the general Hindu rule that weddings are forbidden during the four months from the I ith Asarh Sudi (June) to the i ith Kartik Sudi (October). This is the period of the rains, when the crops are growing and the gods are said to go to sleep, and it is observed more or less as a time of abstinence and fasting. The Hindus should properly abstain from eating sugarcane, brinjals, onions, garlic and other vegetables for the whole four months. On the 1 2th of Kartik the marriage of Tulsi or the basil plant with the Saligram or ammonite representing Vishnu is performed and all these vegetables are offered to her and afterwards generally consumed.

Two days afterwards, be- ginning from the 14th of Kartik, comes the Diwali festival. In Betiil the bridal couple are seated in the centre of a square made of four plough yokes, while a leaf of the pipal tree and a piece of turmeric are tied by a string round both their wrists. The untying of the string by the local Brahman constitutes the essential and binding portion of the marriage. Among the Lonhare subcaste a curious ceremony is per- formed after the wedding. A swing is made, and a round pestle, which is supposed to represent a child, is placed on it and swung to and fro. It is then taken off and placed in the lap of the bride, and the effect of performing this symbolical ceremony is supposed to be that she will soon become a mother.

8. Poly- Polygamy is permitted but rarely practised, a second wife dirorce" being only taken if the first be childless or of bad character, or destitute of attractions. Divorce is allowed, but in some localities at any rate a divorced woman cannot marry again unless she is permitted to do so in writing by her first

husband. If a girl be seduced before marriage a fine is imposed on both parties and they are readmitted to social intercourse, but are not married to each other. Curiously enough, in the Tirole and Wandhekar, the highest sub- castes, the keeping of a woman is not an offence entailing temporary exclusion from caste, whereas among the lower subcastes it is.^ The Kunbis permit the remarriage of widows, with the 9- widow- exception of the Deshmukh families of the Tirole subcaste "^^'"^s^- who have forbidden it.

If a woman's husband dies she returns to her father's house and he arranges her second marriage, which is called choli-patal, or giving her new clothes. He takes a price for her which may vary from twenty-five to five hundred rupees according to the age and attractions of the woman. A widow may marry any one outside the family of her deceased husband, but she may not marry his younger brother. This union, which among the Hindustani castes is looked upon as most suitable if not obligatory, is strictly forbidden among the Maratha castes, the reason assigned being that a wife stands in the position of a mother to her husband's younger brothers. The contrast is curious.

The ceremony of widow-marriage is largely governed by the idea of escaping or placating the wrath of the first husband's ghost, and also of its being something to be ashamed of and contrary to orthodox Hinduism. It always takes place in the dark fortnight of the month and always at night. Sometimes no women are present, and if any do attend they must be widows, as it would be the worst of omens for a married woman or unmarried girl to witness the ceremony. This, it is thought, would lead to her shortly becoming a widow herself. The bridegroom goes to the widow's house with his male friends and two wooden seats are set side by side. On one of these a betel- nut is placed which represents the deceased husband of the widow.

The new bridegroom advances with a small wooden sword, touches the nut with its tip, and then kicks it off the seat with his right toe. The barber picks up the nut and burns it. This is supposed to lay the deceased husband's spirit and prevent his interference with the new union. 1 This is the rule in the Nagpur District.

The bridegroom then takes the seat from which the nut has been displaced and the woman sits on the other side to his left. He puts a necklace of beads round her neck and the couple leave the house in a stealthy fashion and go to the husband's village. It is considered unlucky to see them as they go away because the second husband is regarded in the light of a robber. Sometimes they stop by a stream on the way home, and, taking off the woman's clothes and bangles, bury them by the side of the stream. An exorcist may also be called in, who will confine the late husband's spirit in a horn by putting in some grains of wheat, and after sealing up the horn deposit it with the clothes.

When a widower or widow marries a second time and is afterwards attacked by illness, it is ascribed to the illwill of their former partner's spirit. The metal image of the first husband or wife is then made and worn as an amulet on the arm or round the neck. A bachelor who wishes to marry a widow must first go through a mock ceremony with an dkra or swallow-wort plant, as the widow-marriage is not considered a real one, and it is inauspicious for any one to die without having been properly married once.

A similar ceremony must be gone through when a man is married for the third time, as it is held that if he marries a woman for the third time he will quickly die. The dkra or swallow-wort {Calotropis gigajited) is a very common plant growing on waste land with mauve or purple flowers. When cut or broken a copious milky juice exudes from the stem, and in some places parents are said to poison children whom they do not desire to keep alive by rubbing this on their lips. 10. Cus- During her monthly impurity a woman stays apart and birth ' may not cook for herself nor touch anybody nor sleep on a bed made of cotton thread. As soon as she is in this condition she will untie the cotton threads confining her hair and throw them away, letting her hair hang down. This is because they have become impure.

But if there is no other woman in the house and she must continue to do the household work herself, she does not throw them away until the last day.^ Sin^ilarly she must not sleep on

a cotton sheet or mattress during this time because she would defile it, but she may sleep on a woollen blanket as wool is a holy material and is not defiled. At the end of the period she proceeds to a stream and purifies herself by bathing and washing her head with earth. When a woman is with child for the first time her women friends come and give her new green clothes and bangles in the seventh month ; they then put her into a swing and sing songs. While she is pregnant- she is made to work in the house so as not to be inactive. After the birth of a child the mother remains impure for twelve days.

A woman of the Mang or Mahar caste acts as midwife, and always breaks her bangles and puts on new ones after she has assisted at a birth. If delivery is prolonged the woman is given hot water and sugar or camphor wrapped in a betel-leaf, or they put a few grains of gram into her hand and then someone takes and feeds them to a mare, as it is thought that the woman's pregnancy has been prolonged by her having walked behind the tethering-ropes of a mare, which is twelve months in foal. Or she is given water to drink in which a Sulaimani onyx or a rupee of Akbar's time has been washed ; in the former case the idea is perhaps that a passage will be made for the child like the hole through the bead, while the virtue of the rupee probably consists in its being a silver coin and having the image or device of a powerful king like Akbar. Or it may be thought that as the coin has passed from hand to hand for so long, it will facilitate the passage of the child from the womb.

A pregnant woman must not look on a dead body or her child may be still- born, and she must not see an eclipse or the child may be born maimed. Some believe that if a child is born during an eclipse it will suffer from lung-disease ; so they make a silver model of the moon while the eclipse lasts and hang it round the child's neck as a charm. Sometimes when delivery is delayed they take a folded flower and place it in a pot of water and believe that as its petals unfold so the womb will be opened and the child born ; or they seat the woman on a wooden bench and pour oil on her head, her forehead being afterwards rubbed with it in the belief that as the oil falls so the child will be born. If a child is a long time before

learning to speak they give it leaves of the plpal tree to eat, because the leaves of this tree make a noise by rustling in the wind ; or a root which is very light in weight, because they think that the tongue is heavy and the quality of lightness will thus be communicated to it.

Or the mother, when she has kneaded dough and washed her hands afterwards, will pour a drop or two of the water down the child's throat. And the water which made her hands clean and smooth will similarly clear the child's throat of the obstruction which prevented it from speaking. If a child's neck is weak and its head rolls about they make it look at a crow perching on the house and think this will make its neck strong like the crow's. If he cannot walk they make a little triangle on wheels with a pole called gJmrghiiri, and make him walk holding on to the pole. The first teeth of the child are thrown on to the roof of the house, because the rats, who have especially good and sharp teeth, live there, and it is hoped that the child's second teeth may grow like theirs.

A few grains of rice are also thrown so that the teeth may be hard and pointed like the rice ; the same word, kani, being used for the end of a grain of rice and the tip of a tooth. Or the teeth are placed under a water-pot in the hope that the child's second teeth may grow as fast as the grass does under water-pots. If a child is lean some people take it to a place where asses have lain down and rolled in ashes ; they roll the child in the ashes similarly and believe that it will get fat like the asses are. Or they may lay the child in a pigsty with the same idea. People who want to injure a child get hold of its coat and lay it out in the sun to dry, in the belief that the child's body will dry up in a similar manner.

In order to avert the evil eye they burn some turmeric and juari flour and hold the newly -born child in the smoke. It is also branded on the stomach with a burning piece of turmeric, perhaps to keep off cold. For the first day or two after birth a child is given cow's milk mixed with water or honey and a little castor oil, and after this it is suckled by the mother. But if she is unable to nourish it a wet-nurse is called in, who may be a woman of low caste or even a Muhammadan. The mother is given no

regular food for the first two days, but only some sugar and spices. Until the child is six months old its head and body arc oiled every second or third day and the body is well hand -rubbed and bathed. The rubbing is meant to make the limbs supple and the oil to render the child less susceptible to cold. If a child when sitting soon after birth looks down through its legs they think it is looking for its companions whom it has left behind and that more children will be born. It is considered a bad sign if a child bites its upper teeth on its underlip ; this is thought to prognosticate illness and the child is prevented from doing so as far as possible. On the sixth day after birth they believe that Chhathi n. Sixth- or Satwai Devi, the Sixth-day Goddess, comes at midnight ^"-eifth- and writes on the child's forehead its fate in life, which day cere- writing, it is said, may be seen on a man's skull when the flesh has come off it after death.

On this night the women of the family stay awake all night singing songs and eating sweetmeats. A picture of the goddess is drawn with turmeric and vermilion over the mother's bed. The door of the birth-room is left open, and at midnight she comes. Sometimes a Sunar is employed to make a small image of Chhathi Devi, for which he is paid Rs. 1-4, and it is hung round the child's neck. On this day the mother is given to eat all kinds of grain, and among flesh-eating castes the soup of fish and meat, because it is thought that every kind of food which the mother eats this day will be easily digested by the child throughout its life.

On this day the mother is given a second bath, the first being on the day of the birth, and she must not bathe in between. Sometimes after child- birth a woman buys several bottles of liquor and has a bath in it ; the stimulating effect of the spirit is supposed to remedy the distension of the body caused by the birth. If the child is a boy it is named on the twelfth and if a girl on the thirteenth day. On the twelfth day the mother's bangles are thrown away and new ones put on. The Kunbis are very kind to their children, and never harsh or quick-tempered, but this may perhaps be partly due to their constitutional lethargy. They seldom refuse a child anything, but taking advantage of its innocence will by dissimulation make it

forget what it wanted. The time arrives when this course of conduct is useless, and then the child learns to mistrust the word of its parents. Minute quantities of opium are generally administered to children as a narcotic. 12. Devices If a woman is barren and has no children one of the °'".P™" remedies prescribed by the Sarodis or wandering soothsayers children, is that she should set fire to somebody's house, going alone and at night to perform the deed. So long as some small part of the house is burnt it does not matter if the fire be extinguished, but the woman should not give the alarm her- self It is supposed that the spirit of some insect which is burnt will enter her womb and be born as a child. Perhaps she sets fire to someone else's house so as to obtain the spirit of one of the family's dead children, which may be supposed to have entered the insects dwelling on the house. Some years ago at Bhandak in Chanda complaints were made of houses being set on fire.

The police officer ^ sent to investigate found that other small fires continued to occur. He searched the roofs of the houses, and on two or three found little smouldering balls of rolled-up cloth. Knowing of the superstition he called all the childless married women of the place together and admonished them severely, and the fires stopped. On another occasion the same officer's wife was ill, and his little son, having fever, was sent daily to the dispensary for medicine in charge of a maid. One morning he noticed on one of the soles of the boy's feet a stain of the juice of the bhilawa'^ or- marking- nut tree, which raises blisters on the skin. On looking at the other foot he found six similar marks, and on inquiry he learned that these were made by a childless woman in the expectation that the boy would soon die and be born again as her child.

The boy suffered no harm, but his mother, being in bad health, nearly died of shock on learning of the magic practised against her son. Another device is to make a pradakshmia or pilgrimage round a pipal tree, going naked at midnight after worship- ping Maroti or Hanuman, and holding a necklace of iulsi beads in the hand. The pTpal is of course a sacred tree, and is the abode of Brahma, the original creator of the world. 1 Circle Inspector Ganesh Prasad, ^ Semicarpus anacardium .

Brahma has no consort, and it is believed that while all other trees are both male and female the pipal is only male, and is capable of impregnating a woman and rendering her fertile. A variation of this belief is that pIpal trees are inhabited by the spirits of unmarried Brahman boys, and hence a woman sometimes takes a piece of new thread and winds it round the tree, perhaps with the idea of investing the spirit of the boy with the sacred thread. She will then walk round the tree as a symbol of the wedding ceremony of walking round the sacred post, and hopes that the boy, being thus brought to man's estate and married, will cause her to bear a son. But modest women do not go naked round the tree.

The Amawas or New Moon day, if it falls on a Monday, is specially observed by married women. On this day they will walk 1 08 times round a pIpal tree, and then give 108 mangoes or other fruits to a Brahman, choosing a different fruit every time. The number 108 means a hundred and a little more to show there is no stint, ' Full measure and flow- ing over,' like the customary present of Rs. 1-4 instead of a rupee. This is also no doubt a birth-charm, fruit being given so that the woman may become fruitful. Or a childless woman will pray to Hanuman or Mahabir.

Every morning she will go to his shrine with an offering of fruit or flowers, and every evening will set a lamp burning there ; and morning and evening, prostrating herself, she makes her continuous prayer to the god : ' (9/z, Mahabir, Mahdrdj ! hamko ek batcha do, sirf ek batcha do! ^ Then, after many days, Mahabir, as might be anticipated, appears to her in a dream and promises her a child. It does not seem that they believe that Mahabir himself directly renders the woman fertile, because similar prayers are made to the River Nerbudda, a goddess. But perhaps he, being the god of strength, lends virile power to her husband. Another prescription is to go to the burying- ground, and, after worshipping it, to take some of the bone- ash of a burnt corpse and wear this wrapped up in an amulet on the body.

Occasionally, if a woman can get no children she will go to the father of a large family and let him beget a child upon her, with or without the connivance of her husband. But only the more immodest women do this. Or ' 'Oh, Lord Mahabir, give nie a child, only one child." VOL. IV D charms.

she cuts a piece off the breast-cloth of a woman who has children, and, after burning incense on it, wears it as an amulet. For a stronger charm she will take a piece of such a woman's cloth and a lock of her hair and some earth which her feet have pressed and bury these in a pot before Devi's shrine, sometimes fashioning an image of the woman out of them. Then, as they rot away, the child-bearing power of the fertile woman will be transferred to her. If a woman's first children have died and she wishes to preserve a later one, she sometimes weighs the child against sugar or copper and dis- tributes the amount in charity. Or she gives the child a bad name, such as Dagharia (a stone), Kachria (sweepings), Ukandia (a dunghill).

13. Love If a woman's husband is not in love with her, a prescrip- tion of a Mohani or love-charm given by the wise women is that she should kill an owl and serve some of its flesh to her husband as a charm. " It has not occurred," Mr. Kipling writes, " to the oriental jester to speak of a boiled owl in con- nection with intoxication, but when a husband is abjectly submissive to his wife her friends say that she has given him boiled owl's flesh to eat." ^ If a man is in love with some woman and wishes to kindle a similar sentiment in her the following method is given : On a Saturday night he should go to a graveyard and call out, ' I am giving a dinner to- morrow night, and I invite you all to attend.' Then on the Sunday night he takes cocoanuts, sweetmeats, liquor and flowers to the cemetery and sets them all out, and all the spirits or Shaitans come and partake. The host chooses a particularly big Shaitan and calls to him to come near and says to him, ' Will you go with me and do what I ask you.

' If the spirit assents he follows the man home. Next night the man again offers cocoanuts and incense to the Shaitan, whom he can see by night but not by day, and tells him to go to the woman's house and call her. Then the spirit goes and troubles her heart, so that she falls in love with the man and has no rest till she goes to him. If the man afterwards gets tired of her he will again secretly worship and call up the Shaitan and order him to turn the woman's inclination ' Beast and Man in Iiid/'a, j). 44. Hindus do say, 'Drunk as an owl' But, according to the same writer, tlic and also ' Stupid as an owl.'

away. Another method is to fetch a skull from a graveyard and go to a banyan tree at midnight. There, divesting him- self of his clothes, the operator partially cooks some rice in the skull, and then throws it against the tree ; he gathers all the grains that stick to the trunk in one box and those that fall to the ground in another box, and the first rice given to the woman to eat will turn her inclination towards him, while the second will turn it away from him. This is a sympathetic charm, the rice which sticks to the tree having the property of attracting the woman. The Kunbis either bury or burn the dead.

In Berar 14. Dis- sepulture is the more common method of disposal, perhaps in [j^g^^ead imitation of the Muhammadans. Here the village has usually a field set apart for the disposal of corpses, which is known as Smashan. Hindus fill up the earth practically level with the ground after burial and erect no monument, so that after a few years another corpse can be buried in the same place. When a Kunbi dies the body is washed in warm water and placed on a bier made of bamboos, with a network of san- hemp.^ Ordinary rope must not be used. The mourners then take it to the grave, scattering almonds, sandalwood, dates, betel-leaf and small coins as they go.

These are picked up by the menial Mahars or labourers. Halfway to the grave the corpse is set down and the bearers change their positions, those behind going in front. Here a little wheat and pulse which have been tied in the cloth covering the corpse are left by the way. On the journey to the grave the body is covered with a new unwashed cloth. The grave is dug three or four feet deep, and the corpse is buried naked, lying on its back with the head to the south. After the burial one of the mourners is sent to get an earthen pot from the Kumhar ; this is filled with water at a river or stream, and a small piece is broken out of it with a stone ; one of the mourners then takes the pot and walks round the corpse with it, dropping a stream of water all the way. Having done this, he throws the pot behind him over his shoulder without looking round, and then all the mourners go home without looking behind them. The stone with which the hole has been made in the earthen pot is held to represent ^ Crotalaria juncea.


the spiiit of the deceased. It is placed under a tree or -on the bank of a stream, and for ten days the mourners come and offer it pindas or balls of rice, one ball being offered on the first day, two on the second, and so on, up to ten on the tenth. On this last day a little mound of earth is made, which is considered to represent Mahadeo. Four miniature flags are planted round, and three cakes of rice are laid on it ; and all the mourners sit round the mound until a crow comes and eats some of the cake. Then they say that the dead man's spirit has been freed from troubling about his household and mundane affairs and has departed to the other world. But if no real crow comes to eat the cake, they make a representation of one out of the sacred kusha grass, and touch the cake with it and consider that a crow has eaten it.

After this the mourners go to a stream and put a little cow's urine on their bodies, and dip ten times in the water or throw it over them. The officiating Brahman sprinkles them with holy water in which he has dipped the toe of his right foot, and they present to the Brahman the vessels in which the funeral cakes have been cooked and the clothes which the chief mourner has worn for ten days. On coming home they also give him a stick, umbrella, shoes, a bed and anything else which they think the dead man will want in the next world. On the thirteenth day they feed the caste-fellows and the head of the caste ties a new pagri on the chief mourner's head backside foremost ; and the chief mourner breaking an areca-nut on the threshold places it in his mouth and spits it out of the door, signifying the final ejectment of the deceased's spirit from the house. Finally, the chief mourner goes to worship at Maroti's shrine, and the household resumes its ordinary life.

The different rela- tives of the deceased man usually invite the bereaved family to their house for a day and give them a feast, and if they have many relations this may go on for a considerable time. The complete procedure as detailed above is observed only in the case of the head of the household, and for less im- portant members is considerably abbreviated. The position of chief mourner is occupied by a man's eldest son, or in the absence of sons by his younger brother, or failing him by the eldest son of an elder brother, or failing male relations

by the widow. The chief mourner is considered to have a special claim to the property. He has the whole of his head and face shaved, and the hair is tied up in a corner of the grave-cloth. If the widow is chief mourner a small lock of her hair is cut off and tied up in the cloth. When the corpse is being carried out for burial the widow breaks her viangal- sutravi or marriage necklace, and wipes off the kunku or ver- milion from her forehead.

This necklace consists of a string of black glass beads with a piece of gold, and is always placed on the bride's neck at the wedding. The widow does not break her glass bangles at all, but on the eleventh day changes them for new ones. The period of mourning for adults of the family is ten 15. Moum- days, and for children three, while in the case of distant '"^' relatives it is sufficient to take a bath as a mark of respect for them. The male mourners shave their heads, the walls of the house are whitewashed and the floor spread with cow- dung. The chief mourner avoids social intercourse and abstains from ordinary work and from all kinds of amuse- ments. He debars himself from such luxuries as betel-leaf and from visiting his wife. Oblations are offered to the dead on the third day of the light fortnight of Baisakh (June) and on the last day of Bhadrapad (September). The Kunbi is a firm believer in the action of ghosts and spirits, and never omits the attentions due to his ancestors. On the appointed day he diligently calls on the crows, who represent the spirits of ancestors, to come and eat the food which he places ready for them ; and if no crow turns up, he is disturbed at having incurred the displeasure of the dead.

He changes the food and goes on calling until a crow comes, and then concludes that their previous failure to appear was due to the fact that his ancestors were not pleased with the kind of food he first offered. In future years, therefore, he changes it, and puts out that which was eaten, until a similar contretemps of the non-appearance of crows again occurs. The belief that the spirits of the dead pass into crows is no doubt connected with that of the crow's longevity. Many Hindus think that a crow lives a thousand years, and others that it never dies of disease, but only when killed by violence. Tennyson's ' many-wintered crow ' may indicate some similar

idea in Europe. Similarly if the Gonds find a crow's nest they give the nestlings to young children to eat, and think that this will make them long-lived. If a crow perches in the house when a woman's husband or other relative is away, she says, ' Fly away, crow ; fly away and I will feed you ' ; and if the crow then flies away she thinks that the absent one will return.

Here the idea is no doubt that if he had been killed his spirit might have come home in the shape of the crow perching on the house. If a married woman sees two crows breeding it is considered a very bad omen, the effect being that her husband will soon die. It is probably supposed that his spirit will pass into the young crow which is born as a result of the meeting which she has seen. Mr. A. K. Smith states that the omen applies to men also, and relates a story of a young advocate who saw two crows thus engaged on alighting from the train at some station.

In order to avert the consequences he ran to the telegraph office and sent messages to all his relatives and friends announcing his own death, the idea being that this fictitious death would fulfil the omen, and the real death would thus become unnecessary. In this case the belief would be that the man's own spirit would pass into the young crow. i6. Reii- The principal deities of the caste are Maroti or Hanu- ^'°"' man, Mahadeo or Siva, Devi, Satwai and Khandoba. Maroti is worshipped principally on Saturdays, so that he may counteract the evil influences exercised by the planet Saturn on that day. When a new village is founded Maroti must first be brought and placed in the village and worshipped, and after this houses are built.

The name Maroti is derived from Marut, the Vedic god of the wind, and he is considered to be the son of Vayu, the wind, and Anjini. Khandoba is an incarnation of Siva as a warrior, and is the favourite deity of the Marathas. Devi is usually venerated in her incarnation of Marhai Mata, the goddess of smallpox and cholera—the most dreaded scourges of the Hindu villager. They offer goats and fowls to Marhai Devi, cutting the throat of the animal and letting its blood drop over the stone, which represents the goddess ; after this they cut off a leg and hang it to the tree above her shrine, and eat the

remainder. Sometimes also they offer wooden images of human beings, which are buried before the shrine of the goddess and are obviously substitutes for a human sacrifice ; and the lower castes offer pigs. If a man dies of snake- bite they make a little silver image of a snake, and then kill a real snake, and make a platform outside the village and place the image on it, which is afterwards regularly wor- shipped as Nagoba Deo.

They may perhaps think that the spirit of the snake which is killed passes into the silver image. Somebody afterwards steals the image, but this does not matter. Similarly if a man is killed by a tiger he is deified and worshipped as Baghoba Deo, though they cannot kill a tiger as a preliminary. The Kunbis make images of their ancestors in silver or brass, and keep them in a basket with their other household deities. But when these get too numerous they take them on a pilgrimage to some sacred river and deposit them in it. A man who has lost both parents will invite some man and woman on Akshaya Tritiya,^ and call them by the names of his parents, and give them a feast.

Among the mythological stories known to the caste is one of some interest, explaining how the dark spots came on the face of the moon. They say that once all the gods were going to a dinner-party, each riding on his favourite animal or vdJian (conveyance). But the vdhan of Ganpati, the fat god with the head of an elephant, was a rat, and the rat naturally could not go as fast as the other animals, and as it was very far from being up to Ganpati's weight, it tripped and fell, and Ganpati came off. The moon was looking on, and laughed so much that Ganpati was enraged, and cursed it, saying, ' Thy face shall be black for laughing at me.'

Accordingly the moon turned quite black ; but the other gods interfered, and said that the curse was too hard, so Ganpati agreed that only a part of the moon's face should be blackened in revenge for the insult. This happened on the fourth day of the bright fortnight of Bhadon (September), and on that day it is said that nobody should look at the moon, as if he does, his reputation will probably be lowered by some false charge or ' The 3rd Baisakh (May) Siidi, the The name means, 'The day of immor- commencement of the agricultural year. tality.'

17. The Pola festival. Muham- madan tendencies of Berar Kunbis. libel being promulgated against him. As already stated, the Kunbi firmly believes in the influence exercised by spirits, and a proverb has it, ' Brahmans die of indigestion, Sunars from bile, and Kunbis from ghosts ' ; because the Brahman is alvi^ays feasted as an act of charity and given the best food, so that he over-eats himself, while the Sunar gets bilious from sitting all day before a furnace. When somebody falls ill his family get a Brahman's cast-off sacred thread, and folding it to hold a little lamp, will wave this to and fro. If it moves in a straight line they say that the patient is possessed by a spirit, but if in a circle that his illness is due to natural causes. In the former case they promise an offering to the spirit to induce it to depart from the patient.

The Brahmans, it is said, try to prevent the Kunbis from getting hold of their sacred threads, because they think that by waving the lamp in them, all the virtue which they have obtained by their repetitions of the Gayatri or sacred prayer is transferred to the sick Kunbi. They therefore tear up their cast-off threads or sew them into clothes. The principal festival of the Kunbis is the Pola, falling at about the middle of the rainy season, when they have a procession of plough-bullocks. An old bullock goes first, and on his horns is tied the vmk/iar, a wooden frame with pegs to which torches are affixed. They make a rope of mango-leaves stretched between two posts, and the viakJiar bullock is made to break this and stampede back to the village, followed by all the other cattle.

It is said that the makhar bullock will die within three years. Behind him come the bullocks of the proprietors and then those of the tenants in the order, not so much of their wealth, but of their standing in the village and of the traditional position held by their families. A Kunbi feels it very bitterly if he is not given what he considers to be his proper rank in this pro- cession. It has often been remarked that the feudal feeling of reverence for hereditary rights and position is as strong among the Maratha people as anywhere in the world. In Wardha and Berar the customs of the Kunbis show in several respects the influence of Islam, due no doubt to the long period of Muhammadan dominance in the country. To this may perhaps be attributed the prevalence of burial


of the dead instead of cremation, the more respectable method according to Hindu ideas. The Dhanoje Kunbis commonly revere Dawal Malik, a Muhammadan saint, whose tomb is at Uprai in Amraoti District. An iincs or fair is held here on Thursdays, the day commonly sacred to Muhammadan saints, and on this account the Kunbis will not be shaved on Thursdays. They also make vows of mendicancy at the Muharram festival, and go round begging for rice and pulse ; they give a little of what they obtain to Muhammadan beggars and eat the rest. At the Muharram they tie a red thread on their necks and dance round the aldwa, a small hole in which fire is kindled in front of the tdzias or tombs of Hussain.

At the Muharram ^ they also carry horseshoes of silver or gilt tinsel on the top of a stick decorated with peacock's feathers. The horseshoe is a model of that of the horse of Hussain. The men who carry these horseshoes are supposed to be possessed by the spirit of the saint, and people make prayers to them for anything they want. If one of the horseshoes is dropped the finder will keep it in his house, and next year if he feels that the spirit moves him will carry it himself. In Wardha the Kunbis worship Khwaja Sheikh Farld of Girar, and occasionally Sheikh Farld appears to a Kunbi in a dream and places him under a vow.

Then he and all his household make little imitation beggars' wallets of cloth and dye them with red ochre, and little hoes on the model of those which saises use to drag out horses' dung, this hoe being the badge of Sheikh Farld. Then they go round begging to all the houses in the village, saying, ' Dam^ Sahib, dam.' With the alms given them they make cakes of niallda, wheat, sugar and butter, and give them to the priest of the shrine. Sometimes Sheikh Farld tells the Kunbi in the dream that he must buy a goat of a certain Dhangar (shepherd), naming the price, while the Dhangar is similarly warned to sell it at the same price, and the goat is then purchased and sacrificed without any haggling. At the end of the sacrifice the priest releases the Kunbi from his vow, and he must then shave the whole of his head and distribute liquor to the caste-fellows in order to ' Furnished by Inspector Ganesh Prasad. 2 Dam : breath or life. and houses.


be received back into the community. The water of the well at Sheikh Farld's shrine at Girar is considered to preserve the crops against insects, and for this purpose it is carried to considerable distances to be sprinkled on them. 19. Villages An ordinary Kunbi village ^ contains between 70 and 80 houses or some 400 souls. The village generally lies on a slight eminence near a nullah or stream, and is often nicely planted with tamarind or pipal trees. The houses are now generally tiled for fear of fire, and their red roofs may be seen from a distance forming a little cluster on high- lying ground, an elevated site being selected so as to keep the roads fairly dry, as the surface tracks in black-soil country become almost impassable sloughs of mud as soon as the rains have broken.

The better houses stand round an old mud fort, a relic of the Pindari raids, when, on the first alarm of the approach of these marauding bands, the whole population hurried within its walls. The village proprietor's house is now often built inside the fort. It is an oblong building surrounded by a compound wall of unbaked bricks, and with a gateway through which a cart can drive. Adjoining the entrance on each side are rooms for the reception of guests, in which constables, chuprassies and others are lodged when they stay at night in the village.

Kothas or sheds for keeping cattle and grain stand against the walls, and the dwelling-house is at the back. Substantial tenants have a house like the proprietor's, of well- laid mud, whitewashed and with tiled roof ; but the ordinary cultivator's house is one-roomed, with an angan or small yard in front and a little space for a garden behind, in which vegetables are grown during the rains. The walls are of bamboo matting plastered over with mud. The married couples sleep inside, the room being partitioned off if there are two or more in the family, and the older persons sleep in the verandahs.

In the middle of the village by the biggest temple will be an old pipal tree, the trunk encircled by an earthen or stone platform, which answers to the village club. The respectable inhabitants will meet here while the lower classes go to the liquor-shop nearly every ' Tliese paragraphs are largely based on a description of a Wardha village by Mr. A. K. Smith, C.S.


night to smoke and chat. The blacksmith's and carpenter's shops are also places of common resort for the cultivators. Hither they wend in the morning and evening, often taking with them some implement which has to be mended, and stay to talk. The blacksmith in particular is said to be a great gossip, and will often waste much of his customer's time, plying him for news and retailing it, before he repairs and hands back the tool brought to him.

The village is sure to contain two or three little temples of Maroti or Mahadeo. The stones which do duty for the images are daily oiled with butter or ghl, and a miscellaneous store of offerings will accumulate round the buildings. Outside the village will be a temple of Devi or Mata Mai (Smallpox Goddess) with a heap of little earthen horses and a string of hens' feet and feathers hung up on the wall. The little platforms which are the shrines of the other village gods will be found in the fields or near groves. In the evening the elders often meet at Maroti's temple and pay their respects to the deity, bowing or prostrating themselves before him.

A lamp before the temple is fed by contribu- tions of oil from the women, and is kept burning usually up to midnight. Once a year in the month of Shrawan (July) the villagers subscribe and have a feast, the Kunbis eating first and the menial and labouring castes after them. In this month also all the village deities are worshipped by the Joshi or priest and the villagers. In summer the cultivators usually live in their fields, where they erect temporary sheds of bamboo matting roofed with juari stalks. In these most of the household furniture is stored, while at a little distance in another funnel-shaped erection of bamboo matting is kept the owner's grain.

This system of camping out is mainly adopted for fear of fire in the village, when the cultivator's whole stock of grain and his household goods might be destroyed in a few minutes without possibility of saving them. The women stay in the village, and the men and boys go there for their midday and evening meals. Ordinary cultivators have earthen pots for cooking 20. Furni- purposes and brass ones for eating from, while the well-to- do have all their vessels of brass. The furniture consists of a few stools and cots. No Kunbi will lie on the ground,

probably because a dying man is always laid on the ground to breathe his last ; and so every one has a cot consisting of a wooden frame with a bed made of hempen string or of the root-fibres of the palds tree {Butea frondosd). These cots are always too short for a man to lie on them at full length, and are in consequence supremely uncomfortable. The reason may perhaps be found in the belief that a man should always lie on a bed a little shorter than himself so that his feet project over the end.

Because if the bed is longer than he is, it resembles a bier, and if he lies on a bier once he may soon die and lie on it a second time. For bathing they make a little enclosure in the compound with mats, and place two or three flat stones in it. Hot water is generally used and they rub the perspiration off their bodies with a flat stone called Jhavvar. Most Kunbis bathe daily. On days when they are shaved they plaster the head with soft black earth, and then wash it off and rub their bodies with a little linseed or sesamum oil, or, if they can afford it, with cocoanut oil. 21. Food. The Kunbis eat three times a day, at about eight in the morning, at midday and after dark. The morning meal is commonly eaten in the field and the two others at home. At midday the cultivator comes home from work, bathes and takes his meal, having a rest for about two hours in all.

After finishing work he again comes home and has his evening meal, and then, after a rest, at about ten o'clock he goes again to the fields, if the crops are on the ground, and sleeps on the mara or small elevated platform erected in the field to protect the grain from birds and wild animals

occasionally waking and emitting long-drawn howls or

pulling the strings which connect with clappers in various parts of the field. Thus for nearly eight months of the year the Kunbi sleeps in his fields, and only during the remaining period at home. Juari is the staple food of the caste, and is eaten both raw and cooked.

The raw pods of juari were the provision carried with them on their saddles by the marauding Maratha horsemen, and the description of Sivaji getting his sustenance from gnawing at one of these as he rode along is said to have struck fear into the heart of the Nizam. It is a common custom among well-to-do

tenants and proprietors to invite their friends to a picnic in the fields when the crop is ripe to eat hurda or the pods of juari roasted in hot ashes. For cooking purposes juari is ground in an ordinary handmill and then passed through a sieve, which separates the finer from the coarser particles. The finer flour is made into dough with hot water and baked into thick flat cJiapdtis or cakes, weighing more than half a pound each ; while the coarse flour is boiled in water like rice. The boiled pulse of arhar {Cajajius indicus) is commonly eaten with juari, and the chapdtis are either dipped into cold linseed oil or consumed dry. The same- ness of this diet is varied by a number of green vegetables, generally with very little savour to a European palate.

These are usually boiled and then mixed into a salad with linseed or sesam'um oil and flavoured with salt or powdered chillies, these last being the Kunbi's indispensable condiment. He is also very fond of onions and garlic, which are either chopped and boiled, or eaten raw. Butter-milk when avail- able is mixed with the boiled juari after it is cooked, while wheat and rice, butter and sugar are delicacies reserved for festivals. As a rule only water is drunk, but the caste ^ indulge in country liquor on festive occasions. Tobacco is commonly chewed after each meal or smoked in leaf cigarettes, or in chilains or clay pipe-bowls without a stem. Men also take snuff, and a few women chew tobacco and take snuff, though they do not smoke. It is noticeable that different subdivisions of the caste will commonly take food from each other in Berar, whereas in the Central Provinces they refuse to do so.

The more liberal usage in Berar is possibly another case of Muhammadan influence. Small children eat with their father and brothers, but the women always wait on the men, and take their own food afterwards. Among the Dalia Kunbis of Nimar, however, women eat before men at caste feasts in opposition to the usual practice. It is stated in explanation that on one occasion when the men had finished their meal first and gone home, the women on returning were waylaid in the dark and robbed of their ornaments. And hence it was decided that they should always eat first and go home before nightfall. The Kunbi is fairly liberal in the matter of food. He will cat the flesh and oma ments.

of goats, sheep and deer, all kinds of fish and fowls, and will drink liquor. In Hoshangabad and Nimar the higher subcastes abstain from flesh and wine. The caste will take food cooked without water from Brahmans, Banias and Sunars, and that mixed with water only from Maratha Brahmans. All castes except Maratha Brahmans will take water from the hands of a Kunbi. 22. Clothes The dress of the ordinary cultivator is most common- place and consists only of a loin-cloth, another cloth thrown over the shoulders and upper part of the body, which except for this is often bare, and a third rough cloth wound loosely round the head.

All these, originally white, soon assume a very dingy hue. There is thus no colour in a man's every- day attire, but the gala dress for holidays consists of a red pagri or turban, a black, coloured or white coat, and a white loin-cloth with red silk borders if he can afford it. The Kunbi is seldom or never seen with his head bare ; this being considered a bad omen because every one bares his head when a death occurs. Women wear lugras, or a single long cloth of red, blue or black cotton, and under this the choli^ or small breast-cloth. They have one silk-bordered cloth for special occasions. A woman having a husband alive must not wear a white cloth with no colour in it, as this is the dress of widows.

A white cloth with a coloured border may be worn. The men generally wear shoes which are open at the back of the heel, and clatter as they move along. Women do not, as a rule, wear shoes unless these are necessary for field work, or if they go out just after their confinement. But they have now begun to do so in towns. Women have the usual collection of ornaments on all parts of the person. The head ornaments should be of gold when this metal can be afforded.

On the finger they have a miniature mirror set in a ring ; as a rule not more than one ring is worn, so that the hands may be free for work. For a similar reason glass bangles, being fragile, are worn only on the left wrist and metal ones on the right. But the Dhanoje Kunbis, as already stated, have cocoanut shell bangles on both wrists. They smear a mark of red powder on the forehead or have a spangle there. Girls are generally tattooed in childhood when the skin is tender, and the


operation is consequently less painful. They usually have a small crescent and circle between the brows, small circles or dots on each temple and on the nose, cheeks and chin, and five small marks on the back of the hands to represent flies. Some of the Deshmukh families have now adopted the sacred thread ; they also put caste marks on the fore- head, and wear the shape of pagri or turban formerly dis- tinctive of Maratha Brahmans. The Kunbi has the stolidity, conservative instincts, 23. The dulness and patience of the typical agriculturist. Sir R. cultivator. Craddock describes him as follows : ^ " Of the purely agri- cultural classes the Kunbis claim first notice. They are divided into several sections or classes, and are of Maratha origin, the Jhari Kunbis (the Kunbis of the wild country) being the oldest settlers, and the Deshkar (the Kunbis from the Deccan) the most recent.

The Kunbi is certainly a most plodding, patient mortal, with a cat-like affection for his land, and the proprietary and cultivating communities, of both of which Kunbis are the most numerous members, are unlikely to fail so long as he keeps these characteristics. Some of the more intelligent and affluent of the caste, who have risen to be among the most prosperous members of the community, are as shrewd men of business in their way as any section of the people, though lacking in education. I remember one of these, a member of the Local Board, who believed that the land revenue of the country was remitted to England annually to form part of the private purse of the Queen Empress.

But of the general body of the Kunbi caste it is true to say that in the matter of enterprise, capacity to hold their own with the moneylender, determina- tion to improve their standard of comfort, or their style of agriculture, they lag far behind such cultivating classes as the Kirar, the Raghvi and the Lodhi. While, however, the Kunbi yields to these classes in some of the more showy attributes which lead to success in life, he is much their superior in endurance under adversity, he is more law- abiding, and he commands, both by reason of his character and his caste, greater social respect among the people at large. The wealthy Kunbi proprietor is occasionally rather ^ Nagpur Settlement Report, para. 45.


spoilt by good fortune, or, if he continues a keen culti- vator, is apt . to be too fond of land-grabbing. But these are the exceptional cases, and there is generally no such pleasing spectacle as that afforded by a village in which the cultivators and the proprietors are all Kunbis living in harmony together." The feeling ^ of the Kunbi towards agricultural improvements has hitherto probably been some- thing the same as that of the Sussex farmer who said, * Our old land, it likes our old ploughs ' to the agent who was vainly trying to demonstrate to him the advantages of the modern two-horse iron plough over ^the great wooden local tool ; and the emblem ascribed to old Sussex—a pig couchant with the motto ' I wun't be druv '—would suit the Kunbi equally well. But the Kunbi, too, though he could not express it, knows something of the pleasure of the simple outdoor life, the fresh smell of the soil after rain, the joy of the yearly miracle when the earth is again carpeted with green from the bursting into life of the seed which he has sown, and the pleasure of watching the harvest of his labours come to fruition.

He, too, as has been seen, feels some- thing corresponding to " That inarticulate love of the English farmer for his land, his mute enjoyment of the furrow crumbling from the ploughshare or the elastic tread of his best pastures under his heel, his ever-fresh satisfaction at the sight of the bullocks stretching themselves as they rise from the soft grass." Some characteristics of the Maratha people are noticed by Sir R. Jenkins as follows : " " The most remarkable feature perhaps in the character of the Marathas of all descriptions is the little regard they pay to show or cere- mony in the common intercourse of life.

A peasant or mechanic of the lowest order, appearing before his superiors, will sit down of his own accord, tell his story without cere- mony, and converse more like an equal than an inferior ; and if he has a petition he talks in a loud and boisterous tone and fearlessly sets forth his claims. Both the peasantry and the better classes are often coarse and indelicate in their 1 The references to English farming in this paragraph are taken from an article in the Saturday Review of 22n(l August 1908. - Report on the Territories of the Rc'ija of Nfigpur. -r:^- J'-:- %.- / V V V

language, and many of the proverbs, which they are fond of introducing into conversation, are extremely gross. In general the Marathas, and particularly the cultivators, are not possessed of much activity or energy of character, but they have quick perception of their own interest, though their ignorance of writing and accounts often renders them the dupes of the artful Brahmans." " The Kunbi," Mr. Forbes remarks,' " though frequently all submission and prostration when he makes his appearance in a revenue office, is sturdy and bold enough among his own people.

Wq is fond of asserting his independence and the helpless- ness of others without his aid, on which subject he has several proverbs, as : ' Wherevqr it thunders there the Kunbi is a landholder,' and ' Tens of millions are dependent on the Kunbi, but the Kunbi depends on no man.' " This sense of his own importance, which has also been noticed among the Jats, may perhaps be ascribed to the Kunbi's ancient status as a free and full member of the village community. " The Kunbi and his bullocks are inseparable, and in speaking of the one it is difficult to dissociate the other.

His pride in these animals is excusable, for they are most admirably suited to the circumstances in which nature has placed them, and possess a very wide-extended fame. But the Kunbi frequently exhibits his fondness for them in the somewhat peculiar form of unmeasured abuse. * May the Kathis - seize you ! ' is his objurgation if in the peninsula of Surat

if in the Idar district or among the mountains it is there ' May the tiger kill you ! ' and all over Gujarat, ' May your master die ! ' However, he means by this the animal's former owner, not himself ; and when more than usually cautious he will word his chiding thus—' May the fellow that sold you to me perish.' " But now the Kathis raid no more and the tiger, though still taking good toll of cattle in the Central Provinces, is not the ever-present terror that once he was. But the bullock himself is no longer so sacro- sanct in the Kunbi's eyes, and cannot look forward with the •same certainty to an old age of idleness, thrisatened only by starvation in the hot weather or death by surfeit of the new A fiocbooting tribe who gave their name to Kalhiawar. VOL. IV E

moist grass in the rains ; and when therefore the Kunbi's patience is exhausted by these aggravating animals, his favourite threat at present is, ' I will sell you to the Kasais

(butchers) ; and not so very infrequently he ends by doing so. It may be noted that with the development of the cotton industry the Kunbi of Wardha is becoming much sharper and more capable of protecting his own interests, while with the assistance and teaching which he now receives from the Agricultural Department, a rapid and decided improvement is taking place in his skill as a cultivator.

The Kunbis’ self-view

SurfIndia

Varna: It is difficult classify Kunbis as per the Hindu caste system, because for the past many centuries they have been practicing occupations that can be a collective function of Vaishyas, Brahmins, Kshatriyas.

About Kunbis: Kunbis are basically patidars. They have taken to all types of professions in present times and have achieved high regards in diverse fields including agriculture, engineering, sports, defense, politics, medical professions, etc. This group has been making conscious efforts to maintain communal harmony within all religious groups and Hindu castes. Responsible group members have given protection to innocent regional Brahmins during the massacre resulted from assassination of Mahatma Gandhi. Many Sikhs were also given protection during the riots that occurred after the assassination of Indira Gandhi and in the recent times to regional Muslim community after Godhra Riots. In return this group has received enormous support from religious groups and all Hindu castes.

There is a great amount of confusion between words 'Kunbis' and 'Maratha-Kunbis' although surnames and social status may be same. Marathas as such a vast social class, it consists of royal clans and also farmers. Many Marathas have identified themselves as Kunbis, although some of them may belong to 96 clans of Marathas. Many Kunbis perform the Upanayana Samskara as per their family traditions. Maratha or Kunbis together constitute approximately 35% or one-third population of Maharashtra. Kunbi is a separate caste from Maratha caste.

Other Surnames

Adik, Aware, Bhalerao, Brahmankar, Bele, Bhagwat, Bhope, Chowdhary, Choudhari, Chavan, Dhone, Dange, Dongre, Dore, Desai, Dhanwate, Deshmukh, Deoskar, Deorkar, Dhamankar, Dhande,Dubey, Dhamakar, Dhadse, Geete, Gurve, Gaithonde, Gore,Gode, Gaikwad, Gedam, Gawande, Gurve, Jadhav, Junarkar, Jichkar, KhandarKadam, Kedar, Kale, Lunge, Lalke, Lambat, Misal, Mathankar, More, Mahajan, Manik, Mate, Navalkar, Naik, Nigam, Nikunj, Parimal Patel, Patil, Pawar, Pandey, Premkhede, Rode, Raut, Rane, Shinde, Sable, Sawant, Salve, Shinde, Taiwade, Thakur, Thakre, Taley, Tambe, Thape, Tope, Uparker, Wankhede, Watonde, Wagh.

It is quite common in the state of Maharashtra that these family names may be used by other castes.

Customs

Food Habits : Kunbis are basically vegetarian, although some sects have taken up non-vegetarian diet.

Marriage Preference : Prefer marriage within the community although inter-caste marriages are common between Kunbis and Marathis.

Famous Kunbis

Famous Saints from the community :

Saint Tukaram - Revered 17th century poet who greatly influenced Chatrapati Shiva ji Maharaj and Mahatma Gandhi.

Rashtra Sant Tukdoji Maharaj - Author of Gramgita he was honored with the title of Rashtrasant. He is also one of the founding Vice President of Vishwa Hindu Parishad.

Famous Personalities

Smita Patil - Bollywood actor and a Padmashree

Lalita Pawar - Bollywood actor know as the mother of all mother-in-laws in films

Usha Chavan - Bollywood Actor

Prabha Rau - Politician and former sports person

Pratibha Patil - First Woman Governor of Rajasthan; First Woman President of India

Dr CD Deshmukh - First Governor of RBI

S B Chavan - Former Union Minister

Dr Shrikant Jichkar - Member of Rajya Sabha

Yashwantrao Chavan - Chief Minister of Maharashtra

Sandeep Patil - Cricket Player

Kiran More - Cricket Player and Wicket Keeper

Ashok Desai - Former Attorney General of India, Padma Bushan awardee

Shivraj Patil - Union Home Minister, India

Sharad Pawar - Union Minister of Agriculture and Former CM of Maharashtra

Kunbi

(From People of India/ National Series Volume VIII. Readers who wish to share additional information/ photographs may please send them as messages to the Facebook community, Indpaedia.com. All information used will be gratefully acknowledged in your name.)

Groups/subgroups: Bawane, Khaire, Lunhare, Tirode [ Madhya Pradesh and/or Chhattisgarh]

  • Subcastes: Dalia, Dhanoje, Dholewar, Gadhao, Gujar

ati Kunbis, Jaiswar, Jhare, Karwa, Khaire, Khedule, Leve, Lonhare, Manwa Kunbis, Mehkar, Munurwars, Pardesi, Singrore, Tailanges, Tirole Wandhekars, Wanjari [Ru ssell & Hiralal] Titles: Amin, Desai, Patel [R.E. Enthoven]

  • Exogamous septs (kul): Aglawe, Bagmare, Burade, D

okarmare, Gadhe, Ghoremare, Hagre, Jagthap, Kadam, Kadu, Kalamkar, Kantode, Kole, Lohekari, Lute, Meghe, Nak tode, Patre, Shinde, Sutar, Titarmare, Ughde Wani ( Bania), Wankhede [Russell & Hiralal] Exogamous units/clans: Bhoyar, Bhusade, Bonde, Chou dhury, Choure, Ingle, Kapale, Karade, Raut, Thakre [Madhya Pradesh and/or Chhattisgarh] Dandalkar (Kale), Dingakar, Ghatole (Khandesh), Goi rekar, Irkolkar, Kajewkar, Kolakar, Kumarkar, Kumbhar, Kumgelkar, Loni, Madraj, Mainolkar, Mudekar, Nandkar, Nujekar, Panjna, Patankar Raikar, Sanwarkar, Tir odkar, Tirole, Turaikar, Vanjari, Volkar [R.E. Enthoven]

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