I found this new & interesting article on Magar culture, and hence publishing in my blog.
Source: Dhaulagiri Journal of Sociology and Anthropology
Author: Prasad Prakash Sapkota
Abstract
Human- plant relation is tightly attached on life of human beings. From the beginning of civilization, people used many plants and their products for different purpose to adopt with their environment. The essential and valuable materials including plant species are gathered, used, saved and always remain hunger for knowledge yet now. They developed different kinds of ceremonies and rituals and include valuable materials and plants within it to protect and remains as indigenous knowledge in particular communities and groups. In this context, I wants to raise the issue of material culture to search why people used plants in their rituals with reference to a plant species the Jhakro the Magars inhabitant of Baglung district, western Nepal. The research was carried out by using descriptive and exploratory research design. Observation, interview and group discussion were used in the field for primary data collection. The Magars are rich in their rituals among them death and kul pujane rituals are significant for cohesive and solidarity of the group; within these rituals a shrub plant species with special type of smell remains in central position for purity and soul. They believed that in death ritual all the polluted activities are purified and in kul pujane Jhakro acts as purity as well as help to join their ancestors with them. Unfortunately, they are unknown of the materialistic meaning of it due to lack of transferring knowledge. In etic aspect, this plant has important medicinal properties and the Magar preserved by keeping it in important rituals within their community.
1.
Introduction
This paper is based on field research, which was carried out in September 2010 to January 2011 within Magar community in Langaouan of Baglung District, western Nepal.
The word community is derived from two Latin words com means together and munis means
serving. It means that the group of people
living within a limited geographic area, share whole set of interests with we feeling, having
complexity of relations as well as feeling more or less same sentiments and attitudes and possesses the basic institutions by means of which
a common life is made possible. “A
human community is a functionally related aggregate of people who live in a particular geographic locality at a
particular time, share a common
culture are arranged
in a social structure, and exhibit and awareness of their uniqueness and separate identity as a group”(Bhusan et
al., 1999).
1.1
The Magar
The Magar is one of the largest ethnic groups of Nepal. Census has reported that the population of the Magar
is 1622421, which is 7.14 percentage
of the total population of the country (CBS, 2001).The Magars are found mostly in hilly region of Nepal but they are widely spread all over the country. Majority of Magar community is concentrated in western and mid-western hills like Rukum, Rolpa, Baglung,
Myagdi, Puthan,Salyan, Mugu, Palpa, Dang on the basis of their population. Nepal
living standard survey (2004) states
that 34.4% of the Magars are below the poverty line (Thapa Magar 2010).
1.1
The Jhakro
Jhakro is a name of a plant species. In the study area, there is a single plant of this species. It remains
in the forest half an hour far on
walking distance from the village. Whether it is cultivated by their ancestor or germinated itself,
they do not know. It lies in difficult steep rock where people are
unable to visit easily. When I observed
the plant following with a respondent morphologically, the plant species
is perennial shrub. The roots are tap and branched. The stem is erect, branched,
solid and creamy in color. The leaves
are arranged in whorl on the stem like as node. From this node small branches are developed. The leaves are
petiolate, simple, whorl as well as
alternate, entire, acute, exstipulate with unicostate reticulate venation. The leaves are shiny, thick with special type of smell. It is difficult to describe this species botanically because Magar cut the main
stem of this plant with branches at the time of their rituals, so the plant has not any flowers
and fruits.
2. Rituals and Jhakro
Life-cycle rituals continue to have significance in both simple and complex societies. In each society ritual action has their own
meanings which are culturally transmitted through custom and tradition. Ritual action is seen in all areas of social life and is one of the key means. The individual and groups solve their problems
in both the sacred and profane aspects of social existence. Customs and traditions remain alive from
generation to generation with the cohesive attachment with their religion.
In light of religion Durkheim
argued that, religions
are collective representations which express collective realities; the rites are a manner of
acting which take rise in the midst
of the assembled groups and which are destined to excite, maintain
or recreate certain
mental states in these
groups. So if the categories are of religious origin, they ought to participate in this nature common to
all religious facts, they too should be social affairs
and the product of collective thought (Durkheim,1950 copy in High Points of Anthropology,1980).
In Magar society purity and profane of soul are
deeply connected with the Jhakro at the time of death. In the life-cycle ritual, death is one of the
most important unpleasant, painful and distressing rituals
within the Magar community. When a member of the family dies, the other members of the family are to lament with tear. The neighboring members of the village assemble and the older member consoles
them. The other member prepared death
bed of green bamboo. The dead body is kept on the death bed and covered by shroud (a white thin cloth called kora) and yellow-red thick cloth called the pat. They
think pat is a special and pure cloth use to remove pollution.
Most favored food of dead people when
he was alive, wine, kapur, shrikhanda, rice, flower etc. are put on the mouth of dead
body and is taken to Kaligandaki
river with spreading la (the mixture
of fried rice, abir, coins and flowers) on the cross road. All
the mourners offer jal (river water) in the mouth of dead
body at last to pay homage to dead soul. Then, finally
dagbatti (firing on mouth)
is given by elder
son and buried on the bank of the river and return to home. Next day, son engage in polluted
activities called kiriya garne, at that
time, they prepare small hut of tite
pati (Artemisia valgaris) and vorlako
leaf. Son and his wife and others who are participate in dead pollution remains untouchable, who
eat rice without salt and worship their ancestors. They believe that the purity
of Jhakro helps to reach soul in their heaven.
The dead pollution is completed on eleventh day. On eleventh day early morning at three, son baths on the
tap or well and prepare 22 pinda (rounded stricture of rice and
ghee) and keeps on the small branches
of Jhakro near the ladder of Jhakro itself, symbol of soul and believes that the ladder help to join
death body soul to their ancestors. The ladder, pinda are
worships and he prays according
to the advice of their priest-bhanja.
Then again bathing activities occurs
by son and becomes purified. All the polluted materials are buried by bhanja (sister’s son) and spread the mixture
of cow urine, ghee, milk with dubo
(Cynodon dactylon L.) for
purifying of the family member as
well as the house. The son receives tika from
their bhanja and gives tika to his respective sisters,
daughters and other relatives by
arranging party including local wine. On the day the polluted ritual is over.
2.1 Kul pujane
In Magar community, Kul pujne (remembrance of their ancestors) is another important
ritual. According to respondents, their ancestral god must be Chandi Baraha because He accepts pig scarifice.
There is not clear cut demarcation of the years for Kul puja. In the study
area, there is variation in the years of Kul
puja between the Magar clans.
Generally, they arrange Kul puja at
the alternate of seven years. They arrange this ritual at the last of December or January’s bright half of a
lunar month on Wednesday or Friday.
The small branch of Jhakro is kept on
the tap on bath in the morning on
that day. The house is purified and smeared by the oil of sesame's
seeds.
2.2 Cultural importance of Jhakro
Man is highly developed living beings than other organisms due to capacity of building culture and to adopt
easily according to their environment.
According to Tylor, culture is that complex whole, which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom and
any other capabilities acquired by
man as a member of society. The people
acquired those culture which helps to adopt them easily. In Magar community, they acquired the
importance of Jhakro from their ancestors. The two above described ritual’s
activities are rounds around the plant species Jhakro. They believe that, it is a such type of plant which make purity of
their polluted situation of life.
They thought that, Jhakro helps to
join their ancestors with them.
2.3 Symbiotic association between culture and Jhakro
To begin with, each society
must cope with the problem
of production-behaviorally satisfying minimal requirements for subsistence; hence there must be an etic behavioral mode of production. The technology and the practice
of expanding or limiting
the modes of reproduction. The mode of production and reproduction forms the structure. At that time behavioral superstructure is formed. Mental and 'emic' superstructure, meaning
the conscious and unconscious cognitive
goals, categories, rules, plans, values,
philosophies and beliefs
about behavior elicited
from the participants (Harris,1980).
3. Conclusion
In any society of the world, cultural traits are developed by the human beings for their better adaptation
within their environment. Environment
is changeable. Within this situation human should adjust in changing ecosystem in their society. Food, shelter,
cloth and good health are essential to adjust there. For good health people search different
plant species, their character and importance.
The most of the medically important plant species are saved when they are interlinked with their important cultural
traits. In Magar community, the Jhakro and cultural traits death and kulpujne rituals are tightly connected. It makes the Magar community cohesive, solidarity and share
we feeling. Symbiotic association between
culture and Jhakro is found in Magar community but as Marvin Harris argues,
there is materialistic meaning of each cultural trait, but it is vanish within the
Magar of the study area about the Jhakro. They only express that Jhakro is pure and essential plant species which is
necessary to make happy for our
ancestral god as well as to save our dead soul and complete the polluted rituals. In the analysis of
'etic' prospective, the plant Jhakro is one of the most important
medicinal plants. It has special smell
which can be used as pesticide and other medicinal propose locally, though chemical analysis has not
been carried out till now. In the
name of modernization, most of
the people ignore their cultural values and materials
and increase dependency on allopathic medicine
day by day. Increasing dependency will not save
communities in terrible change in ecosystem of any corner of the world.
No comments:
Post a Comment