Kharwar
The Kharwar are an indigenous tribal community primarily distributed across the eastern and central Indian states of Jharkhand, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh (notably Sonbhadra district), Chhattisgarh, Odisha, and West Bengal, where they are officially classified as a Scheduled Tribe in regions like Jharkhand and Odisha.[1][2][3] Their traditional livelihood revolves around settled agriculture, supplemented by forest collection and wage labor, with a social organization featuring exogamous clans, totemic reverence for the Khar grass, and practices such as monogamous marriages within a classificatory kinship framework.[4][3] Historical accounts trace Kharwar settlements to areas like the Palamau region in present-day Jharkhand and the Sone Valley, with oral traditions positing migrations from locales such as Khari Jhar or legendary ties to ancient Suryavanshi lineages, though empirical evidence points to their integration among Dravidian and Austroasiatic-influenced groups in pre-colonial agrarian societies.[1][5] A defining episode in their collective memory is the 1881 Kharwar Movement, a resistance effort in the Chota Nagpur region against British colonial policies, encompassing anti-census protests, religious revivalism under figures like Bhagat Birsa-influenced leaders, and demands for land rights that highlighted tensions over resource extraction and administrative impositions.[6] Today, numbering around 486,000 in India, the community navigates modernization's impacts, including shifts toward education and urban migration, while preserving cultural elements like Sadri-language folk traditions and animistic rituals amid broader Hindu influences.[5][3]Etymology and Origins
Etymological Roots
The name Kharwar derives from the Hindi and regional term khar, denoting Saccharum spontaneum, a tall perennial grass commonly used for thatching roofs and crafting mats in eastern India.[1] This grass holds totemic significance for the Kharwar community, who traditionally refrain from cutting or damaging it during its growth to honor ancestral customs tied to agrarian and forest-based livelihoods.[1] Anthropological accounts link the ethnonym directly to this totem, suggesting the tribe's identity emerged from clans revering the plant as a symbol of sustenance and protection in their native habitats along the Sone River valley and Chota Nagpur plateau.[7] Variations in self-identification, such as Khairwar among subgroups in districts like Surguja, trace the root to khair (Acacia catechu), a hardwood tree valued for timber and catechu extraction, indicating localized adaptations of the name based on prominent flora in their territories.[8] Broader linguistic evidence positions Kharwar or Kherwar as an archaic tribal descriptor in Munda-speaking traditions, potentially predating modern subgroups and denoting proto-austroasiatic forest dwellers who integrated totemic elements into their nomenclature.[9] These roots underscore a causal connection between the tribe's name and ecological totems, rather than mythological or exogenous derivations unsupported by empirical tribal lore.[10]Traditional and Mythological Origins
The Kharwar community traditionally traces its mythological origins to the ancient Suryavanshi (Solar) dynasty of Hindu lore, claiming descent from Rohitashva, the son of the legendary king Harishchandra. According to this oral tradition, Rohitashva was exiled due to a divine curse associated with his father's trials of truthfulness and sacrifice, leading the lineage to migrate and settle in regions such as Rohtas and Palamau. This narrative positions the Kharwar as offshoots of Kshatriya royalty who, over time, adopted tribal lifestyles amid forested terrains, a claim echoed in Uttar Pradesh subgroups who identify as "Suryavanshi Kharwar."[5][1][11] An alternative legend attributes the ethnonym "Kharwar" to a migration from Khari Jhar (a mythical or historical hilly locale), where ancestors purportedly originated before receiving land grants in Palamau from Chero chieftains for military or service rendered. This story, prevalent among Jharkhand and Odisha Kharwar, underscores a narrative of rewarded valor rather than royal exile, with the name deriving from "Khar" (possibly denoting forest or clan) and "war" (linked to abode or warrior). Such accounts blend proto-historical elements with folklore, reflecting efforts to assert pre-colonial autonomy against later agrarian displacements.[2][4][7] These traditions, preserved through clan bards and rituals, lack corroboration in epigraphic records predating medieval inscriptions (e.g., a 1169 AD reference to regional presence), suggesting they serve to legitimize social identity amid interactions with dominant castes. Historians note parallels with broader Adivasi claims to Vedic lineages, potentially influenced by Sanskritization processes, though empirical genetics and linguistics indicate Dravidian-Austroasiatic roots distinct from northern Indo-Aryan royals.[1][12]Historical Development
Pre-Colonial Presence and Society
The Kharwar people trace their pre-colonial presence to the Rohtasgarh region in present-day Bihar, where local traditions identify them as former rulers before their migration southward to Palamau in Jharkhand during the early medieval period.[12] Inscriptions and accounts suggest affiliations with the Khayaravala dynasty, which governed territories spanning parts of Bihar and Jharkhand from the 11th to 12th centuries CE, engaging in agriculture and local governance as a tribal polity. Their original habitats included the Sone Valley and Khairagarh in Chhattisgarh, from which groups dispersed to areas like Sundergarh and Jajpur in Odisha, establishing settled communities as landholders prior to widespread external incursions. Mythological accounts, preserved in oral traditions, link Kharwar origins to the Suryavanshi lineage, specifically Rohitashva, son of the ancient king Harishchandra, who was exiled due to a curse and resettled in forested valleys, adopting subsistence practices suited to the terrain.[5] These narratives position the Kharwar as Proto-Australoid or Dravidian-origin groups who maintained autonomy in hilly and forested domains, practicing settled cultivation and rendering services to neighboring chieftains like the Chero of Palamau, which granted them land holdings. Archaeological and inscriptional evidence from Rohtasgarh, dating to the 7th–12th centuries CE, corroborates a hierarchical tribal presence in the area, though direct attribution to Kharwar remains tied to endogenous claims rather than exhaustive epigraphic records.[3] Socially, pre-colonial Kharwar society was organized around endogamy, with six primary subgroups—Suryabansi, Daulatbandi, Kheri/Chero, Bhogati/Ganju, Manjhia, and others—each regulating internal marriages while prohibiting unions with outsiders to preserve ethnic cohesion. Totemistic exogamous clans structured kinship, employing a classificatory system that defined roles such as joking relations with certain uncles and avoidance with aunts, fostering community bonds in isolated hamlets.[3] Families were predominantly nuclear and patrilineal, adhering to monogamy, with joint households rare; disputes were adjudicated by village-level councils (Baithaki) enforcing customary norms on matters like intra-clan relations and resource allocation.[13] Economically, the Kharwar relied on rain-fed agriculture as the mainstay, cultivating single annual crops alongside forest extraction, livestock rearing, fishing, and hunting, which supported self-sufficient hamlets distanced from dominant agrarian societies.[3] This structure emphasized communal labor and seasonal mobility within territories, reflecting adaptation to the ecological niches of central India's plateaus and valleys before the intensification of external trade or conquest disrupted indigenous polities.[12]Colonial Encounters and Resistance Movements
The Kharwar tribe, primarily residing in the forested and hilly regions of Chota Nagpur including Palamau (modern-day Jharkhand), faced significant disruptions during British colonial expansion in the early 19th century. Following the British annexation of the area after defeating the Chero rulers in 1818, the imposition of the zamindari system under the Permanent Settlement of 1793 extended to tribal lands, enabling non-tribal landlords and moneylenders to encroach on communal holdings traditionally managed by Kharwar clans. This led to widespread indebtedness and loss of autonomy, as revenue demands escalated without regard for shifting cultivation practices central to Kharwar subsistence.[14] Tensions culminated in active participation in the 1857 Indian Rebellion, where Kharwar leaders mobilized against British authority amid broader sepoy mutinies and local grievances. Nilamber and Pitamber, brothers and chiefs of the Bhogta subclan of the Kharwar tribe, who held ancestral jagirs in the region, rallied tribal forces in response to rumors of British defeats elsewhere. On October 21, 1857, they assembled around 500 fighters and attacked Chainpur, targeting properties of Raghubar Dayal, a local figure aligned with British interests, marking an initial success in disrupting colonial supply lines.[15] The brothers expanded operations, capturing the strategic town of Daltonganj and nearby forts such as Manatu and Ranka, while forging alliances with neighboring Chero and Bogtah groups to challenge British garrisons. British records note their forces employing guerrilla tactics suited to the terrain, inflicting casualties on retreating troops before a counteroffensive led by Major English in late 1857 dispersed the rebels. Nilamber and Pitamber were apprehended in early 1859 and publicly hanged in Daltonganj as a deterrent, underscoring the British strategy of exemplary punishment to quell tribal unrest.[14][15] Post-1857 suppression fragmented Kharwar resistance, though sporadic protests persisted against revenue policies and forest regulations that restricted access to resources. The rebellion highlighted the tribe's integration into wider anti-colonial networks but also exposed vulnerabilities to superior British firepower and intelligence, contributing to stricter administrative controls like the Chota Nagpur Tenancy Act of 1908, which aimed to safeguard tribal lands yet often failed in practice due to implementation gaps.[14]Post-Independence Trajectory
Following India's independence in 1947, the Kharwar community was formally classified under the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950, in Uttar Pradesh, granting them access to affirmative action measures such as reservations in education, government employment, and political representation aimed at addressing historical disadvantages. However, many community members expressed dissatisfaction with this Scheduled Caste designation, viewing it as misaligned with their tribal identity and cultural practices, which led to ongoing advocacy for reclassification as a Scheduled Tribe in certain regions. In contrast, Kharwar populations in states like Jharkhand, Bihar, and Odisha were recognized as Scheduled Tribes, entitling them to protections under the Fifth and Sixth Schedules of the Constitution, including safeguards against land alienation and provisions for tribal autonomous councils.[2] These classifications facilitated targeted welfare schemes, such as the Tribal Sub-Plan and integrated development projects post-1970s, though implementation varied by state, with Uttar Pradesh's Scheduled Caste status limiting access to tribe-specific forest rights under the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006. Socio-economically, Kharwar livelihoods remained centered on subsistence agriculture and forest-based activities, with many engaging in seasonal wage labor due to fragmented landholdings and limited irrigation, as evidenced by surveys in Sonebhadra district, Uttar Pradesh, where over 80% of households depended on rain-fed farming by the early 2000s.[16] Post-independence modernization, including infrastructure projects and urbanization, accelerated migration to urban centers for low-skilled jobs, eroding traditional practices while exposing communities to economic vulnerabilities like debt bondage and displacement from mining activities in mineral-rich areas such as Chota Nagpur.[16] Literacy rates improved marginally from near-zero in 1951 to around 40-50% by 2011 in tribal-designated areas, bolstered by schemes like the Mid-Day Meal program and residential schools, yet persistent barriers including inadequate infrastructure and cultural alienation kept educational attainment low, with female literacy lagging significantly.[17] Despite policy interventions, Kharwar communities faced ongoing challenges from land encroachments and environmental degradation, prompting localized assertions for cultural preservation, such as the promotion of traditional dances like Jhijhari in Bihar's Kaimur district through government-backed festivals starting in the 2020s.[18] No large-scale post-independence movements akin to pre-1947 resistances emerged, but integration into broader tribal advocacy frameworks influenced demands for better implementation of Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996, emphasizing self-governance. Overall, while constitutional safeguards provided a framework for upliftment, empirical indicators like high poverty rates (over 60% below the poverty line in surveyed Uttar Pradesh clusters as of 2018) highlight uneven progress amid rapid socio-economic transitions.[3]Social Organization and Cultural Practices
Clan Structure and Endogamy
The Kharwar community practices endogamy at the tribal and subgroup levels, restricting marriages to within the community to preserve social cohesion and cultural identity.[19] This endogamous structure is subdivided into six primary groups—Suryabansi, Daulatbandi, Kheri (or Chero), Bhogati (or Ganju), Parab (or Paraband), and Manjhia (or Mauijhia)—each functioning as an endogamous unit where marital alliances are preferentially sought internally.[1] [2] Variations in subgroup nomenclature appear across regional ethnographies, reflecting local dialects or historical migrations, but the core division into these six remains consistent in anthropological records from Bihar and Jharkhand.[20] Within these endogamous subgroups, the Kharwar organize into exogamous totemic clans known as kili, which prohibit marriages between members sharing the same clan totem to avoid consanguinity and maintain genetic diversity.[2] Examples of such clans include Nag (snake), Aiyen, Karketta, Kachchap, and Parasai, with totems often derived from animals, plants, or natural elements symbolizing ancestral lineages.[2] This clan-based exogamy operates alongside broader endogamy, ensuring mates are selected from different clans but the same subgroup or community, a practice reinforced by customary panchayats that mediate disputes over alliances.[21] Monogamy prevails as the normative marital form, with small nuclear families typical, though polygyny occurs rarely among economically secure households.[3] Prohibitions extend to outsiders, including other tribes or castes, underscoring the community's insularity; violations historically invited social ostracism or fines adjudicated by village councils.[3] Ethnographic studies note that while modernization has introduced inter-community unions in urban fringes, rural Kharwar adherence to endogamous norms persists, linked to inheritance patrilineality and totemic taboos.[20]Religious Beliefs and Rituals
The Kharwar, a Scheduled Tribe primarily residing in Bihar, Jharkhand, and Uttar Pradesh, adhere to a syncretic religious framework blending animistic tribal traditions with Hindu practices, where approximately 95.94% identify as Hindu.[5] Ancestral spirits (bhuta) and nature deities hold significance, reflecting indigenous animism, while Hindu pantheon figures such as Rama, Shiva, Parvati, Krishna, and Hanuman are venerated under Brahmanical influence.[22] This duality is evident in the employment of both tribal priests—Pahan for animistic rites and Baiga for shamanistic healing—and Brahmin priests for Vedic ceremonies, allowing parallel observance of indigenous and Sanskritic rituals.[2][23] Key rituals center on life-cycle events and seasonal festivals. Birth ceremonies involve purification rites led by the Pahan to ward off malevolent spirits, followed by naming on the sixth day with offerings to ancestors. Marriage rituals combine tribal exchanges of bride price with Hindu saptapadi vows, often officiated by both Pahan and Brahmin, emphasizing clan exogamy and totemic taboos. Death practices include either cremation (for adults) or burial (for children), with a ten-day pollution period marked by feasting and spirit propitiation to prevent ancestral unrest; the soul is believed to linger until rituals ensure its journey to the afterlife.[2][24] Seasonal festivals underscore agrarian and naturalistic beliefs. Sarhul celebrates spring with sal tree worship and rice-beer offerings to forest spirits for bountiful harvests, while Sohrai honors cattle post-harvest through animal markings and communal dances. Hindu-influenced observances like Diwali (for prosperity), Durga Puja (against evil), Chhath (sun worship), Jitia (for child welfare), and Phagu (Holi precursor) incorporate tribal elements such as animal sacrifices or spirit invocations, reflecting adaptation rather than full assimilation. Nawakhani marks new rice harvest with first-fruits dedicated to deities.[23][25] Historically, the 19th-century Kherwar movement sought to purify tribal religion by promoting monotheism—a singular supreme deity—over polytheistic animism and Hindu syncretism, aiming to resist cultural erosion amid colonial pressures.[26] Though influential in fostering identity assertions, contemporary practices retain the hybrid form, with minor adherents to Christianity (0.15%), Buddhism, Jainism, or Islam, often due to missionary activity or migration.[5] This persistence of animistic cores within Hinduism highlights causal resilience of indigenous cosmologies against external impositions, as ethnographic studies note limited erosion from modernization.[16]Language, Folklore, and Totems
The Kharwar speak Sadri, an Indo-Aryan language, as their primary vernacular for intra-community communication, supplemented by Hindi for broader interactions.[1] In regions such as Odisha, they additionally employ Odia, the state language, often using its script for writing.[2] [19] Their original mother tongue, Kherwari, belonged to the Mundari branch of the Austroasiatic family but has been largely supplanted and forgotten amid linguistic assimilation to dominant regional tongues.[19] Kharwar folklore centers on origin myths linking the tribe to the ancient Suryavansha (solar dynasty) of Hindu tradition, positing descent from Rohitashva, son of King Harishchandra, who faced exile following a divine curse.[5] Subgroups in Uttar Pradesh trace migration from the Rohtas region, reinforcing claims of royal lineage amid displacement.[19] Narratives also preserve accounts of inter-tribal conflicts, including battles with the Oraon over territorial and resource disputes in areas like the Kaimur hills, reflecting historical animosities and survival strategies in forested uplands./Paper/198-1-2862-1-10-20210608.pdf) The Khar grass (Saccharum spontaneum), a tall, wild reed prevalent in their habitats, functions as the central totem, symbolizing ancestral protection and ecological interdependence; tribe members traditionally abstain from harvesting or damaging it during growth to avoid spiritual repercussions.[1] This plant totem likely derives from an expanded clan sept within a broader proto-tribal grouping, where such symbols enforced exogamy and resource taboos, though contemporary observance varies with modernization.[1]Economic Activities and Livelihoods
Traditional Subsistence and Crafts
The Kharwar, primarily residing in forested and hilly regions of Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, and surrounding states, have historically relied on settled agriculture as the cornerstone of their subsistence economy. They cultivate staple crops such as rice, maize, and millets on small landholdings, often using traditional tools like ploughs drawn by bullocks and employing rain-fed farming dependent on monsoon patterns. This single-crop annual cycle exposes them to vulnerabilities from erratic weather, prompting diversification into subsidiary activities.[19][11][27] Subsidiary livelihoods include livestock rearing, particularly of goats, cattle, and poultry for milk, meat, and draft purposes; collection of minor forest products such as firewood, medicinal herbs, and tubers; and occasional hunting or trapping of small game using bows and arrows. Fishing in local rivers and streams supplements diets during lean agricultural seasons, while wage labor on others' fields or in nearby forests provides cash income. These practices reflect an adaptive strategy to environmental constraints in their habitat, emphasizing self-sufficiency over specialization.[25][22][19] Traditional crafts among the Kharwar are limited and integrated into daily needs rather than commercial production, encompassing basic bamboo basketry for storage and transport, rudimentary ironworking for agricultural tools, and weaving of coarse cotton fabrics using pit looms for personal clothing. These skills, passed down orally within families, support subsistence without evidence of market-oriented artisan guilds or distinctive stylistic traditions unique to the community.[28][29]Impacts of Modernization and Development
Modernization and development projects, particularly mining and industrialization in regions like Sonbhadra and Singrauli districts, have significantly disrupted traditional Kharwar livelihoods centered on subsistence agriculture and forest-based activities. Coal mining expansions, including thermal power projects, have led to large-scale land acquisition and displacement, forcing many Kharwar families to abandon farming and collection of non-timber forest products, resulting in seasonal or circular migration for wage labor in construction, quarrying, and urban informal sectors.[30] This transition has introduced vulnerabilities such as insecure employment, occupational hazards, and increased family workloads for women left behind, though remittances from migrants have occasionally supported household consumption and minor investments.[30] Agricultural practices among the Kharwar remain predominantly traditional, with 97% relying on manual methods and minimal mechanization like tractors or pumps (only 3%), limiting productivity gains from modernization.[16] A shift toward diversified occupations is evident, with 47% engaged as daily wage laborers, 34% in agriculture (often sharecropping due to land scarcity), and smaller portions in government jobs or petty trade, reflecting adaptation to resource constraints but persistent low incomes, where 42% of families earn between ₹5,001 and ₹10,000 monthly.[31] Traditional crafts, such as pottery, have declined sharply amid urbanization, with earthen utensils used by only 3% compared to 67% adopting aluminum alternatives, eroding specialized skills without equivalent modern economic niches.[16] Development-induced environmental degradation, including deforestation and restricted forest access, has compounded livelihood insecurity, exacerbating food insecurity and malnutrition in affected communities.[30] While exposure to modern media (e.g., 62% mobile phone access) and government schemes has increased awareness—47% of Kharwar households report knowledge of such programs—limited infrastructure and education barriers hinder effective integration, perpetuating marginalization despite nominal socio-economic improvements like pucca housing in 28% of cases.[31] Overall, these changes have fostered a diluted reliance on ancestral resource bases, with migration disrupting social cohesion and education continuity, though selective benefits like remittances offer partial mitigation.[30]Demographic Profile and Official Recognition
Population Distribution and Statistics
The Kharwar are predominantly distributed in the eastern and central regions of India, with the largest concentrations in Jharkhand, followed by Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. Smaller populations exist in Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, West Bengal, Odisha, and Maharashtra.[5] Population estimates indicate approximately 254,000 Kharwar in Jharkhand, 172,000 in Uttar Pradesh, and 128,000 in Bihar, comprising the core of their demographic footprint.[5] In Uttar Pradesh, Kharwar constitute the second-largest Scheduled Tribe community, accounting for about 14.16% of the state's total ST population of 1,134,273 as per the 2011 Census, primarily in eastern districts sharing borders with Bihar and Jharkhand.[16] [32] The Scheduled Caste classification for Kharwar in Uttar Pradesh recorded 14,796 individuals in the same census, reflecting varying official categorizations across states.[1] Within Jharkhand, where Kharwar are notified as a Scheduled Tribe, they are concentrated in districts such as Garhwa, Palamu, and Latehar, often in forested and hilly terrains conducive to their traditional livelihoods.[1] In Uttar Pradesh, key districts include Sonbhadra, Mirzapur, Chandauli, Ballia, Deoria, and Ghazipur, where they form pockets of tribal settlement amid agrarian landscapes.[3] In Bihar, distributions align with border areas adjacent to Jharkhand, though precise district-level ST enumerations for Kharwar remain limited in available census aggregates.[5]| State | Estimated Population | Classification Notes | Primary Districts |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jharkhand | 254,000 | Scheduled Tribe | Garhwa, Palamu, Latehar[5] [1] |
| Uttar Pradesh | 172,000 (ST est.); 14,796 (SC, 2011) | Scheduled Tribe (second-largest); Scheduled Caste | Sonbhadra, Mirzapur, Ballia, Deoria[5] [16] [1] |
| Bihar | 128,000 | Varies; third-largest tribe overall | Border districts with Jharkhand[5] [33] |