Tuesday, October 23, 2012

MIDDLE MOUNTAIN PEOPLES OF NEPAL


PEOPLES OF NEPAL
Flag of Nepal,
The only national flag not rectangular  or square

Peoples of the Middle  Mountains


Limbus, Rais, Newars, Gurungs, Magars, Bahuns, and Chetris


     Who are the people residing in our Habitat work region of Pokhara?   Researching this question has been quite confusing.  I have discovered that due to Nepal's extremely diverse landscape (Himalayan peaks to the Terai flat lands), Nepal is a crossroads of many cultures.  



A View of Nepal's Geographic Diversity


     There are more than 60 different ethnic groups or castes in Nepal with as many linguistic groups, life styles, and religions.  What an incredibly rich cultural tapestry!

   
      Hinduism in its colorful forms holds the hearts of the country's tropical south, as Buddhism flows from the Tibetan Plateau across the north.  In the midst of the country both great faiths uniquely and colorfully fuse with ancient animism and shaman rituals.  


      Pokhara and Kathmandu are both located in the Middle Mountains or Midlands Zone, between  the Himalayan  peaks and the Terai or flat lands.  Thus, the people we will be working with could be of the following ethnic groups who reside in the Midlands.

Rais and Limbus
   The Rais and the Limbus  have inhabited and ruled the  Kathmandu area since the 700's BC.  Subsequently after being  defeated around 300 AD,  they moved to the eastern hilly area of Nepal.  They call themselves Kirati and can be distinguished by their Mongolian features.

 Newars
     The Newars of the Kathmandu valley total more than one million.  Their language is distinct from Tibetan, Hindi or Nepali and some say it is the most difficult language in the world to learn.  They are excellent farmers and merchants as well as skilled artisans.  I have read that Kublai  Khan of China invited many artisans to his kingdom to work.  Their architectural influence is very noticeable in the Kathmandu  area and  extending as  far away as Lhasa.  Their origins are shrouded in mystery but are  probably made up of  a variety of early settlers.  

    They live a communal life and have  developed several unique customs including  the worship of the Kumari, a girls worshipped as a living god and the annual charriot races, which are  the annual highlight the  valley's cultural  life.


     I am looking  forward to  see  if  the traditional dress  of the Newars is still being worn.  The men wear trousers with  baggy seat, a double-breasted shirt,  a  vest or coat and  a traditional hat called the  topi.  Some of the women wear a  black sari with a red border.

 Gurungs
     Are a Tibeto-Burmese people.  One of the bigget Burung settlements is Ghandruk, with its sweeping view of the Annapurnas and  Machhapuchhare.  They have made up a large part  of the Gurkha regiments.  Gurung women wear noserings, known as phuli and oral  necklaces.  They call themselves Tamu and originally came  from  Tibet, bringing  with them their animist Bon faith.  A distinctive aspect of village life isthe rodi,  a cross  between a town   hall and a youth center, where teenagers hang out  and cooperative village tasks are planned.

  Magars
     A large group comprising 8% of the population is a Tibeto-Burmese people  who live in many parts  of the  midlands thus showing considerable  regional  variations.
   
      They are excellent soldiers, make up the largest numbers  of  Gurkhas.  Generally they live in two-storey,  rectangular or squre thatched houses washed in  red  clay.  They have been   heavily influenced by Hinduism and in terms of religion,  farming,  housing and dress,  they are  hard to distinguish from Chetris.


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