Rajjhar
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From The Tribes And Castes Of The Central Provinces Of India
By R. V. Russell
Of The Indian Civil Service
Superintendent Of Ethnography, Central Provinces
Assisted By Rai Bahadur Hira Lal, Extra Assistant Commissioner
Macmillan And Co., Limited, London, 1916.
NOTE 1: The 'Central Provinces' have since been renamed Madhya Pradesh.
NOTE 2: While reading please keep in mind that all articles in this series have been scanned from the original book. Therefore, footnotes have got inserted into the main text of the article, interrupting the flow. Readers who spot these footnotes gone astray might like to shift them to their correct place.
Rajjhar
Rajbhar, Lajjhar
A caste of farmservants found in the northern Districts. In 1 9 1 1 they numbered "°"'^^' about 8000 persons in the Central Provinces, being returned principally from the Districts of the Satpura plateau. The names Rajjhar and Rajbhar appear to be applied indiscriminately to the same caste, who are an offshoot of the great Bhar tribe of northern India. The original name appears to have been Raj Bhar, which signifies a landowning Bhar, like Raj-Gond, Raj-Korku and so on.
In Mandla all the members of the caste were shown as Rajbhar in 1891, and Rajjhar in 1901, and the two names seem to be used interchangeably in other Districts in the same manner. Some section or family names, such as Bamhania, Patela, Barhele and others, are common to people calling themselves Rajjhar and Rajbhar. But, though practically the same ^ Tribes and Castes, art. Rafrhuvansi.
caste, the Rajjhars seem, in some localities, to be more backward and primitive than the Rajbhars. This is also the case in Berar, where they are commonly known as Lajjhar and are said to be akin to the Gonds. A Gond will there take food from a Lajjhar, but not a Lajjhar from a Gond. They are more Hinduised than the Gonds and have prohibited the killing or injuring of cows by some caste penalties/ 2. Origin The caste appears to be in part of mixed origin arising and subfj- Qm the unions of Hindu fathers with women of the Bhar divisions. tribe. Several of their family names are derived from those of other castes, as Bamhania (from Brahman), Sunarya (from Sunar), Baksaria (a Rajput sept), Ahlriya (an Ahir or cowherd), and Bisatia from Bisati (a hawker). Other names are after plants or animals, as Baslya from the bans or bamboo, Mohanya from the moJiin tree, Chhitkaria from the sitapJial or custard-apple tree, Hardaya from the banyan tree, Richhya from the bear, and Dukhania from the buffalo.
Members of this last sept will not drink buffalo's milk or wear black cloth, because this is the colour of their totem animal. Members of septs named after other castes have also adopted some natural object as a sept totem ; thus those of the Sunarya sept worship gold as being the metal with which the Sunar is associated. Those of the Bamhania sept revere the banyan and pipal trees, as these are held sacred by Brahmans. The Bakraria or Bagsaria sept believe their name to be derived from that of the bdgJi or tiger, and they worship this animal's footprints by tying a thread round them.
3. Mar- The marriage of members of the same sept, and also riage. that of first cousius, is forbidden. The caste do not employ Brahmans at their marriage and other ceremonies, and they account for this somewhat quaintly by saying that their ancestors were at one time accustomed to rely on the calculations of Brahman priests ; but many marriages which the Brahman foretold as auspicious turned out very much the reverse ; and on this account they have discarded the Brahman, and now determine the suitability or otherwise of a projected union by the common primitive custom of ' Kitts' Berdr Census Report (1881), p. 157.
throwing two grains of rice into a vessel of water and seeing
whether they will meet. The truth is probably that they
are too backward ever to have had recourse to the Brahman
priest, but now, though they still apparently have no desire
for his services, they recognise the fact to be somewhat
discreditable to themselves, and desire to explain it away by
the story already given. In Hoshangabad the bride still
goes to the bridegroom's house to be married as among the
Gonds.
A bride-price is paid, which consists of four rupees, a khandi ^ of juari or wheat, and two pieces of cloth. This is received by the bride's father, who, however, has in turn to pay seven rupees eight annas and a goat to the caste panchayat or committee for the arrangement and sanction of the match. This last payment is known as Sharab-kanipaya or liquor-money, and with the goat furnishes the wherewithal for a sumptuous feast to the caste. The marriage-shed must be made of freshly-cut timber, which should not be allowed to fall to the ground, but must be supported and carried off on men's shoulders as it is cut.
When the bridegroom arrives at the marriage-shed he is met
by the bride's mother and conducted by her to an inner
room of the house, where he finds the bride standing. He
seizes her fist, which she holds clenched, and opens her
fingers by force. The couple then walk five times round
the cJiauk or sacred space made with lines of flour on the
floor, the bridegroom holding the bride by her little finger.
They are preceded by some relative of the bride, who walks
round the post carrying a pot of water, with seven holes in
it ; the water spouts from these holes on to the ground, and
the couple must tread in it as they go round the post. This
forms the essential and binding portion of the marriage.
That night the couple sleep in the same room with a woman lying between them. Next day they return to the bridegroom's house, and on arriving at his door the boy's mother meets him and touches his head, breast and knees with a churning-stick, a winnowing-fan and a pestle, with the object of exorcising any evil spirits who may be accompanying the bridal couple. As the pair enter the marriage-shed erected before the bridegroom's house they are drenched with water 1 About 400 lbs.
by a man sitting on the roof, and when they come to the door of the house the bridegroom's younger brother, or some other boy, sits across it with his legs stretched out to prevent the bride from entering. The girl pushes his legs aside and goes into the house, where she stays for three months with her husband, and then returns to her parents for a year.
After this she is sent to her husband with a basket of fried cakes and a piece of cloth, and takes up her residence with him. When a widow is to be married, the couple pour turmeric and water over each other, and then walk seven times round in a circle In an empty space, holding each other by the hand. A widow commonly marries her deceased husband's younger brother, but is not compelled to do so. Divorce is permitted for adultery on the part of the wife, 4. Social The caste bury their dead with the head pointing to the customs, ^yggj-.
This practice is peculiar, and is also followed. Colonel Dalton states, by the hill Bhuiyas of Bengal, who in so doing honour the quarter of the setting sun. When a burial takes place, all the mourners who accompany the corpse throw a little earth into the grave. On the same day some food and liquor are taken to the grave and offered to the dead man's spirit, and a feast is given to the caste-fellows. This concludes the ceremonies of mourning, and the next day the relatives go about their business. The caste are usually petty cultivators and labourers, while they also collect grass and fuel for sale, and propagate the lac insect. In Seoni they have a special relation with the Ahirs, from whom they will take cooked food, while they say that the AhIrs will also eat from their hands. In Narsinghpur a similar connection has been observed between the Rajjhars and the Lodhi caste.
This probably arises from the fact that the former have worked for several generations as the farmservants of Lodhi or Ahir employers, and have been accustomed to live in their houses and partake of their meals, so that caste rules have been abandoned for the sake of convenience. A similar intimacy has been observed between the Panwars and Gonds, and other castes who stand in this relation to each other. The Rajjhars will also eat katcha food (cooked with water) from Kunbis and Kahars. But in
Hoshangabad some of them will not take food from any caste, even from Brahmans. Their women wear glass bangles only on the right hand, and a brass ornament known as indtJii on the left wrist. They wear no ornaments in the nose or cars, and have no breast-clotii. They are tattooed with dots on the face and patterns of animals on the right arm, but not on the left arm or legs.
A liaison between a youth and maiden of the caste is considered a trifling matter, being punished only with a fine of two to four annas or pence. A married woman detected in an intrigue is mulcted in a sum of four or five rupees, and if her partner be a man of another caste a lock of her hair is cut off. The caste are generally ignorant and dirty, and are not much better than the Gonds and other forest tribes.