Kudmi Mahato

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Kudmi Mahato
Mahato, Kudmi
LanguagesNative language – Kudmali/Kurmali
Secondary language – Hindi, Odia, Bengali
CountryIndia, Nepal and Bangladesh
Populated statesJharkhand, Odisha, West Bengal, Assam, Nepal and Bangladesh
StatusOBC (in India)[1]

The Kudmi Mahato[note 1] are a tribal community in the states of Jharkhand, West Bengal and Odisha of India. They are primarily agriculturalist.[2][3]

Population

Census data for Kudmi in 1931[note 2]
Bengal Province[4]
Area Population
Burdwan 4161
Birbhum 499
Bankura 20564
Midnapore 85711
Hooghly 2835
Howrah 4348
24 Parganas 15444
Calcutta 9628
Nadia 3955
Murshidabad 1693
Jessore 546
Khulna 527
Rajshahi 6805
Dinajpur 7712
Jalpaiguri 1693
Darjiling 632
Rangpur 3692
Bogra 2894
Pabna 4228
Malda 6777
Dacca 1491
Mymensingh 4289
Faridpur 1941
Bakarganj 87
Tippera 483
Noakhali 78
Chittagong 463
Cooch Behar 1138
Tripura 338
Sikkim 20
Assam 22,304[5]
Bihar and Orissa Province[6]
Area Population
Patna 173,146
Gaya 42,459
Shahabad 59,040
Saran 108,512
Muzaffarpur 130,683
Darbhanga 67,295
Monghyr 58,891
Bhagalpur 35,645
Purnea 12,774
Santal Parganas 22,630
Hazaribagh 105,725
Ranchi 62,198
Palaman 5,985
Manbhum 323,068
Singbhum 22,463
Orissa States 95,422
Chota Nagpur States 25,807

Classification

Kudmi were classified as a Notified Tribe by the British Raj under the terms of the Indian Succession Act introduced in 1865 as they have customary rules of succession.[7][page needed] Kudmi of Chotanagpur are different from Kurmi of Gangetic plain.[8] According to Mahanta (2003) kudmi follow totemism which stamps them as Dravidian descent and resembles to Dravidian tribe around them according to book The Tribes and Castes of Bengal (1891) written by Herbert Hope Risley.[9][10][11][12] Subsequently, in 1913, they were classified as a Primitive tribe. Then they were omitted from the list of communities listed as tribes in the 1931 census.[13]

They were not in the list of Scheduled Tribes drawn up in 1950. They are included in the list of Other Backward Classes in the States of Jharkhand,[14] West Bengal[15] and Odisha.[16][17] In 2004, the Government of Jharkhand recommended that they should be listed as a Scheduled Tribe rather than Other Backward Class.[18] The Tribal Research Institute of Government of India recommended against this proposal, claiming they are a sub-caste of the Kunbi and thus different to tribal people.[19][20][21] Therefore, In 2015, the Government of India refused to approve the recommendation of Jharkhand government to list the Kudmi Mahato as Schedule Tribe.[21]

The language of Kudmi is Kudmali/Kurmali. But according to study, Kurmali language have vocabulary which is neither Dravidian nor Austro-asiatic. The Kudmi people once spoke a distinct language, neither Munda nor Dravidian but also not Indo-Aryan, and at some point switched to the regional Indo-Aryan lingua franca of that time, leaving a distinct substrate in their new language.[22][23]

In April 2023, a Kudmi organization of West Bengal and Jharkhand engaged in rail blockages and demanded Scheduled Tribe status,[24] a demand which was opposed by some scheduled tribes.[25][26]

Religion and culture

Social organisations of this tribal community demand religious code for their traditional religion Sarna.[27] During the 20th century, some Kudmis of Chhotanagpur underwent a social change of Kshatriyaization along with the other Kurmi of North India[28] and elevated their status as Kshatriya.[29][30]

Historically, the Kudmi Mahatos have been a noble class[31] who were landowning zamindars.[32][33][34] They exhibit upper-caste status in some villages[35][36] and performed priestly functions in the temples situated in western Rarh region.[37]

The traditional occupation of Kudmi is agriculture. Kudmi are divided into 81 clans or gushti including Keshriar, Hindoiar, Bagh Banuar, Naguar, Punoriar, Bangsoar, Sankhuar, Kanbindha, Katiar, Dumriar, Karuar etc.[21][38][39]

Bari Puja, Karam, Chait Parab, Jitiya, Bandna, Tusu Parab are the major festival of Kudmi. They worship Budha Baba in Madapthan and Garam at garamthan. Jhumair and Chhau are their folk dance.[40][41]

Roles in Indian's freedom struggle

The Kudmi Mahato community played a role in various rebellions in India's freedom struggle. From the Chuar Rebellion to the Quit India Movement, many Kudmi Mahatos were martyred. Raghunath Mahato was a notable leader of the Chuar Rebellion in India's freedom struggle against the British. The rebellion he waged against the British is known as the Chuar Rebellion. His Slogan "Apna Gaon, Apna Raaj; Dur Bhagao Bideshi Raaj".[42][43][44][45][46]

Buli Mahato was the hero martyr of Kol Rebellion and Bhumij Rebellion.[47][48][49][50] Then came the Neel Rebellion 1843-1848 led by Gopal Mahato. Chanku Mahato then led the Santhal Rebellion in Godda district.[51] Also in the Sepoy Mutiny eleven were hanged together with Sukdev Mahato. In addition, Kanka Mahato, Rajani Mahato, Suchand Mahato, Kalicharan Mahato, Gopinath Mahato, Kalia Mahato etc. led the Medi Movement of Orissa. After that, the Kudmis also actively participated in the non-cooperation movement. Five Kudmi Mahato youths were martyred in this movement. These are Gokul Mahato, Mohan Mahato, Sheetal Mahato, Sahadeva Mahato, Ganesh Mahato.[52][53] Many were also jailed. Girish Mahato, Nanku Chandra Mahato, Govinda Mahato, Dasharath Mahato, Chunaram Mahato, Mathan Mahato and others were imprisoned in Hazaribagh Jail during Mahatma Gandhi's civil disobedience movement. Padak Mahato was also imprisoned in Bhagalpur Jail. Sagar Mahato, Bhajahari Mahato, Bhim Mahato, Satyakinkar Mahato, Mohini Mahato were imprisoned for doing satyagraha in 1941. Then in 1942, Satyakinkar Mahato was imprisoned from Manbazar during the Quit India movement. Chunaram Mahato and Govinda Mahato were martyred during the siege of Manbazar police station in 1942. Among the women Bhavini Mahato played a prominent role. Jagadish Mahato of (Dhanbad-Parabasnia) also took an active part in the Quit India movement. Many others are also involved.[54][55][56][57][58]

Notable people

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Other names include Kurmi, Mahato
  2. ^ The 1931 census data for Kudmi (Mahato) is combined with Kurmi Kshatriya, Kurmi, Kumbi, Kunbi, Kurambi, Kurum, Kurumanik, all grouped under the term "Kurmi" due to phonetic similarities. However, the Kurmi (Mahato) are different from others and are inhabiting in a stretch from Manbhum to Medinipur. As author Lacey (1933), p. 293 noted that "It is not possible to give accurate statistics of the Kurmi Mahto community, but something over 660,000 “Kurmis” were enumerated on the Chota Nagpur plateau, and the overwhelming majority of these (about half of whom were found in Manbhum district) would undoubtedly be Kurmi Mahtos."

References

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  2. ^ O'Malley, Lewis Sydney Steward (2011). Bengal District Gazetteers: Sinhbhum, Saraikela and Kharsawan. Concept Publishing Company. ISBN 978-81-7268-215-6.
  3. ^ "Bandh in Jharkhand as Kurmi outfits seek inclusion in ST list". Indian express. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  4. ^ Porter, A. E. (1932). Bengal And Sikkim – Census Of India 1931. Vol. V. Part II, Tables. p. 234.
  5. ^ "Estimated Population by Castes, 5. Assam – Census 1951" (PDF). Office of the Registrar General, India. 1954. p. 14.
  6. ^ Lacey, W. G. (1932). Bihar and Orissa – Census Of India 1931. Vol. VII. Part II, Tables. p. 138.
  7. ^ "Inheritance Law of Kurmi Mahto of Chotanagpur and Orissa". The Tribes and castes of Bengal by Risley Herbert Hope.
  8. ^ Bera, Gautam Kumar (2008). The Unrest Axle: Ethno-social Movements in Eastern India. Mittal Publications. ISBN 978-81-8324-145-8.
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  15. ^ "List of Other Backward Classes in West Bengal". wbcbc.gov.in. Retrieved 10 April 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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  28. ^ Pinch; R., Wiliiam (1996). Peasants and monks in British India. Berkeley : University of California Press. p. 89. A striking feature of these peasant based social movements in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries is the quality of their leadership. A new educated elite, which had begun to penetrate the lower and middle rungs of government service, provided the organizational frame for the status claims among communities formerly identified as servile. This is most evident among Kurmis, the first peasant community to organize a campaign for Kshatriya identity. By the 1890s the Kurmi-Kshatriya movement was being coordinated on a broad, transregional level.
  29. ^ W.G., Lacey (1933). "Some Aspects Of The Census Operations Of 1931". archive.org. p. 126. Retrieved 10 April 2024. And there was much wonder in the mind of the non-Kurmis of Manbhum that Panchet raja, having come up from the ancient Kshatriya royal family of the district, accepts the Kurmis as Kurmi Kshatriyas.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  30. ^ W.G., Lacey (1933). "Some Aspects Of The Census Operations Of 1931". archive.org. p. 124. Retrieved 10 April 2024. There can be no question but that the Kurmi Mahtos are completely Hinduized and have been for many years. They are in general much better educated, much more prosperous and enterprising, than the other aboriginal tribes or the low-caste Hindus, and they have succeeded in retaining their self-respect in a degree which is uncommon among primitive tribes converted to Hinduism. It is doubtless this circumstance which is now leading them not only to identify themselves with a Hindu caste which happens to bear the same name but also to join with that caste in affirming their Kshatriya origin.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  31. ^ Dalton (1872). Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal. India. p. 318. Though the Kurmis include so many noble families, their social position in Bengal Proper is not high.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  32. ^ Mondal, Bikram (2021-09-07). Broken Palace: The Lost Majesty of Bengal. Notion Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-1-68554-408-9. Panchkote Raj, also known as Panchkot Zamindari or Kashipur Raj, was a family of Kudmi (Kurmi) community Zamindars who ruled in the western fringe areas of present-day West Bengal, India and some of the adjacent areas in present-day Jharkhand.
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