CHAIBASA, the amazing megalith town
by
Subhashis Das
(The poor quality of the snaps is deeply regretted)
This post in actuality is a tribute to Chaibasa, a town in Jharkhand of East India which is perhaps one of the few last remaining towns of India where megaliths can be witnessed all over and where megalith building is a living tradition.
This is Ho country. Anthropologically
speaking Hos are proto austroloid Kolarian people; a sister tribe of the Mundas
and they are a megalithic lot too. They are believed to have entered the region
of Singhbhum in South Jharkhand pretty late. Therefore their monuments, the
megaliths are assumed to be relatively newer, not going beyond 500/600 years.
So profoundly megalithic are the
Hos that they would raise menhirs to commemorate any event; a major victory in
a football game or the birth of girl child or a significant meeting that may
have been held or perhaps even for the formation of the Jharkhand state.
This post in actuality is a tribute to Chaibasa, a town in Jharkhand of East India which is perhaps one of the few last remaining towns of India where megaliths can be witnessed all over and where megalith building is a living tradition.
You see tall menhirs dotting the countryside as you begin to approach the region of Singhbhum. Their density augments as you begin to enter the town of Chaibasa.
Such megalithic burials in every Ho courtyard are called sasandiri |
Ho homes are pieces of art…thoroughly
whitewashed and half of it from the bottom donning beige or black colour produced
from seeds. The floors too are painted from the extracts of various seeds. The
village women toil to paint their homes every 15 days to keep them sparkling! These
white homes dazzle in the sun in the Singhbhum landscape like jewels.
One tall menhir |
The unique fact about Chaibasa and its environs is that majority of the homes of the Hos have megalithic burials called sasandiris in their courtyard, it is a living tradition here.
Their departed ancestors though are dead they yet remain a member of their family so their remains are buried in the courtyard. The cremated ash of the deceased is inserted into funerary pots and thereafter buried in the courtyard over which the sepulchral slabs or the sasandiris are placed. Later in their memory the tall menhirs or the birdiris are erected in the sacred land of the village.
Such large menhirs called Bidiris dot the villages all around Chaibasa |
Another set of tall menhirs (bidiris) in a village called Baihatu |
What exactly is this, a cenotaph ? This strcuture has a North-South orientation |
If I had it my way I would have had Chaibasa
be declared a heritage town not only for the innumerable megaliths that the
region houses but also for continuing the tradition of megalith making since
unknown times in an uninterrupted manner.
Know any place like this?
(More in Sacred Stones in Indian Civilization)
©Subhahsis Das
Comments
Dheeraj
Keep reading Megaliths of India.
Love and peace
Subhashis Das
Abhishek Bose.
There is a film on adivasi heritage and culture available with PSBT, called "Eer-Stories In Stone", which was made in 2011. I came across this heritage and history while shooting for it. If you're interested in more, you should get a copy of the film.
Cheers,
Mithun
I liked your blogger page. I was wondering if you researched on how people erected the large menhirs, how they brought these menhirs to the burial place?
I hope you can find these also
Deogam