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Kurukh people

The Kurukh or Oraon, also spelt Uraon or Dhangar,[7] (Kurukh: Karḵẖ and Oṛāōn) are a Dravidian speaking ethnolinguistic group inhabiting Chhotanagpur Plateau and adjoining areas - mainly the Indian states of Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, and West Bengal.[8] They predominantly speak Kurukh as their native language, which belongs to the Dravidian language family.[9] In Maharashtra, Oraon people are also known as Dhangad or Dhangar.[10][11]

oraon
Kurukh in traditional clothes performing dance
Total population
3.8 million (2011)
Regions with significant populations
 India3,696,899[1]
   Jharkhand1,716,618
   Chhattisgarh748,739
   West Bengal643,510
   Odisha358,112
   Bihar144,472
   Assam73,437
   Tripura12,011[2]
 Bangladesh85,846[3]
   Nepal37,424[4]
 Bhutan4200[5]
Languages
Kurukh • Sadri • Odia • Hindi • Bengali
Religion
Hinduism, Christianity, Sarnaism[6]
Related ethnic groups

Traditionally, Oraons depended on the forest and farms for their ritual practices and livelihoods, but in recent times, they have become mainly settled agriculturalists. Many Oraon migrated to tea gardens of Assam, West Bengal and Bangladesh as well as to countries like Fiji, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago and Mauritius during British rule, where they were known as Hill Coolies.[12][13] They are listed as a Scheduled Tribe for the purpose of India's reservation system.[14]

Etymology edit

According to Edward Tuite Dalton, "Oraon" is an exonym assigned by neighboring Munda people, meaning "to roam". They call themselves Kurukh.[15] According to Sten Konow, Uraon will mean man as in the Dravidian Kurukh language, the word Urapai, Urapo and Urang means Man. The word Kurukh may be derived from the word Kur or Kurcana means Shout and stammer. So Kurukh will mean a speaker.[16]

History edit

According to the Indian Anthropological Society, Konkan is said to be the original home of the Kurukh tribes from where they migrated to the Chota Nagpur Plateau.[17] The group is said to have settled in the Chota Nagpur Plateau by 100 CE.[18]

There are three opinions of scholars about the origin of Kurukh people. According to Sarat Chandra Roy, Kurukh people might have migrated from Coorg in South India. In 1987, Elefenbein proposed Baloch's hypothesis, in which he proposed the Brahui tribe migrated from Baluchistan to Sindh where Brahui is still spoken, and the Rohtasgarh and Rajmahal hills. Those who migrated to Rohtasgarh were Kurukh and Rajmahal hills were Malto. According to another opinion, Kurukh people were living in Indus valley civilization, then they migrated to South and Central India after the decline of the Indus valley civilization due to droughts and floods in 2500 BCE.[19]

According to the writings of Colonel Edward Tuite Dalton, Oraon claimed that they were settled in Gujarat, then they were expelled from there. Then they settled in Kalinjar, where they fought with Lowrik Sowrik of Palipiri and were defeated. Then they came to Rohtasgarh and were driven out by Muslims during the reign of Akbar. Then they settled in Chotanagpur. According to Dalton, Oraon were settled in Chotanagpur before the reign of Akbar and possibly some Oraon were in Rohtas hills when Rohtasgarh fort was constructed by Muslims. According to him the Oraon language is similar to Tamil, but some words spoken by Oraon are of Sanskrit origin due to their living with Sanskrit and Prakrit speaking people in the past. The physical features of Oraon are the darkest but those who live in mixed settlements have varieties of features.[20]

Colonial rule edit

 
Dalton's painting of Oraons in 1872

During the British Period, Kurukh people rebelled against the British East India Company authority and local Zamindars against tax imposition. The Budhu Bhagat led the Lakra rebellion which is also known as the Kol uprising in 1832.[21]

Jatra Bhagat led civil disobedience movement Tana Bhagat Movement from 1914 to 1920.[22] After independence of India, They listed as a Scheduled Tribe for the purpose of India's reservation system.[14]

Society edit

The Kurukh tribe is patrilocal and patrilineal. Kurukhs are divided into many exogamous clans. Clans names among the Kurukh are taken from plants, animals and objects. Some important clans are:[23][24][25]

  • Addo (ox)
  • Aind (a fish)
  • Alla (dog)
  • Bakula (Heron)
  • Bando (wild cat)
  • Bara (Banyan)
  • Barwa (wild dog)
  • Beck (Salt)
  • Chidra (Squirrel)
  • Edgo (Mouse)
  • Ekka or kachhap (Turtle)
  • Gari (monkey)
  • Gede (Duck)
  • Gidhi (vulture)
  • Halman (langur)
  • Keond (a fruit)
  • Khoya (wild dog)
  • Kinduar (a fish)
  • Kosuar (a fish)
  • Kiro (a fruit)
  • Kiss (pig)
  • Kerketta (Hedge- sparrow)
  • Kokro (cock)
  • Kujur ( A medicinal plant)
  • Lakra (Tiger)
  • Minz (a fish)
  • Khetta or Nag (Cobra)
  • Panna (Iron)
  • Tido (a fish)
  • Tirkuar (tithio bird)
  • Tirkey (an eagle)
  • Toppo (Woodpecker)
  • Tigga (Monkey)
  • Xalxo (pigeon)
  • Xaxa (Crow)
  • Xess or Dhan (Paddy)

Culture edit

Language edit

Kurukh are traditional speakers of Kurukh, which belongs to the northern branch of the Dravidian family. Just under half still speak this language as their mother tongue. Many have adopted the local lingua francas, Sadri and Odia, as their first languages. This shift to regional languages, especially Sadri, has been most pronounced in West Bengal, Bangladesh, Assam and Tripura, where the Kurukh are mainly tea garden workers and Sadri is the main link language.[9]

Festivals edit

The Kurukh celebrate all traditional festivals of the Chota Nagpur plateau: Sarhul, Karma, Dhanbuni, Harihari, Nawakhani, Khariyani etc.[26]

Music and dance edit

Since time immemorial The Oraon people have a rich range of folk songs, dances and tales,[27] as well as traditional musical instruments. Both men and women participate in dances, which are performed at social events and festivals. The Mandar, Nagara and Kartal are the main musical instruments. In Kurukh, song is known as "Dandi". Some Kurukh folk dances are war dances (between two Parhas), Karma dance (Karam dandi), Khaddi or Sarhul dance, Phagu, Jadur, jagra, Matha, Benja Nalna (wedding dance) and Chali (courtyard dance).[9]

 
Sarhul dance known as Khaddi

Marriage tradition edit

Marriage among Kurukhs is usually arranged by the parents. The parents negotiate a bride price, after which the wedding can take place. On the wedding day, the groom arrives with his friends to the bride's house, and they hold a dance. A pandal is constructed in front of the bride's father's house, and the bride and groom stand on a stone, under which is grain above a plough yoke. A cloth is then thrown over the couple, who are doubly screened by the groom's friends. Then the sindoordaan is done: the groom applies sindoor to the bride's forehead, which is sometimes returned. Afterwards, water is poured over the couple and they return to a separate area of the house to change. When they are emerged, they are considered married. During this entire time, the rest of the party continue to dance.[28]

Dress edit

 
Oraon House at 'State Tribal Fair-2020' Bhubaneswar, India

At the turn of the 20th century, Kurukh men wore a loincloth tied around the hips, while women less influenced by other communities would wear a cloth reaching to just above the knee, covering the chest.[28] Today, women traditionally a wear thick cotton sari with detailed stitched borders of purple or red thread. Traditional tattoos include elaborate symmetrical patterns around their forearms, ankles, and chest. Men wear a thick cloth with similar detailed borders as a dhoti or lungi.[6]

Livelihood edit

Originally, the Oraons relied on the forest and its goods for an economic livelihood. Unlike many other communities of Jharkhand which practice jhum, the Kurukh community uses plough agriculture. At the turn of the 20th century however, due to the policies of the British colonial government, most of the tribe worked as agricultural labourers for the Zamindars on their own lands.[28] However, recently many have become settled agriculturists, while others became migrant workers.[6]

Administration edit

In a Kurukh village, the village level political organization is called Parha which consists of post such as Pahan (village priest), Panibharwa (water-bearer of Pahan), Pujar (assistant of Pahan), Bhandari and Chowkidar (watchman). Each has a particular role in religious ceremonies, festivals and solving disputes in the village. The traditional informal educational institution youth dormitory is called Dhumkuria. The public and common meeting place is Akhra where people meet for the purpose of discussion and solving disputes.[29]

Twelve to thirty villages form a Parha council. Each village has a village council, member of village council act as the members of Parha council in the headship of Parha chief. One of the villages in Parha is called Raja (King) village, another dewan (prime minister) village, another panrey (clerk of the village), a fourth kotwar (orderly) village and remaining village are called praja (subject) village. Raja village has highest social status because headman of this village presides at the meeting of a Parha Panchayat.[29] The Kurukh are patrilocal and patrilineal. Clan name descends from father to son. The major lineage is known as Bhuinhari Khunt. Bhuinhari means owner of the land. Khunt has two sub groups: the Pahan Khunt and Mahato Khunt. Pahan and Mahato are two main office of Bhuinhari lineage.[9]

Religion edit

  Hinduism (36%)
  Sarna (32%)
  Christianity (30%)
  Animism (1%)
  Others[i] (1%)

|^ Others includes Muslims, Sikhs and Jains.[citation needed]

The Oraon follow their traditional religion (Sarnaism), which is based on nature worship. Some of the groups started following Sarnaism in a Hindu style, as the sects of the Bishnu Bhagats, Bacchinda Bhagats, Karmu Bhagats and Tana Bhagats. The Oraons have established several Sarna sects. Oraons worship Sun as biri (a name given for Dharmesh). Kurukhar also believe in Animism.[citation needed]

Most of population is Sarna, which is a religion that is indigenous to Adivasis in the Chota Nagpur Plateau. Sarna perform religious rituals under the shade of a sacred grove. They worship the sun as Biri and the moon as Chando, and call the earth Dharti Aayo (Earth as mother). Chando Biri are the words which are used in Sarna pujas. Dharmesh is their supreme almighty god.[30]

Kamru Bhagats (Oraon or Munda devotees) originated when Oraons acquired special powers after making a pilgrimage to Kamakhya in Assam to pay respect to Durga.[31]

The Tana Bhagat was formed by Oraon saints Jatra Bhagat and Turia Bhagat. Tana Bhagats opposed the taxes imposed on them by the British and staged a Satyagraha movement even before Mahatma Gandhi. All Tana Bhagats were followers of Gandhi during the Independence movement. Tana Bhagats still wear a khadi kurta, dhoti and Gandhi topi (cap) with tricoloured flag in their topi. All Tana Bhagats perform puja to the Mahadeo and the tricolour with a chakra symbol on it, which is fixed at their courtyard.

Among Christian Oraons, there are Roman Catholics and Protestants, the latter of which having several denominations.

In popular culture edit

In 1957, film-maker Ritwik Ghatak shot a preparatory test film named Oraon on the life of the Adivasis of the Ranchi region in Jharkhand and on the Oraons of Rani Khatanga Village in Jharkhand.[32]

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "A-11 Individual Scheduled Tribe Primary Census Abstract Data and its Appendix". www.censusindia.gov.in. Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  2. ^ "Statement 1: Abstract of speakers' strength of languages and mother tongues - 2011". www.censusindia.gov.in. Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  3. ^ "Table 1.4 Ethnic Population by Group and Sex" (PDF) (in Bengali). Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics. 2021. p. 33.
  4. ^ "National Population and Housing Census 2011: Social Characteristics Tables" (PDF). Nepal Census – via Government of Nepal.
  5. ^ "Oraon of Bhutan". PeopleGroups. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
  6. ^ a b c Winston, Robert, ed. (2006) [First published 2004]. Human. Dorling Kindersley. p. 439. ISBN 0-7566-1901-7.
  7. ^ "The Long Journey: From India to Guyana".
  8. ^ Hasnain, Nadeem (2021). Tribal India (7th ed.). Delhi: Palaka Prakashan. p. 136.
  9. ^ a b c d Prasad, R. R. (1996). Encyclopaedic Profile of Indian Tribes, Volume 1. ISBN 9788171412983.
  10. ^ Singh, Kumar Suresh; Mehta, B. V.; Anthropological Survey of India (2004). Maharashtra Part 3. Anthropological Survey of India. p. 1585. ISBN 9788179911020.
  11. ^ Ministry of Tribal Affairs, Government of India (December 2002). (PDF) (Report). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 October 2020.
  12. ^ "The Long Journey: From India to Guyana".
  13. ^ "Oraons - Dictionary definition of Oraons". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
  14. ^ a b (PDF). Census India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2013. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
  15. ^ Dalton E T, The Oraons, Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal, 1872. Section 1, page 215.
  16. ^ Ferdinand Hahn (1985). Grammar of the Kurukh Language. Mittal Publications. p. xii. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  17. ^ Indian Anthropological Society (1986). Journal of the Indian Anthropological Society, Volumes 21-22. Indian Anthropological Society. pp. See page 75.
  18. ^ Singh, Anjana (August 2018). "Linguistic Politics and Kurukh Language Movement of the Oraons in Jharkhand". Journal of Adivasi and Indigenous Studies. 8: 37–50 – via Academia.edu.
  19. ^ Alisha Vandana Lakra, Md. Mojibur Rahman (August 2017). "Vitality and Endangerment of Contemporary Kurukh". Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  20. ^ Sanjay Nath (2015). "Pages from the Old Records: A Note on 'The "Kols" of Chota-Nagpore' by E.T. Dalton". academia.edu: 15-22. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
  21. ^ "Governor pays tribute to Veer Budhu Bhagat". dailypioneer. 23 August 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  22. ^ Kumar, Sanjay (2008). "The Tana Bhagat Movement in Chotanagpur (1914-1920)". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 69: 723–731. ISSN 2249-1937. JSTOR 44147236. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  23. ^ "Tradition of Clan names and conservation among the Oraons of Chhattishgarh". niscair.res.in. Retrieved 5 September 2019.
  24. ^ James George Frazer (2000). Totemism and Exogamy. Psychology Press. p. 374. ISBN 978-0700713387.
  25. ^ "आदिवासी गोत्र". vikaspedia. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  26. ^ "Marriage Customs among The Oraons". etribaltribune.com.
  27. ^ Ferdinand Hahn (1906). Blicke in die Geisteswelt der heidnischen Kols: Sammlung von Sagen, Märchen und Liedern der Oraon in Chota Nagpur. C. Bertelsmann. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  28. ^ a b c Hewitt, J. F. (April 1893). "Art. VII.–The Tribes and Castes of Bengal, by H. H. Risley. Vols. I. and II. Ethnographic Glossary, Vols. I. and II. Anthropometric Data". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland. 25 (2): 237–300. doi:10.1017/s0035869x00022395. ISSN 0035-869X. S2CID 163011123.
  29. ^ a b Team, Mai Bhi Bharat (16 May 2016). Tribes of India, PESA Act & Padaha system of Oraon tribe (Television production). Mai Bhi Bharat (in Hindi). RSTV. Archived from the original on 13 December 2021.
  30. ^ Ghosh, Abhik (2003). History and Culture of the Oraon Tribe : Some Aspects of Their Social Life. Mohit. p. 237. ISBN 81-7445-196-X.
  31. ^ Jha, P. 41 India and Nepal
  32. ^ Cinema & I pg.116 25 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ a b "Asunta Lakra, a symbol for tribal hope". The Times of India. 6 February 2012. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 3 April 2023.

External links edit

  • kurukhworld.com

This article includes material from the 1995 public domain Library of Congress Country Study on India.

kurukh, people, kurukh, oraon, also, spelt, uraon, dhangar, kurukh, karḵẖ, oṛāōn, dravidian, speaking, ethnolinguistic, group, inhabiting, chhotanagpur, plateau, adjoining, areas, mainly, indian, states, jharkhand, odisha, chhattisgarh, west, bengal, they, pre. The Kurukh or Oraon also spelt Uraon or Dhangar 7 Kurukh Karḵẖ and Oṛaōn are a Dravidian speaking ethnolinguistic group inhabiting Chhotanagpur Plateau and adjoining areas mainly the Indian states of Jharkhand Odisha Chhattisgarh and West Bengal 8 They predominantly speak Kurukh as their native language which belongs to the Dravidian language family 9 In Maharashtra Oraon people are also known as Dhangad or Dhangar 10 11 oraonKurukh in traditional clothes performing danceTotal population3 8 million 2011 Regions with significant populations India3 696 899 1 Jharkhand1 716 618 Chhattisgarh748 739 West Bengal643 510 Odisha358 112 Bihar144 472 Assam73 437 Tripura12 011 2 Bangladesh85 846 3 Nepal37 424 4 Bhutan4200 5 LanguagesKurukh Sadri Odia Hindi BengaliReligionHinduism Christianity Sarnaism 6 Related ethnic groupsDravidian peopleMalto peopleTraditionally Oraons depended on the forest and farms for their ritual practices and livelihoods but in recent times they have become mainly settled agriculturalists Many Oraon migrated to tea gardens of Assam West Bengal and Bangladesh as well as to countries like Fiji Guyana Trinidad and Tobago and Mauritius during British rule where they were known as Hill Coolies 12 13 They are listed as a Scheduled Tribe for the purpose of India s reservation system 14 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Colonial rule 3 Society 4 Culture 4 1 Language 4 2 Festivals 4 3 Music and dance 4 4 Marriage tradition 4 5 Dress 4 6 Livelihood 4 7 Administration 5 Religion 6 In popular culture 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEtymology editAccording to Edward Tuite Dalton Oraon is an exonym assigned by neighboring Munda people meaning to roam They call themselves Kurukh 15 According to Sten Konow Uraon will mean man as in the Dravidian Kurukh language the word Urapai Urapo and Urang means Man The word Kurukh may be derived from the word Kur or Kurcana means Shout and stammer So Kurukh will mean a speaker 16 History editAccording to the Indian Anthropological Society Konkan is said to be the original home of the Kurukh tribes from where they migrated to the Chota Nagpur Plateau 17 The group is said to have settled in the Chota Nagpur Plateau by 100 CE 18 There are three opinions of scholars about the origin of Kurukh people According to Sarat Chandra Roy Kurukh people might have migrated from Coorg in South India In 1987 Elefenbein proposed Baloch s hypothesis in which he proposed the Brahui tribe migrated from Baluchistan to Sindh where Brahui is still spoken and the Rohtasgarh and Rajmahal hills Those who migrated to Rohtasgarh were Kurukh and Rajmahal hills were Malto According to another opinion Kurukh people were living in Indus valley civilization then they migrated to South and Central India after the decline of the Indus valley civilization due to droughts and floods in 2500 BCE 19 According to the writings of Colonel Edward Tuite Dalton Oraon claimed that they were settled in Gujarat then they were expelled from there Then they settled in Kalinjar where they fought with Lowrik Sowrik of Palipiri and were defeated Then they came to Rohtasgarh and were driven out by Muslims during the reign of Akbar Then they settled in Chotanagpur According to Dalton Oraon were settled in Chotanagpur before the reign of Akbar and possibly some Oraon were in Rohtas hills when Rohtasgarh fort was constructed by Muslims According to him the Oraon language is similar to Tamil but some words spoken by Oraon are of Sanskrit origin due to their living with Sanskrit and Prakrit speaking people in the past The physical features of Oraon are the darkest but those who live in mixed settlements have varieties of features 20 Colonial rule edit nbsp Dalton s painting of Oraons in 1872During the British Period Kurukh people rebelled against the British East India Company authority and local Zamindars against tax imposition The Budhu Bhagat led the Lakra rebellion which is also known as the Kol uprising in 1832 21 Jatra Bhagat led civil disobedience movement Tana Bhagat Movement from 1914 to 1920 22 After independence of India They listed as a Scheduled Tribe for the purpose of India s reservation system 14 Society editThe Kurukh tribe is patrilocal and patrilineal Kurukhs are divided into many exogamous clans Clans names among the Kurukh are taken from plants animals and objects Some important clans are 23 24 25 Addo ox Aind a fish Alla dog Bakula Heron Bando wild cat Bara Banyan Barwa wild dog Beck Salt Chidra Squirrel Edgo Mouse Ekka or kachhap Turtle Gari monkey Gede Duck Gidhi vulture Halman langur Keond a fruit Khoya wild dog Kinduar a fish Kosuar a fish Kiro a fruit Kiss pig Kerketta Hedge sparrow Kokro cock Kujur A medicinal plant Lakra Tiger Minz a fish Khetta or Nag Cobra Panna Iron Tido a fish Tirkuar tithio bird Tirkey an eagle Toppo Woodpecker Tigga Monkey Xalxo pigeon Xaxa Crow Xess or Dhan Paddy Culture editLanguage edit Kurukh are traditional speakers of Kurukh which belongs to the northern branch of the Dravidian family Just under half still speak this language as their mother tongue Many have adopted the local lingua francas Sadri and Odia as their first languages This shift to regional languages especially Sadri has been most pronounced in West Bengal Bangladesh Assam and Tripura where the Kurukh are mainly tea garden workers and Sadri is the main link language 9 Festivals edit The Kurukh celebrate all traditional festivals of the Chota Nagpur plateau Sarhul Karma Dhanbuni Harihari Nawakhani Khariyani etc 26 Music and dance edit Since time immemorial The Oraon people have a rich range of folk songs dances and tales 27 as well as traditional musical instruments Both men and women participate in dances which are performed at social events and festivals The Mandar Nagara and Kartal are the main musical instruments In Kurukh song is known as Dandi Some Kurukh folk dances are war dances between two Parhas Karma dance Karam dandi Khaddi or Sarhul dance Phagu Jadur jagra Matha Benja Nalna wedding dance and Chali courtyard dance 9 nbsp Sarhul dance known as KhaddiMarriage tradition edit Marriage among Kurukhs is usually arranged by the parents The parents negotiate a bride price after which the wedding can take place On the wedding day the groom arrives with his friends to the bride s house and they hold a dance A pandal is constructed in front of the bride s father s house and the bride and groom stand on a stone under which is grain above a plough yoke A cloth is then thrown over the couple who are doubly screened by the groom s friends Then the sindoordaan is done the groom applies sindoor to the bride s forehead which is sometimes returned Afterwards water is poured over the couple and they return to a separate area of the house to change When they are emerged they are considered married During this entire time the rest of the party continue to dance 28 Dress edit nbsp Oraon House at State Tribal Fair 2020 Bhubaneswar IndiaAt the turn of the 20th century Kurukh men wore a loincloth tied around the hips while women less influenced by other communities would wear a cloth reaching to just above the knee covering the chest 28 Today women traditionally a wear thick cotton sari with detailed stitched borders of purple or red thread Traditional tattoos include elaborate symmetrical patterns around their forearms ankles and chest Men wear a thick cloth with similar detailed borders as a dhoti or lungi 6 Livelihood edit Originally the Oraons relied on the forest and its goods for an economic livelihood Unlike many other communities of Jharkhand which practice jhum the Kurukh community uses plough agriculture At the turn of the 20th century however due to the policies of the British colonial government most of the tribe worked as agricultural labourers for the Zamindars on their own lands 28 However recently many have become settled agriculturists while others became migrant workers 6 Administration edit In a Kurukh village the village level political organization is called Parha which consists of post such as Pahan village priest Panibharwa water bearer of Pahan Pujar assistant of Pahan Bhandari and Chowkidar watchman Each has a particular role in religious ceremonies festivals and solving disputes in the village The traditional informal educational institution youth dormitory is called Dhumkuria The public and common meeting place is Akhra where people meet for the purpose of discussion and solving disputes 29 Twelve to thirty villages form a Parha council Each village has a village council member of village council act as the members of Parha council in the headship of Parha chief One of the villages in Parha is called Raja King village another dewan prime minister village another panrey clerk of the village a fourth kotwar orderly village and remaining village are called praja subject village Raja village has highest social status because headman of this village presides at the meeting of a Parha Panchayat 29 The Kurukh are patrilocal and patrilineal Clan name descends from father to son The major lineage is known as Bhuinhari Khunt Bhuinhari means owner of the land Khunt has two sub groups the Pahan Khunt and Mahato Khunt Pahan and Mahato are two main office of Bhuinhari lineage 9 Religion edit Hinduism 36 Sarna 32 Christianity 30 Animism 1 Others i 1 Others includes Muslims Sikhs and Jains citation needed The Oraon follow their traditional religion Sarnaism which is based on nature worship Some of the groups started following Sarnaism in a Hindu style as the sects of the Bishnu Bhagats Bacchinda Bhagats Karmu Bhagats and Tana Bhagats The Oraons have established several Sarna sects Oraons worship Sun as biri a name given for Dharmesh Kurukhar also believe in Animism citation needed Most of population is Sarna which is a religion that is indigenous to Adivasis in the Chota Nagpur Plateau Sarna perform religious rituals under the shade of a sacred grove They worship the sun as Biri and the moon as Chando and call the earth Dharti Aayo Earth as mother Chando Biri are the words which are used in Sarna pujas Dharmesh is their supreme almighty god 30 Kamru Bhagats Oraon or Munda devotees originated when Oraons acquired special powers after making a pilgrimage to Kamakhya in Assam to pay respect to Durga 31 The Tana Bhagat was formed by Oraon saints Jatra Bhagat and Turia Bhagat Tana Bhagats opposed the taxes imposed on them by the British and staged a Satyagraha movement even before Mahatma Gandhi All Tana Bhagats were followers of Gandhi during the Independence movement Tana Bhagats still wear a khadi kurta dhoti and Gandhi topi cap with tricoloured flag in their topi All Tana Bhagats perform puja to the Mahadeo and the tricolour with a chakra symbol on it which is fixed at their courtyard Among Christian Oraons there are Roman Catholics and Protestants the latter of which having several denominations In popular culture editIn 1957 film maker Ritwik Ghatak shot a preparatory test film named Oraon on the life of the Adivasis of the Ranchi region in Jharkhand and on the Oraons of Rani Khatanga Village in Jharkhand 32 Notable people editDilip Tirkey President of the Hockey India 33 Asunta Lakra former captain of the Indian woman s Hockey team 33 Budhu Bhagat freedom fighter Jatra Bhagat freedom fighter and social reformist Sudarshan Bhagat Member of Parliament Albert Ekka recipient of India s highest wartime gallantry award Param Vir Chakra Deep Grace Ekka Indian hockey player Michael Kindo hockey player Renee Kujur model Santiuse Kujur MP of Assam Birendra Lakra Indian hockey player Provat Lakra Football player of West Bengal Sunita Lakra Indian hockey player Madhu Mansuri singer and activist Nirmal Minz scholar Lilima Minz Indian hockey player Sonajharia Minz vice chancellor to the Sido Kanhu Murmu University Jual Oram Ministry of Tribal Affairs India Dinesh Oraon Indian politician currently serving as speaker of Jharkhand legislative assembly and a leader of Bharatiya Janata Party from Jharkhand Jacinta Kerketta journalist and poet Kartik Oraon Member of Parliament Lok Sabha Rameshwar Oraon former IPS officer and politician Simon Oraon environmentalist amp Padma Shri awardee Manisa Panna football player Simon Tigga politician Ignace Tirkey hockey player Manohar Tirkey politician Rupa Rani Tirkey lawn ball player Biju Toppo documentary filmmaker Binita Toppo hockey player Namita Toppo Indian hockey player Telesphore Toppo Cardinal Pyari Xaxa football player Mukut Minz Mukut Minz is an Indian doctor In 2017 he was awarded the Padma Shri by the Indian Government for his contribution in medicine See also editKharia peopleReferences edit A 11 Individual Scheduled Tribe Primary Census Abstract Data and its Appendix www censusindia gov in Office of the Registrar General amp Census Commissioner India Retrieved 3 November 2017 Statement 1 Abstract of speakers strength of languages and mother tongues 2011 www censusindia gov in Office of the Registrar General amp Census Commissioner India Retrieved 7 July 2018 Table 1 4 Ethnic Population by Group and Sex PDF in Bengali Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics 2021 p 33 National Population and Housing Census 2011 Social Characteristics Tables PDF Nepal Census via Government of Nepal Oraon of Bhutan PeopleGroups Retrieved 28 January 2020 a b c Winston Robert ed 2006 First published 2004 Human Dorling Kindersley p 439 ISBN 0 7566 1901 7 The Long Journey From India to Guyana Hasnain Nadeem 2021 Tribal India 7th ed Delhi Palaka Prakashan p 136 a b c d Prasad R R 1996 Encyclopaedic Profile of Indian Tribes Volume 1 ISBN 9788171412983 Singh Kumar Suresh Mehta B V Anthropological Survey of India 2004 Maharashtra Part 3 Anthropological Survey of India p 1585 ISBN 9788179911020 Ministry of Tribal Affairs Government of India December 2002 27th report of Standing Committee on Labour and Welfare with regards to SCs and STs order Second Amendment Bill 2002 PDF Report Archived from the original PDF on 24 October 2020 The Long Journey From India to Guyana Oraons Dictionary definition of Oraons Encyclopedia com Retrieved 14 October 2017 a b List of notified Scheduled Tribes PDF Census India Archived from the original PDF on 7 November 2013 Retrieved 9 February 2019 Dalton E T The Oraons Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal 1872 Section 1 page 215 Ferdinand Hahn 1985 Grammar of the Kurukh Language Mittal Publications p xii Retrieved 29 November 2022 Indian Anthropological Society 1986 Journal of the Indian Anthropological Society Volumes 21 22 Indian Anthropological Society pp See page 75 Singh Anjana August 2018 Linguistic Politics and Kurukh Language Movement of the Oraons in Jharkhand Journal of Adivasi and Indigenous Studies 8 37 50 via Academia edu Alisha Vandana Lakra Md Mojibur Rahman August 2017 Vitality and Endangerment of Contemporary Kurukh Retrieved 5 September 2022 Sanjay Nath 2015 Pages from the Old Records A Note on The Kols of Chota Nagpore by E T Dalton academia edu 15 22 Retrieved 25 October 2022 Governor pays tribute to Veer Budhu Bhagat dailypioneer 23 August 2016 Retrieved 5 September 2022 Kumar Sanjay 2008 The Tana Bhagat Movement in Chotanagpur 1914 1920 Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 69 723 731 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44147236 Retrieved 5 September 2022 Tradition of Clan names and conservation among the Oraons of Chhattishgarh niscair res in Retrieved 5 September 2019 James George Frazer 2000 Totemism and Exogamy Psychology Press p 374 ISBN 978 0700713387 आद व स ग त र vikaspedia Retrieved 18 September 2019 Marriage Customs among The Oraons etribaltribune com Ferdinand Hahn 1906 Blicke in die Geisteswelt der heidnischen Kols Sammlung von Sagen Marchen und Liedern der Oraon in Chota Nagpur C Bertelsmann Retrieved 25 August 2012 a b c Hewitt J F April 1893 Art VII The Tribes and Castes of Bengal by H H Risley Vols I and II Ethnographic Glossary Vols I and II Anthropometric Data Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain amp Ireland 25 2 237 300 doi 10 1017 s0035869x00022395 ISSN 0035 869X S2CID 163011123 a b Team Mai Bhi Bharat 16 May 2016 Tribes of India PESA Act amp Padaha system of Oraon tribe Television production Mai Bhi Bharat in Hindi RSTV Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Ghosh Abhik 2003 History and Culture of the Oraon Tribe Some Aspects of Their Social Life Mohit p 237 ISBN 81 7445 196 X Jha P 41 India and Nepal Cinema amp I pg 116 Archived 25 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b Asunta Lakra a symbol for tribal hope The Times of India 6 February 2012 ISSN 0971 8257 Retrieved 3 April 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kurukh people kurukhworld comThis article includes material from the 1995 public domain Library of Congress Country Study on India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kurukh people amp oldid 1185252906, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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