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Dhimal

The Dhimal or Dhemal (Nepali: धिमाल) are an Kirati ethnic group residing in the eastern Terai of Nepal. They are a Sino-Tibetan-speaking ethnic group of the eastern Terai. They mainly reside in Morang and Jhapa districts of Nepal and Darjeeling district of West Bengal, India. They are respected as the "First Citizens" of Damak municipality.[4]

Dhimal
धिमाल
Total population
   Nepal 25,643 (2021)[1]
 India 900[2]
Languages
Dhimal, Nepali
Religion
Hinduism 56.1%, Kiratism 40.9%[3]
Related ethnic groups

Ethnicity and language edit

They are an indigenous group of Nepal and belong to Sino-Tibetan group. They are culturally close to Limbu and Koch of Terai and of the northern hills.[4][5]

Dhimals consider themselves of Kirati descent. They consider the Limbu, the Rai of the hills and the Mech, and Koch people of the tarai as their brethren.

According to Hodgson the Mech, Bodo, Koch and Dhimal tribes are of the same race; however, comparison of language does not support so close a connection, he added. He stated that "… but it is difficult to suppose the Bodo and Dhimal languages other than primitive". He also stated that the Dhimals are "… nomadic cultivators of wild. For ages transcending memory or tradition, they have passed beyond the savage or hunter state, and also beyond the herdsman's state, and have advanced to the third or agricultural grade of social progress, but so as to indicate a not entirely broken connection with the precedent condition of things … They never cultivate the same field beyond the second year, or remain in the same village beyond from four to six years". He again identified the barter system for the few things which they require and do not produce themselves.[5][6]

Language edit

Dhimal people speak Dhimal language which is part of the Sino-Tibetan family. According to the census of 2021 there are 20,583 speakers of Dhimal language.[7] It has it's won script called Dham script. There is an eastern and western dialect, which are separated by the Kankai River. It is also closely related to another aboriginal language of the Himalayas called Toto.[8]

Religion and culture edit

Their animistic religion is very close to the Kirant religion. They worship nature and other household gods. Hodgson identified their religion as the religion of nature, or rather, the natural religion of man have neither temple nor idol; their cultivation as shifting cultivation; and "this race assure him that they once had chiefs when they dwelt as a united people in Morang".[9][10]

The religion, as identified by Hodgson, is very different from Hinduism as they have neither temples nor idols. "Altogether, their religion belongs to the same primitive era as their habits and manners", Hodgson added.[11]

Geographic distribution edit

The Central Bureau of Statistics of Nepal classifies the Dhimal as a subgroup within the broader social group of Terai Janajati.[12] At the time of the 2011 Nepal census, 26,298 people (0.09% of the population of Nepal) were Dhimal. The frequency of Dhimals by province was as follows:

The frequency of Dhimals was higher than national average (0.09%) in the following districts:[13]

In India, they reside in 16 villages, namely Naxalbari and Hatighisha in Darjeeling district, West Bengal.

Occupation edit

Dhimals are cultivators, although the frequencies of labourers, including agricultural labourers or to some extent tea garden labourers, may not be overlooked. These days the Indian Dhimals are exclusively concentrated at Hatighisha and Maniram Gram Panchayat of Naxalbari Police Station under Darjeeling district of West Bengal, India. However, sporadic occurrences of Dhimal population may have seen outside the above-said areas but within Darjeeling district of West Bengal. Even this diminutive group sometimes misleads as vanishing races by some amateurs. Their counterpart of Nepal, with whom they have a marital relation and belongs to the same (biological) population, have better numerical strength, socio-economic and educational attainment of their own. The Dhimals of Nepal receive much importance in various writings of Nepali scholars. On the other hand, the Indian Dhimals have been neglected by the government and others in any field of development. Anthropological documents on the Indian Dhimal is yet to be received; some sporadic documents by amateurs and some field-based study by trained scholars in a part of Dhimal population may be available but all of them cover social-cultural-linguistics aspects only, and physical or demographic data on the entire population are literally absent.[14]

Dhimal women are good at weaving and have their unique dress among the ethnic peoples of Nepal.

Research edit

The first identified study on Dhimal of this region may be attributed to English administrators of British India. As per present knowledge the first report in the form of monograph on Dhimal was written by Brain Houghton Hodgson (1847) entitled "Essays the first on the Kocch, Bodo and Dhimal Tribes". The monograph dealt with the Vocabulary, Grammar and Location, Numbers, Creed, Customs, Condition and Physical and Moral Characteristics of the People. Later on Hodgson published the third part in 1849 in Journal of Asiatic Society, entitled "On the Origin, Location, Numbers, Creed, Customs, Characters and Condition of the Kocch, Bodo and Dhimal People, with a general description of the climate they dwelt in" (Hodgson 1849). Trubner and Co. in 1880 published the same original collection of 1847 in the book entitled "Miscellaneous Essays relating to Indian Subjects, Vol-I" (Hodgson 1880).

Hodgson enumerated the number of Dhimals between Konki and Dhorla as below 15,000. Hodgson stated that Dhimal "…do not now exceed 15,000 souls, are at present confined to that portion of Saul forest lying between the Konki and the Dharla or Torsha, mixed with the Bodo but in separate villages and without intermarriage".

Latham (1859) in ‘Descriptive Ethnology’ identified the place of Dhimals as unfavourable and full of malaria, though, he stated "…yet the Dhimal, the Bodo, and others thrive in it, love it, leave it with regret". He believes that Dhimals are separated from Bodos as language, pantheons, marriage ceremony, funerals even festivals of the two are very different.[15] Latham also identified Hodgson's work as "a model of an ethnological monograph". After that all writings are more or less influenced by and borrowed data from Hodgson's writings. Among them the writing of Edward Twite Dalton (1872) may be mentioned.

Dalton in his ‘Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal’ identified Dhimals as tribe of Assam valley, clubbed with the Kacharis or Bodo and Mech; and stated " Hodgson describes the Bodo and Dhimal tribe as of the same race, and there appears no reason for separating them in a work of this nature, as their customs, religion, etc. appear nearly identical".

W. W. Hunter (1876) in "Statistical Account of Bengal" stated that census report distinguishes between these peoples (Dhimals and Meches or Bodos), and returns the number of Dhimals at 873. Later on he wrote a brief note on Dhimal culture which are, as per Hunter, is a condensed form of Hodgson's work. Sannial (1880) when studied Dhimals found hunting and pastoralism as their main source of occupation. He also stated that the village was headed by a headman called ‘Mondal’ and magico-religious practices by Dhami, Deushi and Ojha.

Dhimal again finds their position in H. H. Risley's "The Tribes and Castes of Bengal" where Risley pointed out that "Dhimal, Dhemal, Maulik, a non-Aryan tribe of the Darjeeling and Nepal Terai …. belong to the same main stock with Kocch … rapidly losing their tribal identity by absorption into the large heterogeneous Rajbansi caste". He also pointed out a marked advanced direction towards Hinduism from nature worship. Risley opined that "they seem likely to disappear altogether as a separate tribe within the next generation" (Risley, 1891).

Bandyopadhyay (1895) in his Darjeeling Probasir Patra stated that the cultural aspects of Meches and Dhimals are more or less same, even the folklore, Bandyopadhyay collected, indicates the same origin of Dhimals with Koch and Meches.

O’Malley (1907) in his ‘District Gazetteers of Darjeeling’ classified Dhimals as non-Hinduized Koch or Rajbansi and identified their (Dhimal) habitat as "marshy tract, formerly covered by dense malarious jungle, in which aboriginal tribes of Meches, Dhimals and Koches burnt clearings and raised their scanty crops of rice and cotton on a system, if system it can be called, of nomadic husbandry".

Grierson (1926) in ‘Linguistic Survey of India’ classified Dhimal language as ‘Eastern Pronominalized group’ of ‘Pronominalized Himalayan Group’ under ‘Tibeto Himalaya Branch’ of ‘Tibeto-Burman subfamily’ which may be categorized under ‘Tibeto-Chinese group’. He also stated that "In the Pronominalized group the influence of the ancient Munda language is far more apparent". Endle (1911) placed Dhimals under Northern groups of Kachari family along with Kachari, Rabha, Mech, Koch and others.

Later on Das (1978) examined the same and opined the possibility of same ethnological relationship between these tribes. Deb Burman and Chaudhuri (1999) identified Dhimals as a backward community having tribal origin and "acceptance of Mallick or Maulik title as well as adoption of Hindu religious practices is the stereotype for not considering them tribe. But the strong argument in favour of noninclusion of the Dhimals in the list of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes of India could be their migration to the neighboring countries like Nepal and Bhutan at the time of enumeration", they added. Roy (1999) in his unpublished M.Phil. dissertation noted the prevalence of ‘barter system’ in Dhimal community of this region.

Some recent studies on vernacular language also exhibit the above stated characteristics, many of which are typical tribal characters of their own. Moitra (2004) identified a close affinity between Dhimal and Toto languages; he even calculated the separation of Toto from Dhimal, by grutochronological analysis, as 800-1200 AD. Royburman (1959) in his thesis on Toto also highlighted the same by stated "there is one variant of Toto myth of origin which refers to the Dhimals as the mother group. (Toto) assess the very close affinity exists between the language of the Totos and the Dhimal" but, he added, "as, however, I do not possess any scientifically assessed data, I do not propose to enter into the realm of social psychology". King (1994) after his linguistic survey opined that its (Dhimal) closest relative appears to be Toto (IIAS 2007).

Among Nepali scholars who have done ethnographical and social-cultural aspects on Nepali Dhimals the following names is of great important. Bista (1980) identified Dhimals as nomadic, practicing shifting cultivation until some times ago, they have traditional village councils with a headman called Deonia and the priest who presides over all of the religious function is called Dhami. Regmi (1991) identified a total of 13 exogamous patrilineal clans and 11 sub-clans within the population. Gautam and Thapa-Magar (1994) also classified Dhimals as Tribes in their work "Tribal Ethnography of Nepal". In a recent work Bisht and Bankoti (2004) also followed the same trend by placing Dhimals on "Encyclopedic Ethnography of the Himalayan Tribes". There is a continuous census enumeration on Dhimal population (or sometimes language spoken) up to 1951 except 1941. The 1872 census identified Dhimals as Aboriginal Tribe. The 1891 census headed by O’Donnell identified Dhimals as Forest and Hill Tribes as well as Agriculturalist by occupation. But next census headed by E. A. Gait classified Dhimals as Hindu by religion; even the census stated that they (Dhimals) often called themselves as Rajbansi.

The same trend was carried over by 1931 census headed by Porter. The 1961 census has lost Dhimal data but even it stated Dhimals as Aboriginal tribes as per 1872. After that no single census (1971, 1981, 1991, 2001) have been drawing any traces on Dhimal community or languages, though some very small population even with single household was being considered for the study Now, after a transitional non-recognition period by the Govt. they have been classified as Other Backward Class (OBC) of West Bengal. The history of study (or not to study) on Dhimals of India narrate the negligence for which the once non-Aryan tribe of British India having no reservation on any field, have to compete with others (the recognition as OBC is a recent one, though they are not satisfied with present status and demand the status of Scheduled Tribe instead of OBCs). Because of the uneven competitions with dominant next door neighbours and others in respect of nation, push them much behind whether in the field of education, occupation or sociocultural context as a whole. Very few of them (thirteen in number) have crossed the border of Secondary education, and two of them are graduates.

References edit

  1. ^ National Statistics Office (2021). National Population and Housing Census 2021, Caste/Ethnicity Report. Government of Nepal (Report).
  2. ^ Biswas, Subir (December 2008). "Demographic Profile and Population Dynamics of the Dhimals: A Forgotten Ethnic Group of North Bengal". The Oriental Anthropologist: A Bi-Annual International Journal of the Science of Man. 8 (1–2): 271–281. doi:10.1177/0976343020080119. S2CID 202926467.journals.sagepub.com
  3. ^ Central Bureau of Statistics (2014). Population monograph of Nepal (PDF) (Report). Vol. II. Government of Nepal.
  4. ^ a b Mahendra Ratna Multiple Campus for the partial fulfillment for the Master's Degree in Sociology. "LIFESTYLE CHANGE OF DHIMAL COMMUNITY" (PDF).
  5. ^ a b Hodgson, B.H. (1847). Miscellaneous Essays Relating to Indian Subjects, Vol.1. Printed by J. Thomas.
  6. ^ Som Bahadur Dhimal. "Brief Introduction of the Dhimal of Nepal".
  7. ^ "Population Monograph of Nepal Volume II (Social Demography)" (PDF).
  8. ^ "Dhimal alphabets, pronunciation and language". www.omniglot.com. Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  9. ^ "Dhimal community resumes Jatri festival". GorakhaPatra. Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  10. ^ Koirala, Santosh (20 May 2016). Changing Ways of Marrying: A study of the Dhimal Marriage Ritual of Damak, Nepal (Master thesis thesis). UiT Norges arktiske universitet.
  11. ^ "Janajatis of Nepal" (PDF).
  12. ^ Population Monograph of Nepal, Volume II [1]
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 March 2023. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  14. ^ Singh, Gurvinder (16 May 2023). "Bengal's dwindling Dhimal community battles odds". Village Square. Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  15. ^ Latham, Robert Gordon (1859). Descriptive ethnology, Volume 1. J. van Voorst.
  • Biswas, Subir 2008, Yogesh,Dhimal (addedon,August,29:primary source) The Dhimals –an oldest indigenous cast of Terai Region NEPAL since the very ancient time living in  the present Terai region of Eastern Nepal And a few migrated Dhimal people across the borders in West Bengal to Assam(Long ago) and there known as A Little Known Tribal Group of Sub-Himalayan West Bengal: Historical Perspectives, Stud Tribes Tribals, 6(2): 117-121 (2008)

Further reading edit

  • Bandyopadhyay Sekhar 2004. Dhimal. Kolkata: Centre for Folklore and Tribal Culture, Govt. of West Bengal.
  • Bandyopadhyay Tarapada 1895. Darjeeling Probasir Patra. In: K. Chaudhuri (Ed.): Derjellinger Itihas.2005.Kolkata: Dey's Publishing, pp. 141–170.
  • Bista Dor Bahadur 1980. People of Nepal. Kathmandu:Ratna Pustak Bhandar.
  • Chakladar Paritosh, Biswas Ratan 2004. Dhimal Bhasa.In: Ratan Biswas (Ed.): Uttar banger Bhasa: A Collection of Essays on the Languages of North The Government Census and gazetteers may Bengal. Kolkata: Baiwala, pp. 466–483.
  • Dalton Edward Twite 1872. Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal, Calcutta: Govt. Printing, Reprint. 1973.
  • Das ST 1978. The People of the Eastern Himalaya. New Delhi: Sagar Publication.
  • Deb Burman, Prasenjit and Buddhadeb Chaudhuri 1999.The Dhimals: A Little Known Tribal Community. Occasional Paper No. 9, Dr. Ambedkar Chair in Anthropology, Deptt. of Anthropology, Calcutta University.
  • Endle 1911. The Kacharis, cited on ST Das 1978. The People of the Eastern Himalaya. New Delhi: Sagar Publication.
  • Gautam Rajesh, Thapa-Magar Ashok K 1994. Tribal Ethnography of Nepal (vol-1). Delhi: Book Faith India.
  • Grierson George Abraham 1926. Linguistic Survey of India, Vol-III Tibeto-Burman Family, Part-I. Calcutta: Govt. of India, Central Publication Branch.
  • Hodgson Brian Houghton 1847. Essay the first on the Kocch, Bodo and Dhimal Tribes, Calcutta: Baptist Mission Press.
  • Hodgson Brian Houghton 1849. On the Origin, Location, Numbers, Creed, Customs, Characters and Condition of the Kocch, Bodo and Dhimal People with a General Description of the Climate they dwell in, Journal of the Asiatic Society, 18: 702- 747.
  • Hodgson Brian Houghton 1874. Essays on the Languages,Literature and Religion of Nepal and Tibet (Together with further papers on the Geography,Ethnology and Commerce of those Countries), Reprint, 1971, Varanasi: Bharat-Bharati.
  • Hodgson Brian Houghton 1880. Miscellaneous Essays relating to Indian Subjects, vol-II. London: Trubner and Co.
  • Hunter William Wilson 1876. Statistical Account of Bengal, Vol-X: District of Darjeeling, Jalpaiguri and State of Kuch Behar. London: Trubner and Co.
  • India Census 1881. Census of India, 1881. Statistics of Population, Vol-II, Calcutta: Govt. Printing Press.
  • India Census 1891. Census of India, 1891, Vol-V, The Lower Provinces of Bengal and their Feudatories. Calcutta: Bengal Secretariat Press.
  • India Census 1901. Census of India, 1901, Vol-VI A, The Lower Provinces of Bengal and their Feudatories.Calcutta: Bengal Secretariat Press.
  • India Census 1911. Census of India, 1911, Vol-V, Part- I, Calcutta: Bengal Secretariat Press.
  • India Census 1921. Census of India, 1921, Vol-V, Bengal,Part-II, Calcutta: Bengal Secretariat Press.
  • India Census 1931. Census of India, 1931, Vol-V, Bengal and Sikkim, Part-II. Calcutta: Central Publication Branch.
  • India Census 1941. Census of India, 1941, Vol-IV, Bengal. Delhi: Manager of Publication.
  • India Census 1951. Census of India, 1951, West Bengal District Handbook: Darjeeling. Alipore: W.B. Govt. Press.
  • International Institute of Asian Studies (IIAS) 2007.Dhimal, Retrieved August 18, 2007, from < http://www.iias.nl/himalaya/?q =dhimal>
  • King John Timothy 1994. Picking up where Hodgson left off: Further notes on Dhimal, Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 17(2): 121–132.
  • Latham RG 1859. Tribes and Races (vol-1). Reprint 1983, .Delhi: Cultural Publishing.
  • Moitra Mritunjoy 2001. Uttarbanger Biluptoprai Janojati: Dhimal. In: Ratan Biswas (Ed.): Uttarbanger Jati-O-Upojati. Calcutta: Punascho, pp. 237–278.
  • O’Malley LSS1907. Bengal District Gazetteers: Darjeeling. Reprint 1999. New Delhi: Logos Press.
  • Regmi Risikesh Raj 1991. The Dhimals: Miraculous Migrants of Himal (An Anthropological Study of a Nepalese Ethnic Group). Jaipur: Nirala Publication.
  • Risley Herbert Hope 1891. The Tribes and Castes of Bengal (vol-1). Reprint 1998. Calcutta: Firma KLM Pvt. Ltd.
  • Roy Ranjit 1999. The Dhimals-A Little Known Community of Sub-Himalayan Bengal (An Ethnographic Overview). M.Phil. Dissertation (Unpublished),Silliguri: Centre for Himalayan Studies, North Bengal University. *Royburman Bikram Keshari 1959. Dynamics of Persistence and Change of a Small Community: The Totos. Ph.D. Thesis (Unpublished), Calcutta: University of Calcutta.
  • Sannial Hari Mohon 1880. History of Darjeeling in Bengali. In: Kamal Choudhuri (Ed.): Darjeeliner Itihas. 2005. Kolkata: Dey's Publishing, pp. 13–98

dhimal, village, nepal, nepal, dhemal, nepali, kirati, ethnic, group, residing, eastern, terai, nepal, they, sino, tibetan, speaking, ethnic, group, eastern, terai, they, mainly, reside, morang, jhapa, districts, nepal, darjeeling, district, west, bengal, indi. For the village in Nepal see Dhimal Nepal The Dhimal or Dhemal Nepali ध म ल are an Kirati ethnic group residing in the eastern Terai of Nepal They are a Sino Tibetan speaking ethnic group of the eastern Terai They mainly reside in Morang and Jhapa districts of Nepal and Darjeeling district of West Bengal India They are respected as the First Citizens of Damak municipality 4 Dhimalध म लTotal population Nepal 25 643 2021 1 India 900 2 LanguagesDhimal NepaliReligionHinduism 56 1 Kiratism 40 9 3 Related ethnic groupsLimbuYakkhaRaiSunuwarMechKochTharu Contents 1 Ethnicity and language 2 Language 3 Religion and culture 4 Geographic distribution 5 Occupation 6 Research 7 References 8 Further readingEthnicity and language editThey are an indigenous group of Nepal and belong to Sino Tibetan group They are culturally close to Limbu and Koch of Terai and of the northern hills 4 5 Dhimals consider themselves of Kirati descent They consider the Limbu the Rai of the hills and the Mech and Koch people of the tarai as their brethren According to Hodgson the Mech Bodo Koch and Dhimal tribes are of the same race however comparison of language does not support so close a connection he added He stated that but it is difficult to suppose the Bodo and Dhimal languages other than primitive He also stated that the Dhimals are nomadic cultivators of wild For ages transcending memory or tradition they have passed beyond the savage or hunter state and also beyond the herdsman s state and have advanced to the third or agricultural grade of social progress but so as to indicate a not entirely broken connection with the precedent condition of things They never cultivate the same field beyond the second year or remain in the same village beyond from four to six years He again identified the barter system for the few things which they require and do not produce themselves 5 6 Language editDhimal people speak Dhimal language which is part of the Sino Tibetan family According to the census of 2021 there are 20 583 speakers of Dhimal language 7 It has it s won script called Dham script There is an eastern and western dialect which are separated by the Kankai River It is also closely related to another aboriginal language of the Himalayas called Toto 8 Religion and culture editTheir animistic religion is very close to the Kirant religion They worship nature and other household gods Hodgson identified their religion as the religion of nature or rather the natural religion of man have neither temple nor idol their cultivation as shifting cultivation and this race assure him that they once had chiefs when they dwelt as a united people in Morang 9 10 The religion as identified by Hodgson is very different from Hinduism as they have neither temples nor idols Altogether their religion belongs to the same primitive era as their habits and manners Hodgson added 11 Geographic distribution editThe Central Bureau of Statistics of Nepal classifies the Dhimal as a subgroup within the broader social group of Terai Janajati 12 At the time of the 2011 Nepal census 26 298 people 0 09 of the population of Nepal were Dhimal The frequency of Dhimals by province was as follows Koshi Province 0 6 Bagmati Province 0 0 Gandaki Province 0 0 Lumbini Province 0 0 Madhesh Province 0 0 Karnali Province 0 0 Sudurpashchim Province 0 0 The frequency of Dhimals was higher than national average 0 09 in the following districts 13 Morang 1 2 Jhapa 1 1 Sunsari 0 5 In India they reside in 16 villages namely Naxalbari and Hatighisha in Darjeeling district West Bengal Occupation editDhimals are cultivators although the frequencies of labourers including agricultural labourers or to some extent tea garden labourers may not be overlooked These days the Indian Dhimals are exclusively concentrated at Hatighisha and Maniram Gram Panchayat of Naxalbari Police Station under Darjeeling district of West Bengal India However sporadic occurrences of Dhimal population may have seen outside the above said areas but within Darjeeling district of West Bengal Even this diminutive group sometimes misleads as vanishing races by some amateurs Their counterpart of Nepal with whom they have a marital relation and belongs to the same biological population have better numerical strength socio economic and educational attainment of their own The Dhimals of Nepal receive much importance in various writings of Nepali scholars On the other hand the Indian Dhimals have been neglected by the government and others in any field of development Anthropological documents on the Indian Dhimal is yet to be received some sporadic documents by amateurs and some field based study by trained scholars in a part of Dhimal population may be available but all of them cover social cultural linguistics aspects only and physical or demographic data on the entire population are literally absent 14 Dhimal women are good at weaving and have their unique dress among the ethnic peoples of Nepal Research editThe first identified study on Dhimal of this region may be attributed to English administrators of British India As per present knowledge the first report in the form of monograph on Dhimal was written by Brain Houghton Hodgson 1847 entitled Essays the first on the Kocch Bodo and Dhimal Tribes The monograph dealt with the Vocabulary Grammar and Location Numbers Creed Customs Condition and Physical and Moral Characteristics of the People Later on Hodgson published the third part in 1849 in Journal of Asiatic Society entitled On the Origin Location Numbers Creed Customs Characters and Condition of the Kocch Bodo and Dhimal People with a general description of the climate they dwelt in Hodgson 1849 Trubner and Co in 1880 published the same original collection of 1847 in the book entitled Miscellaneous Essays relating to Indian Subjects Vol I Hodgson 1880 Hodgson enumerated the number of Dhimals between Konki and Dhorla as below 15 000 Hodgson stated that Dhimal do not now exceed 15 000 souls are at present confined to that portion of Saul forest lying between the Konki and the Dharla or Torsha mixed with the Bodo but in separate villages and without intermarriage Latham 1859 in Descriptive Ethnology identified the place of Dhimals as unfavourable and full of malaria though he stated yet the Dhimal the Bodo and others thrive in it love it leave it with regret He believes that Dhimals are separated from Bodos as language pantheons marriage ceremony funerals even festivals of the two are very different 15 Latham also identified Hodgson s work as a model of an ethnological monograph After that all writings are more or less influenced by and borrowed data from Hodgson s writings Among them the writing of Edward Twite Dalton 1872 may be mentioned Dalton in his Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal identified Dhimals as tribe of Assam valley clubbed with the Kacharis or Bodo and Mech and stated Hodgson describes the Bodo and Dhimal tribe as of the same race and there appears no reason for separating them in a work of this nature as their customs religion etc appear nearly identical W W Hunter 1876 in Statistical Account of Bengal stated that census report distinguishes between these peoples Dhimals and Meches or Bodos and returns the number of Dhimals at 873 Later on he wrote a brief note on Dhimal culture which are as per Hunter is a condensed form of Hodgson s work Sannial 1880 when studied Dhimals found hunting and pastoralism as their main source of occupation He also stated that the village was headed by a headman called Mondal and magico religious practices by Dhami Deushi and Ojha Dhimal again finds their position in H H Risley s The Tribes and Castes of Bengal where Risley pointed out that Dhimal Dhemal Maulik a non Aryan tribe of the Darjeeling and Nepal Terai belong to the same main stock with Kocch rapidly losing their tribal identity by absorption into the large heterogeneous Rajbansi caste He also pointed out a marked advanced direction towards Hinduism from nature worship Risley opined that they seem likely to disappear altogether as a separate tribe within the next generation Risley 1891 Bandyopadhyay 1895 in his Darjeeling Probasir Patra stated that the cultural aspects of Meches and Dhimals are more or less same even the folklore Bandyopadhyay collected indicates the same origin of Dhimals with Koch and Meches O Malley 1907 in his District Gazetteers of Darjeeling classified Dhimals as non Hinduized Koch or Rajbansi and identified their Dhimal habitat as marshy tract formerly covered by dense malarious jungle in which aboriginal tribes of Meches Dhimals and Koches burnt clearings and raised their scanty crops of rice and cotton on a system if system it can be called of nomadic husbandry Grierson 1926 in Linguistic Survey of India classified Dhimal language as Eastern Pronominalized group of Pronominalized Himalayan Group under Tibeto Himalaya Branch of Tibeto Burman subfamily which may be categorized under Tibeto Chinese group He also stated that In the Pronominalized group the influence of the ancient Munda language is far more apparent Endle 1911 placed Dhimals under Northern groups of Kachari family along with Kachari Rabha Mech Koch and others Later on Das 1978 examined the same and opined the possibility of same ethnological relationship between these tribes Deb Burman and Chaudhuri 1999 identified Dhimals as a backward community having tribal origin and acceptance of Mallick or Maulik title as well as adoption of Hindu religious practices is the stereotype for not considering them tribe But the strong argument in favour of noninclusion of the Dhimals in the list of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes of India could be their migration to the neighboring countries like Nepal and Bhutan at the time of enumeration they added Roy 1999 in his unpublished M Phil dissertation noted the prevalence of barter system in Dhimal community of this region Some recent studies on vernacular language also exhibit the above stated characteristics many of which are typical tribal characters of their own Moitra 2004 identified a close affinity between Dhimal and Toto languages he even calculated the separation of Toto from Dhimal by grutochronological analysis as 800 1200 AD Royburman 1959 in his thesis on Toto also highlighted the same by stated there is one variant of Toto myth of origin which refers to the Dhimals as the mother group Toto assess the very close affinity exists between the language of the Totos and the Dhimal but he added as however I do not possess any scientifically assessed data I do not propose to enter into the realm of social psychology King 1994 after his linguistic survey opined that its Dhimal closest relative appears to be Toto IIAS 2007 Among Nepali scholars who have done ethnographical and social cultural aspects on Nepali Dhimals the following names is of great important Bista 1980 identified Dhimals as nomadic practicing shifting cultivation until some times ago they have traditional village councils with a headman called Deonia and the priest who presides over all of the religious function is called Dhami Regmi 1991 identified a total of 13 exogamous patrilineal clans and 11 sub clans within the population Gautam and Thapa Magar 1994 also classified Dhimals as Tribes in their work Tribal Ethnography of Nepal In a recent work Bisht and Bankoti 2004 also followed the same trend by placing Dhimals on Encyclopedic Ethnography of the Himalayan Tribes There is a continuous census enumeration on Dhimal population or sometimes language spoken up to 1951 except 1941 The 1872 census identified Dhimals as Aboriginal Tribe The 1891 census headed by O Donnell identified Dhimals as Forest and Hill Tribes as well as Agriculturalist by occupation But next census headed by E A Gait classified Dhimals as Hindu by religion even the census stated that they Dhimals often called themselves as Rajbansi The same trend was carried over by 1931 census headed by Porter The 1961 census has lost Dhimal data but even it stated Dhimals as Aboriginal tribes as per 1872 After that no single census 1971 1981 1991 2001 have been drawing any traces on Dhimal community or languages though some very small population even with single household was being considered for the study Now after a transitional non recognition period by the Govt they have been classified as Other Backward Class OBC of West Bengal The history of study or not to study on Dhimals of India narrate the negligence for which the once non Aryan tribe of British India having no reservation on any field have to compete with others the recognition as OBC is a recent one though they are not satisfied with present status and demand the status of Scheduled Tribe instead of OBCs Because of the uneven competitions with dominant next door neighbours and others in respect of nation push them much behind whether in the field of education occupation or sociocultural context as a whole Very few of them thirteen in number have crossed the border of Secondary education and two of them are graduates References edit National Statistics Office 2021 National Population and Housing Census 2021 Caste Ethnicity Report Government of Nepal Report Biswas Subir December 2008 Demographic Profile and Population Dynamics of the Dhimals A Forgotten Ethnic Group of North Bengal The Oriental Anthropologist A Bi Annual International Journal of the Science of Man 8 1 2 271 281 doi 10 1177 0976343020080119 S2CID 202926467 journals sagepub com Central Bureau of Statistics 2014 Population monograph of Nepal PDF Report Vol II Government of Nepal a b Mahendra Ratna Multiple Campus for the partial fulfillment for the Master s Degree in Sociology LIFESTYLE CHANGE OF DHIMAL COMMUNITY PDF a b Hodgson B H 1847 Miscellaneous Essays Relating to Indian Subjects Vol 1 Printed by J Thomas Som Bahadur Dhimal Brief Introduction of the Dhimal of Nepal Population Monograph of Nepal Volume II Social Demography PDF Dhimal alphabets pronunciation and language www omniglot com Retrieved 28 February 2024 Dhimal community resumes Jatri festival GorakhaPatra Retrieved 28 February 2024 Koirala Santosh 20 May 2016 Changing Ways of Marrying A study of the Dhimal Marriage Ritual of Damak Nepal Master thesis thesis UiT Norges arktiske universitet Janajatis of Nepal PDF Population Monograph of Nepal Volume II 1 2011 Nepal Census District Level Detail Report PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 March 2023 Retrieved 8 April 2023 Singh Gurvinder 16 May 2023 Bengal s dwindling Dhimal community battles odds Village Square Retrieved 28 February 2024 Latham Robert Gordon 1859 Descriptive ethnology Volume 1 J van Voorst Biswas Subir 2008 Yogesh Dhimal addedon August 29 primary source The Dhimals an oldest indigenous cast of Terai Region NEPAL since the very ancient time living in the present Terai region of Eastern Nepal And a few migrated Dhimal people across the borders in West Bengal to Assam Long ago and there known as A Little Known Tribal Group of Sub Himalayan West Bengal Historical Perspectives Stud Tribes Tribals 6 2 117 121 2008 Further reading editBandyopadhyay Sekhar 2004 Dhimal Kolkata Centre for Folklore and Tribal Culture Govt of West Bengal Bandyopadhyay Tarapada 1895 Darjeeling Probasir Patra In K Chaudhuri Ed Derjellinger Itihas 2005 Kolkata Dey s Publishing pp 141 170 Bista Dor Bahadur 1980 People of Nepal Kathmandu Ratna Pustak Bhandar Chakladar Paritosh Biswas Ratan 2004 Dhimal Bhasa In Ratan Biswas Ed Uttar banger Bhasa A Collection of Essays on the Languages of North The Government Census and gazetteers may Bengal Kolkata Baiwala pp 466 483 Dalton Edward Twite 1872 Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal Calcutta Govt Printing Reprint 1973 Das ST 1978 The People of the Eastern Himalaya New Delhi Sagar Publication Deb Burman Prasenjit and Buddhadeb Chaudhuri 1999 The Dhimals A Little Known Tribal Community Occasional Paper No 9 Dr Ambedkar Chair in Anthropology Deptt of Anthropology Calcutta University Endle 1911 The Kacharis cited on ST Das 1978 The People of the Eastern Himalaya New Delhi Sagar Publication Gautam Rajesh Thapa Magar Ashok K 1994 Tribal Ethnography of Nepal vol 1 Delhi Book Faith India Grierson George Abraham 1926 Linguistic Survey of India Vol III Tibeto Burman Family Part I Calcutta Govt of India Central Publication Branch Hodgson Brian Houghton 1847 Essay the first on the Kocch Bodo and Dhimal Tribes Calcutta Baptist Mission Press Hodgson Brian Houghton 1849 On the Origin Location Numbers Creed Customs Characters and Condition of the Kocch Bodo and Dhimal People with a General Description of the Climate they dwell in Journal of the Asiatic Society 18 702 747 Hodgson Brian Houghton 1874 Essays on the Languages Literature and Religion of Nepal and Tibet Together with further papers on the Geography Ethnology and Commerce of those Countries Reprint 1971 Varanasi Bharat Bharati Hodgson Brian Houghton 1880 Miscellaneous Essays relating to Indian Subjects vol II London Trubner and Co Hunter William Wilson 1876 Statistical Account of Bengal Vol X District of Darjeeling Jalpaiguri and State of Kuch Behar London Trubner and Co India Census 1881 Census of India 1881 Statistics of Population Vol II Calcutta Govt Printing Press India Census 1891 Census of India 1891 Vol V The Lower Provinces of Bengal and their Feudatories Calcutta Bengal Secretariat Press India Census 1901 Census of India 1901 Vol VI A The Lower Provinces of Bengal and their Feudatories Calcutta Bengal Secretariat Press India Census 1911 Census of India 1911 Vol V Part I Calcutta Bengal Secretariat Press India Census 1921 Census of India 1921 Vol V Bengal Part II Calcutta Bengal Secretariat Press India Census 1931 Census of India 1931 Vol V Bengal and Sikkim Part II Calcutta Central Publication Branch India Census 1941 Census of India 1941 Vol IV Bengal Delhi Manager of Publication India Census 1951 Census of India 1951 West Bengal District Handbook Darjeeling Alipore W B Govt Press International Institute of Asian Studies IIAS 2007 Dhimal Retrieved August 18 2007 from lt http www iias nl himalaya q dhimal gt King John Timothy 1994 Picking up where Hodgson left off Further notes on Dhimal Linguistics of the Tibeto Burman Area 17 2 121 132 Latham RG 1859 Tribes and Races vol 1 Reprint 1983 Delhi Cultural Publishing Moitra Mritunjoy 2001 Uttarbanger Biluptoprai Janojati Dhimal In Ratan Biswas Ed Uttarbanger Jati O Upojati Calcutta Punascho pp 237 278 O Malley LSS1907 Bengal District Gazetteers Darjeeling Reprint 1999 New Delhi Logos Press Regmi Risikesh Raj 1991 The Dhimals Miraculous Migrants of Himal An Anthropological Study of a Nepalese Ethnic Group Jaipur Nirala Publication Risley Herbert Hope 1891 The Tribes and Castes of Bengal vol 1 Reprint 1998 Calcutta Firma KLM Pvt Ltd Roy Ranjit 1999 The Dhimals A Little Known Community of Sub Himalayan Bengal An Ethnographic Overview M Phil Dissertation Unpublished Silliguri Centre for Himalayan Studies North Bengal University Royburman Bikram Keshari 1959 Dynamics of Persistence and Change of a Small Community The Totos Ph D Thesis Unpublished Calcutta University of Calcutta Sannial Hari Mohon 1880 History of Darjeeling in Bengali In Kamal Choudhuri Ed Darjeeliner Itihas 2005 Kolkata Dey s Publishing pp 13 98 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dhimal amp oldid 1217328362, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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