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{{short description|Hindu agricultural caste of India}} | |||
{{pp-semi|small=yes}} | |||
{{About|the Hindu agricultural community|the people of Greater Jharkhand|Kudumi Mahato|the district in Nigeria|Kurmi, Nigeria}} | |||
{{Merge from|Kunbi|date=July 2011}}{{Infobox caste | |||
{{pp-semi-indef|small=yes}} | |||
|caste_name= Kurmi <br/><br/> कुर्मी | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2023}} | |||
|classification= Claim ] status, but generally recognised as ] | |||
{{EngvarB|date=December 2023}} | |||
|subdivisions=Kurmi, ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ],(Niranjan) | |||
{{Infobox caste | |||
|populated_states=], ], ], ] | |||
| region = ], ], ], ] | |||
|languages= ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], South Indian languages and dialects | |||
| languages = ], ], ]-] | |||
|religions=] | |||
| religions = ], ] | |||
| image = The tribes and castes of the Central Provinces of India (1916) (14577152309).jpg | |||
| caption = A group of Kurmi women in traditional "] dress". | |||
|country=] and ] | |||
| classification = ] | |||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Kurmi''' ({{lang-hi|कुर्मी}}) are a Hindu agricutural '']'' (community) in India. | |||
'''Kurmi''' is traditionally a non-elite ] ] in the lower ] of India, especially southern regions of ], eastern ] and parts of ] and ].<ref name="Bayly2001-lead">{{citation|last=Bayly|first=Susan|author-link=Susan Bayly|title=Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HbAjKR_iHogC&pg=PA200|year=2001|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-79842-6|pages=200–|quote=In southern Awadh, eastern NWP, and much of Bihar, non-labouring gentry groups lived in tightly-knit enclaves among much larger populations of non-elite ‘peasants’ and labouring people. These other groupings included ... non-elite tilling and cattle-keeping people who came to be known by such titles as Kurmi, Koeri and Goala/Ahir.}}</ref> The Kurmis came to be known for their exceptional work ethic, superior tillage and manuring, and gender-neutral culture, bringing praise from Mughal and British administrators alike.<ref name="Bayly1988-p478" /><ref name="Bayly1988-p101" /><ref name="bayly-p41" /> | |||
The group is often associated with the ], though scholars differ as to whether the terms are synonymous.<ref name="Various census of India">{{cite book|title=Various census of India|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=2v8IAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA36|accessdate=13 May 2011|year=1867|pages=36–}}</ref><ref name="Bhattacharya1896">{{cite book|author=Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya|title=Hindu castes and sects: an exposition of the origin of the Hindu caste system and the bearing of the sects towards each other and towards other religious systems / Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=xlpLAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA270|accessdate=13 May 2011|year=1896|publisher=Thacker, Spink|pages=270–}}</ref>{{cn}} In 2006, the Indian government announced that ''Kurmi'' was considered synonymous with the ''Kunbi'' and ''Yellam'' castes in ].<ref name=TheHindu>. The Hindu, January 07, 2006 Union Cabinet approved inclusion and modification of certain castes and communities in the Central list of Other Backward Classes (OBCs)</ref> They are regarded as being historically a ] (agricultural) class by academics, and as an ] by the Indian central government, which deprecates use of the Hindu ] ritual ranks,<ref name="Pandey2005">{{cite book|author=Aditya Pandey|title=South Asia: Politics of South Asia|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=LaINywMCwgAC&pg=PA150|accessdate=13 April 2011|year=2005|publisher=Isha Books |location=Delhi |isbn=9788182053038|page=150}}</ref><ref name=TheHindu/> though the community itself claims membership in the ] (warrior) class. | |||
==Etymology== | == Etymology == | ||
There are several theories |
There are several late-19th century theories of the etymology of ''Kurmi''. According to ] (1896), the word may be derived from an Indian tribal language, or be a ] compound term ''krishi karmi'', "agriculturalist."<ref name="Bhattacharya1896">{{cite book|author=Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya|title=Hindu castes and sects: an exposition of the origin of the Hindu caste system and the bearing of the sects towards each other and towards other religious systems / Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya|url=https://archive.org/details/hinducastesands00bhatgoog|year=1896|publisher=Thacker, Spink|pages=–}}</ref> A theory of ] (1893) holds that it may be derived from ''kṛṣmi'', meaning "ploughman".<ref name="Oppert1978">{{cite book|author=Gustav Salomon Oppert|title=On the original inhabitants of Bharatavarṣa or India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kDzXAAAAMAAJ|date=February 1978|publisher=Arno Press|isbn=978-0-405-10557-9}}</ref> | ||
According to ] (1926), the Bengali word ''kuṛmī'' or ''kurmī'' derives from Sanskrit ''kuṭumbin''.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Chatterji |first=Suniti Kumar |title=The Origin and Development of the Bengali Language |publisher=Calcutta University Press |year=1926 |pages=333}}</ref> This view is endorsed in ] ''A Comparitive Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages'' (1962-1985), where he lists cognates across many Indo-Aryan languages including ], ], and ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Turner |first=Ralph Lilley |url=https://dsal.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/app/soas_query.py?qs=ku%E1%B9%ADumbin&searchhws=yes&matchtype=exact |title=A Comparative Dictionary of Indo-Aryan Languages |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1962–1985 |pages=166}}</ref> | |||
==History== | |||
Kurmis have historically been mostly landowners and cultivators.<ref name="RussellLai1916"/> | |||
== History == | |||
In 2006, the Indian government included the Jati in the backward category list.<ref name=TheHindu/> | |||
=== Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries === | |||
===Colonial descriptions=== | |||
With the continued waning of ] in the early 18th century, the ]'s hinterland dwellers, many of whom were armed and nomadic, began to appear more frequently in settled areas and interact with townspeople and agriculturists. Many new rulers of the 18th century came from such nomadic backgrounds. The effect of this interaction on India's social organisation lasted well into the colonial period. During much of this time, non-elite tillers and pastoralists, such as the Kurmi, were part of a social spectrum that blended only indistinctly into the elite landowning classes at one end, and the menial or ritually polluting classes at the other.<ref name=bayly-p41>{{citation|last=Bayly|first=Susan|title=Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HbAjKR_iHogC|year=2001|publisher=Cambridge University Press|page=41|isbn=978-0-521-79842-6}}</ref> | |||
According to ]: "The Kurmi has a strong, bony hand, natural to a man of his employment. He is frequently a tall and powerful man, outspoken and independent in manner, and is altogether free from cringing obsequiousness."<ref name="Sherring1974">{{cite book|author=Matthew Atmore Sherring|title=Hindu tribes and castes as represented in Benares|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=tDmBAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=10 May 2011|year=1974|publisher=Cosmo Publications|page=258}}</ref> | |||
The Kurmi were famed as market gardeners. In western and northern ], for example, for much of the eighteenth century, the Muslim gentry offered the Kurmi highly discounted rental rates for clearing the jungle and cultivating it. Once the land had been brought stably under the plough, however, the land rent was usually raised to 30 to 80 per cent above the going rate. Although British revenue officials later ascribed the high rent to the prejudice among the elite rural castes against handling the plough, the main reason was the greater productivity of the Kurmi, whose success lay in superior manuring.<ref name="Bayly1988-p478">{{cite book|last=Bayly|first=C. A.|author-link=Christopher Bayly|title=Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars: North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion, 1770–1870|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xfo3AAAAIAAJ|year=1988|publisher=CUP Archive|isbn=978-0-521-31054-3|page=478}}</ref> According to historian ], <blockquote> Whereas the majority of cultivators manured only the lands immediately around the village and used these lands for growing food grains, Kurmis avoided using animal dung for fuel and manured the poorer lands farther from the village (the ''manjha''). They were able, therefore, to grow valuable market crops such as potatoes, melons and tobacco immediately around the village, sow fine grains in the ''manjha'', and restrict the poor millet subsistence crops to the periphery. A network of ''ganjs'' (fixed rural markets) and Kurmi or Kacchi settlements could transform a local economy within a year or two.<ref name="Bayly1988-p101">{{cite book|last=Bayly|first=C. A.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xfo3AAAAIAAJ|title=Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars: North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion, 1770–1870|publisher=CUP Archive|year=1988|isbn=978-0-521-31054-3|page=101|author-link=Christopher Bayly}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
Colonel Edward Tuite Dalton regards them as the descendants of some of the earliest ] colonists: | |||
{{quote|a brown, tawny-coloured people, of average height, well-proportioned, rather lightly framed, and with a fair amount of good looks. They show well-shaped heads and high features, less refined than Brahmans, less martial than Rajputs, of humbler mien even than the Goalas; but, except when they have obviously intermixed with aborigines, they are unquestionably Aryan in looks. Grey eyes and brownish hair are sometimes met with amongst them. The women have usually small and well-formed hands and feet|Dalton's ''Ethnology of Bengal'' - pg 320<ref>{{cite book|author=Sir Herbert Hope Risley|title=The tribes and castes of Bengal: Ethnographic glossary|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=5yk-AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA529|accessdate=26 April 2011|year=1892|publisher=Printed at the Bengal secretariat press|pages=529–}}</ref> }} | |||
Cross-cultural influences were felt also. Hindu tillers worshipped at Muslim shrines in the small towns founded by their Muslim overlords. The Hindu Kurmis of ] and ], for instance, took up the Muslim custom of ] and of burying their dead.<ref name="Bayly1988-p478" /> In some regions, the Kurmis' success as tillers led to land ownership, and to avowals of high status, as noted, for examples, by ] in the early 19th century among the ] Kurmis of the Awadh.<ref name="Pinch1996-p85">{{cite book|first=William R. |last=Pinch|title=Peasants and monks in British India|url=https://archive.org/details/peasantsmonksinb0000pinc|url-access=registration |year=1996|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-20061-6|page=}}</ref> Earlier, in the late eighteenth century, when ], the fourth ], attempted to grant the kshatriya title of ] to a group of influential landed Ayodhya Kurmis, he was thwarted by a united opposition of ]s, who were themselves (as described by Buchanan), "a group of newcomers to the court, who had been peasant soldiers only a few years before ..."<ref name="Pinch1996-p85" /> According to historian William Pinch: <blockquote> Rajputs of Awadh, who along with ] constituted the main beneficiaries of what historian Richard Barnett characterizes as "Asaf's permissive program of social mobility," were not willing to let that mobility reach beyond certain arbitrary socio-cultural boundaries. ... The divergent claims to status in the nineteenth century (and earlier) illustrate the point that for non-Muslims, while varna was generally accepted as the basis for identity, on the whole little agreement prevailed with respect to the place of the individual and the jati within a varna hierarchy.<ref name="Pinch1996-p85" /></blockquote> | |||
===Varna status debate=== | |||
Though designated as Shudra in historical sources, the late-20th century historian ] noted that the Kurmi "thought of themselves not as cosmically created servants (shudra) devoid of any history, but as the descendants of divine warrior clans (kshatriya) firmly rooted in the Indian past."{{cn|date=July 2011}}<ref>, Nandini Gooptu, Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 0521443660, ISBN 9780521443661</ref> | |||
Although the free peasant farm was the mainstay of farming in many parts of north India in the 18th century, in some regions, a combination of climatic, political, and demographic factors led to the increased dependence of peasant cultivators such as the Kurmi. In the Benares division, which had come under the revenue purview of the ] in 1779, the ] of 1783 and the relentless revenue demand from the Company reduced the status of many Kurmi cultivators. A British revenue agent wrote in 1790, "It unfortunately happened that during the famine aforesaid a great proportion of the Kurmis, Kacchis and Koeris were in this district as well as in others supplanted by Brahmans ... " and bemoaned the loss of agricultural revenue in part due to, "this unfavourable mutation amongst the cultivators ..."<ref name="Bayly1988-p478" /> | |||
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the Kurmis, along with other castes such as the ], began to assert the claim that they had previously been Kshatriya and had been "reduced" to peasant status by circumstance.<ref>{{cite book|title=Journal of social and economic studies, Volume 11|url=http://books.google.com/books?ei=WknMTbXeG-3ciAL-ptSHBQ&ct=result&id=c6XrAAAAMAAJ&dq=kurmi+kshatriya&q=kurmis | |||
|accessdate=12 May 2011|year=1994|publisher=A.N.S. Institute of Social Studies|isbn=9788124100677 | |||
|pages=146}}</ref> The Kurmi embarked on a program of publications, public mobilisation, and temple-building to establish their ] credentials and buttress their claims to Kshatriya status.<ref name="Pinch1996">{{cite book|author=William R. Pinch|title=Peasants and monks in British India|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=uEP-ceGYsnYC&pg=PA98|accessdate=13 May 2011|year=1996|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=9780520200616|pages=98–}}</ref> These claims have not been proven, though some scholars allow that such an argument can be made.<ref name="The Caste System of Northern India">{{cite book|title=The Caste System of Northern India |last=Blunt |first=Edward Arthur Henry |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=mABr0B_Ah2QC&pg=PA211|accessdate=13 May 2011|publisher=Gyan Publishing House |edition=Reprint |year=2010 |origyear=1931 |isbn=9788182054950|page=211}}</ref> The Kurmis obtained some support for their claims from Brahmin scholars, who were eager to accommodate a caste group which had become politically powerful.<ref name="LalPathak2003">{{cite book|author1=A. K. Lal|author2=Bindeshwar Pathak|title=Social exclusion: essays in honour of Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=o38ZT8UVw8UC&pg=PA157|accessdate=13 May 2011|year=2003|publisher=Concept Publishing Company|isbn=9788180690532|pages=157–}}</ref> Satadal Dasgupta has noted that it is common for Indian lower castes to claim a higher ''varna'', citing the Kurmi Kshatriya as an example.<ref name="Dasgupta1993">{{cite book|author=Satadal Dasgupta|title=Caste, Kinship and Community: Social System of a Bengal Caste|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=JAUdW9_iziAC&pg=PA32|accessdate=13 May 2011|date=12 July 1993|publisher=Orient Blackswan|isbn=9780863112799|pages=32–}}</ref> A specific instance of this was the ], which created such a history in the early part of the 20th century.<ref name=toiKurmis/> | |||
In the first half of the nineteenth century, economic pressures on the large landowning classes increased noticeably. The prices of agricultural lands fell at the same time that the East India Company, after acquiring the ] (later the ]) in 1805, began to press landowners for more ]. The annexation of Awadh in 1856 created more fear and discontent among the landed elite, and may have contributed to the ]. Economic pressures also opened marginal areas to intensive agriculture and turned the fortunes of the non-elite peasants, such as the Kurmi, who worked them. After the rebellion, the landowning classes, defeated but still pressed economically in the new ], attempted to treat their tenants and labourers as people of lowly birth and to demand unpaid labour from them.<ref name="bayly-p41" /> According to historical anthropologist ], <blockquote> In some instances these were attempts to stave off decline by reinvigorating or intensifying existing forms of customary service. Elsewhere these were wholly novel demands, many being imposed on 'clean' tillers and cattle-keepers like the Ram- and Krishna-loving Koeris, Kurmis and Ahirs ... In either case, these calls were buttressed with appeals to Sanskritic varna theory and Brahmanical caste convention. ... Kurmi and Goala/Ahir tillers who held tenancies from these 'squireens' found themselves being identified as Shudras, that is, people who were mandated to serve those of the superior Kshatriya and Brahman varnas.<ref name="bayly-p41" /></blockquote> | |||
==Culture== | |||
], one of the first anthropologists from India, commented in 1896 on the customs of the Kurmis, primarily in Bihar, of that period: | |||
The elite landowning classes, such as Rajputs and ]s, now sought to present themselves as flagbearers of the ancient Hindu tradition. At the same time, there was a proliferation of ] rituals in the daily life of the elite, a greater stress on pure bloodlines, more stringent conditions placed on matrimonial alliances, and, as noted by some social reformers of the day, an increase among the Rajputs of ], a practice that had little history among the Kurmi.<ref name="bayly-p41" /> | |||
===Diet=== | |||
Some of the Kurmis ate fowls and field rats; but they did not eat pork or beef.<ref name="Bhattacharya1896">{{cite book|author=Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya|title=Hindu castes and sects: an exposition of the origin of the Hindu caste system and the bearing of the sects towards each other and towards other religious systems / Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=xlpLAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA272|accessdate=17 June 2011|year=1896|publisher=Thacker, Spink|pages=272-273 |authorlink=Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya}}</ref> | |||
{{Gallery|width=200 | align =center | |||
===Religion=== | |||
|File:India1909PrevailingRaces.JPG|The map of the prevailing "races" of India (now discredited) based on the 1901 Census of British India. The Kurmi are shown both in the ] (UP) and the ]. | |||
Historically, the religion of the Kurmis in Bihar is the same as that of the other local Shudra castes. They offer worship to the gods of the Hindu pantheon, and also to such local deities as ], ], and ]. However, the majority of them mainly followed of Kabir and Ramanand. Some of the Kurmis also worship the five Muslim saints called '']''.<ref name="Bhattacharya1896"/> | |||
|File:Kurmi sowing.jpg|An "ethnographic" photograph from 1916 showing Kurmi farmers, both men and women, sowing a field | |||
|File:Kurmi threshing.jpg|Another ethnographic print from 1916 showing a Kurmi family employing its beasts of burden to thresh wheat | |||
|File:Kurmi winnowing.jpg|A third print from the same collection showing the Kurmi family winnowing | |||
}} | |||
The second half of the nineteenth century also largely overlapped with the coming of age of ethnology—interpreted then as the science of race—in the study of societies the world over. Although later to be discredited, the methods of this discipline were eagerly absorbed and adopted in British India, as were those of the emerging science of anthropology. Driven in part by the intellectual ferment of the discipline and in part by the political compulsions in both Britain and India, two dominant views of caste emerged among the administrator-scholars of the day.<ref name="bayly-p41" /> According to Susan Bayly: <blockquote> Those like ], as well as the key figures of ] (1851–1911) and his protégé ], who were disciples of the French race theorist Topinard and his European followers, subsumed discussions of caste into theories of biologically determined race essences, ... Their great rivals were the material or occupational theorists led by the ethnographer and folklorist ] (1848–1923), author of one of the most widely read provincial ''Castes and Tribes'' surveys, and such other influential scholar-officials as ] and ].<ref name="bayly-p41" /></blockquote> | |||
===Marriage=== | |||
In almost all the sub-castes of the Kurmis, excepting the Ayodhya Bansi, Ghamela and Kochaisa, a widow was allowed to re-marry. If she married a younger brother or cousin of her late husband, she would not forfeit her claim to a share of her husband's estate, or her right to the guardianship of her children. If she married an outsider, these rights were forfeited. Divorce was permitted among the Kurmis, and a divorced wife could marry again in the same manner as a widow. The Kurmis of Northern India usually employed a Brahman to officiate as priest at their marriages, while in Chota Nagpore and Orissa, the practice was different. There the work of the priest, on such occasions, was done by some elderly member of the house or by the Laya of the village.<ref name="Bhattacharya1896"/> | |||
Seeing caste as a fundamental force in Indian life, Risley, especially, influenced official views as expressed in both the Censuses of British India and the ] brought out by Hunter. Risley is best known for the now discounted attribution of all differences in caste to varying proportions of seven racial types which included "Dravidian," "Aryo-Dravidian," and "Indo-Aryan". The Kurmi fell into two such categories. In the ethnological map of India published in the 1909 Imperial Gazetteer of India and based on the 1901 Census supervised by Risley, the Kurmi of the United Provinces were classified as "Aryo-Dravidian," whereas the Kurmi of the ] were counted among "Dravidians".<ref name="bayly-p41" /> In the 1901 Census of India, the category of ], the four-fold graded system, was included in the official classification of caste,<ref name="RudolphRudolph1984">{{cite book|last1=Rudolph|first1=Lloyd I.|last2=Rudolph|first2=Susanne Hoeber|title=The Modernity of Tradition: Political Development in India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7guY1ut-0lwC|year=1984|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-73137-7|page=116}}</ref> the only time this was the case.{{efn|Although influential, Risley's attempt did not achieve the end which he sought: people were unable to determine in which group they should classify themselves, the localised system he adopted could not be transposed onto the national stage, and some groups took advantage of the situation deliberately to seek reclassification and therefore satisfy their aspirations. L. I. and S. H. Rudolph have commented that "Risley's work, as a scientific effort, seemed based on mistaken premises. Varna was not a behavioral concept."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Rudolph|first1=Lloyd I.|last2=Rudolph|first2=Susanne Hoeber|title=The Modernity of Tradition: Political Development in India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7guY1ut-0lwC|year=1984|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-73137-7|page=117}}</ref>}} In the ] (UP), the Kurmi were classified under "Class VIII: Castes from whom some of the twice-born would take water and ''pakki'' (food cooked with ]),<ref name="BluntBlunt1931">Quote: "The Hindu draws a distinction between ''kachcha'' food, which is cooked in water, and ''pakka'' food, which is cooked in '']'' (clarified butter). This distinction depends on the principle that ''ghi'', like all products of the sacred cow protects from impurity ... and enables the Hindu to be less particular in the case of ''pakka'' than of ''kachcha'' food, and allows him to relax his restrictions accordingly." In {{cite book|last=Blunt|first=Sir Edward Arthur Henry|title=The caste system of northern India: with special reference to the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wb45AQAAIAAJ|year=1931|publisher=H. Milford, Oxford University Press|page=89}}</ref> without question;" whereas, in ], they were listed under: "Class III, Clean Sudra, Subclass (a)."<ref name="CommissionerRisley1903">{{cite book|author1=India. Census Commissioner|last2=Risley|first2=Sir Herbert Hope|title=Census of India, 1901: Volume I. India. Ethnographic appendices, being the data upon which the caste chapter of the Report is based|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8MsiAQAAMAAJ|year=1903|publisher=Office of the Supt. of Govt. Printing, India|location=Calcutta|pages=56–57}}</ref>{{efn|] are not usually considered to be particularly reliable except for overall population figures. Those for some areas of the country could be more reliable than others.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fq1MVCSqu4sC |page=60 |title=The economic development of India |first=Vera Powell |last=Anstey |edition=Reprinted |publisher=Ayer Publishing |year=1977 |orig-year=1931 |isbn=978-0-405-09775-1 |quote=... a vast army of enumerators are utilized, many of whom have a very limited understanding of what is required. Hence the Indian census provides at times more food for merriment than is usually connected with statistical compilations.}} | |||
===Cremation=== | |||
{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-2RP04HHopkC |pages=104–116 |title=The census administration under the raj and after |first=Shriram |last=Maheshwari |publisher=Concept Publishing Company |year=1996 |isbn=978-81-7022-585-0}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H3fxvuxjJOsC |page=124 |title=Social Sciences: The Indian Scene |first=Yogesh |last=Atal |publisher=Abhinav Publications |year=2003 |isbn=978-81-7017-042-6}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wBUot0-CIYUC |title=Children of Colonialism: Anglo-Indians in a Postcolonial World |first=Lionel |last=Caplan |publisher=Berg |year=2003 |pages=66–67 |isbn=978-1-85973-632-6}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3Qy14yBg8Q8C |page=290 |title=Elements Of Demography |last=Sinha |first=E. Zacharia |publisher=Allied Publishers |isbn=978-81-7764-044-1|date=12 April 1984 }}</ref>}} According to William Pinch, "Risley's hierarchy (for United Provinces) was far more elaborate than that for Bihar, suggesting that contending claims of social respectability may have been more deeply entrenched in the western half of the Gangetic Plain."<ref name="Pinch1996-p85" /> | |||
The Kurmis ] their dead, and perform '']s'' in the same manner as other high caste Shudras. The period of observing mourning vary according to local practice, from ten days to thirty days.<ref name="Bhattacharya1896"/> | |||
In the writings of the occupational theorists, the Kurmis and the Jats came to be extolled for their yeoman-like purposefulness, tirelessness, and thrift, all of which, according to writers such as Crooke, Ibbetson, and Blunt had been largely abandoned by the landed elite.<ref name="bayly-p41" /> Crooke wrote about the Kurmi in 1897: <blockquote> They are about the most industrious and hard-working agricultural tribe in the Province. The industry of his wife has passed into a proverb: <br /> | |||
==Politics == | |||
''Bhali jât Kurmin, khurpi hât,'' <br /> | |||
The ''Sardar Kurmi Kshatryia Sabha'' was organised in 1894 in ], the capital of Uttar Pradesh (some sources say 1884<ref name="Shah2004">{{cite book|author=Ghanshyam Shah|title=Caste and democratic politics in India|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=zByW5kHB3vIC&pg=PA15|accessdate=10 May 2011|year=2004|publisher=Anthem Press|isbn=9781843310853|pages=15–}}</ref>) to protest a government decision barring Kurmi recruitment into the police force. However, the influence of this organisation diminished at the end of the 19th century.<ref name="Verma1979">{{cite book|author=Krishna Kumar Verma|title=Changing role of caste associations|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ozMiAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=10 May 2011|year=1979|publisher=National|page=13-16}}</ref><!-- CAN ONLY GET GBOOKS SNIPPET VIEW, SO CAN'T SEE THE WHOLE SERIES OF THEORIES WHY IT DECLINED --> A similar Sabha was formed in ], which sought to unite as "Kurmi" other castes such at the ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref name="Jaffrelot2003">{{cite book|author=Christophe Jaffrelot|title=India's silent revolution: the rise of the lower castes in North India|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=qJZp5tDuY-gC&pg=PA197|accessdate=10 May 2011|year=2003|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=9780231127868|pages=197–}}</ref> | |||
''Khet nirâwê apan pî kê sâth.'' <br /> | |||
"A good lot is the Kurmi woman; she takes her spud and weeds the field with her lord."<ref name="Crooke1896-p353-354">{{cite book|last=Crooke|first=William|title=The tribes and castes of the North-western Provinces and Oudh, Volume III|url=https://archive.org/details/tribesandcastes01croogoog|year=1896|publisher=Office of the superintendent of government printing|pages=–354}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
According to Susan Bayly, <blockquote> By the mid-nineteenth century, influential revenue specialists were reporting that they could tell the caste of a landed man by simply glancing at his crops. In the north, these observers claimed, a field of 'second-rate barley' would belong to a Rajput or Brahman who took pride in shunning the plough and secluding his womenfolk. Such a man was to be blamed for his own decline, fecklessly mortgaging and then selling off his lands to maintain his unproductive dependents. By the same logic, a flourishing field of wheat would belong to a non-twice-born tiller, wheat being a crop requiring skill and enterprise on the part of the cultivator. These, said such commentators as Denzil Ibbetson and E. A. H. Blunt, were the qualities of the non-patrician 'peasant' – the thrifty Jat or canny Kurmi in upper India, .... Similar virtues would be found among the smaller market-gardening populations, these being the people known as Keoris in Hindustan, ....<ref>{{citation|last=Bayly|first=Susan|title=Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HbAjKR_iHogC&pg=PA212|year=2001|publisher=Cambridge University Press|page=212|isbn=978-0-521-79842-6}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
In its fifth conference in 1909, the Sabha{{Which?|date=May 2011}} changed its name to ''All India Kurmi Kshatriya Association'',{{Citation needed|date=May 2011}} and the ''All India Kurmi Kshatriya Mahasabha'' (Association) was first registered at ] in 1910. <ref name="Verma1979">{{cite book|author=Krishna Kumar Verma|title=Changing role of caste associations|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ozMiAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=10 May 2011|year=1979|publisher=National|page=17}}</ref> This organisation promoted both secular and religious interests, supporting ] and canvassing for the right to wear the ], but also pushing for preferential quotas as a ].<ref name="Jaffrelot2003">{{cite book|author=Christophe Jaffrelot|title=India's silent revolution: the rise of the lower castes in North India|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=qJZp5tDuY-gC&pg=PA197|accessdate=10 May 2011|year=2003|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=9780231127868|pages=197–}}</ref> | |||
=== Twentieth century === | |||
In the early 1930s, the Kurmis joined with the ] and ] agriculturalists to enter elections, and in 1934 formed the ] political party, which had a million dues-paying members by 1936. However, the organisation was hobbled by competition from the Congress-backed ] and cooption of its leaders by the Congress party. The organisation also suffered due to the Yadav's "superiority complex" which limited their cooperation with the Kurmi. Similarly, a planned caste union with the Koeris, to be called ''Raghav Samaj'', failed due to caste rivalries.<ref name="Jaffrelot2003">{{cite book|author=Christophe Jaffrelot|title=India's silent revolution: the rise of the lower castes in North India|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=qJZp5tDuY-gC&pg=PA197|accessdate=10 May 2011|year=2003|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=9780231127868|pages=197–}}</ref> | |||
As the economic pressures on the patrician landed groups continued through the remainder of the nineteenth century and into the early twentieth, there were increasing demands for unpaid labour directed at the Kurmi and other non-elite cultivators.<ref name="bayly-p41" /> The landed elites' demands were couched in avowals of their ancient rights as "twice-born" landowners and of the Kurmi's alleged lowly, even servile, status, which required them to serve. At times encouraged by sympathetic British officials and at other times carried by the groundswell of egalitarian sentiment being espoused then by the devotional ] movements, especially those based on ]'s '']'', the Kurmi largely resisted these demands.<ref name="bayly-p41" /> Their resistance, however, did not take the form of denial of caste or of caste-based imposition, but rather of disagreement about where they stood in the caste ranking.<ref name="bayly-p41" /> A noteworthy attribute of the resulting Kurmi-kshatriya movement was the leadership provided by educated Kurmis who were now filling the lower and middle levels of government jobs.<ref name="Pinch1996-p85" /> According to William Pinch: <blockquote> The mantle of leadership in this phase befell the well-connected Ramdin Sinha, a government forester who had gained notoriety by resigning from his official post to protest a provincial circular of 1894 that included Kurmis as a "depressed community" and barred them therefore from recruitment into the police service. The governor’s office was flooded with letters from an outraged Kurmi-kshatriya public and was soon obliged to rescind the allegation in an 1896 communique to the police department "His Honor is ... of the opinion that Kurmis constitute a respectable community which he would be reluctant to exclude from Government service."<ref name="Pinch1996-p85" /></blockquote> | |||
The first Kurmi caste association had been formed in 1894 at ] to protest against the police recruitment policy. This was followed by an organisation in Awadh that sought to draw other communities — such as the ]s, ]s, ], ]s and ]s — under the umbrella of the Kurmi name. This body then campaigned for Kurmis to classify themselves as Kshatriya in the 1901 census and, in 1910, led to the formation of the ].<ref name=Jaffrelot2003p197>{{cite book |title=India's silent revolution: the rise of the lower castes in North India |page=197 |first=Christophe |last=Jaffrelot |publisher=C. Hurst & Co. |location=London |year=2003 |isbn=978-1-85065-670-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OAkW94DtUMAC |access-date=3 October 2016 |archive-date=2 February 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230202200231/https://books.google.com/books?id=OAkW94DtUMAC |url-status=live }}</ref> Simultaneously, newly constituted farmers' unions, or ''Kisan Sabhas''—composed of cultivators and pastoralists, many of whom were Kurmi, Ahir, and ] (]), and inspired by Hindu mendicants, such as ] and ]—denounced the Brahman and Rajput landlords as ineffective and their morality as false. In the rural Ganges valley of Bihar and Eastern United Provinces, the ] cults of ], the incorruptible Kshatriya god-king of Hindu tradition, and ], the divine cowherd of Gokul, had long been entrenched among the Kurmi and Ahir. The leaders of the ''Kisan Sabhas'' urged their Kurmi and Ahir followers to lay claim to the Kshatriya mantle. Promoting what was advertised as soldierly manliness, the ''Kisan Sabhas'' agitated for the entry of non-elite farmers into the British Indian army during World War I; they formed ]; they asked their members to wear the ] of the ], and, in contrast to the Kurmis own traditions, to sequester their women in the manner of Rajputs and Brahmins.<ref name="bayly-p41" /> | |||
Again in the 1970s, the India Kurmi Kshatriya Sabha attempted to bring the Koeris under their wing, but again a disunity troubled this alliance. Kurmi politician ] fomed the ] in 1994, forming a backward-upper caste alliance with the conservative ], which achieved only initial success. In 1998, politician ] took advantage of this lack of unity in the IKKS, portraying Koeri ] as an incarnation of Kush. Under Yadav, the IKSS became less and less advantageous to the Kurmi, favouring instead the priorities of the Yadav caste, and this combined with the competition of the Kurmi-based Samata led to a divide between these intermittently allied castes.<ref name=toiKurmis>Akshaya Mukul.. Times of India, March 12, 2004</ref> | |||
In 1930, the Kurmis of Bihar joined with the Yadav and ] agriculturalists to enter local elections. They lost badly but in 1934 the three communities formed the ] political party, which allegedly had a million dues-paying members by 1936. However, the organisation was hobbled by competition from the Congress-backed ] Federation, which was formed around the same time, and by co-option of community leaders by the Congress party. The Triveni Sangh suffered badly in the 1937 elections, although it did win in some areas. The organisation also suffered from caste rivalries, notably the superior organisational ability of the higher castes who opposed it, as well as the inability of the Yadavs to renounce their belief that they were natural leaders and that the Kurmi were somehow inferior. Similar problems beset a later planned caste union, the ''Raghav Samaj'', with the Koeris.<ref name="Jaffrelot2003p197" /> | |||
==Language== | |||
The Kurmi of Jharkhand, Orissa, West Bengal and Assam use to speak ] language. Kurmi of other state speak their native and regional languages. In ], Kurmi people speak the ] and ], while in Uttar Pradesh the Kurmi speak ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2011}} | |||
Again in the 1970s, the India Kurmi Kshatriya Sabha attempted to bring the Koeris under their wing, but disunity troubled this alliance.<ref>{{cite news |first=Akshaya |last=Mukul |url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/young-india-votes/news/Mighty-Kurmis-of-Bihar/articleshow/555124.cms |title=Mighty Kurmis of Bihar |work=The Times of India |date=12 March 2004 |access-date=17 June 2011 |archive-date=27 November 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101127201356/http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/young-india-votes/news/Mighty-Kurmis-of-Bihar/articleshow/555124.cms |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title=Fernandes to head Janata Dal (United) | url=http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/2003/10/31/stories/2003103104371100.htm | author=Gargi Parsai | date=31 October 2003 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120204034133/http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/2003/10/31/stories/2003103104371100.htm | newspaper=] | archive-date=4 February 2012}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ]s | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
Many private caste-based armies surfaced in Bihar between the 1970s and 1990s, largely influenced by landlord farmers reacting to the growing influence of left extremist groups. Among these was the ], the membership of which was drawn mainly from youths who had a Kurmi origin.<ref name="bayly-p41" /><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://frontline.thehindu.com/static/html/fl1919/19190330.htm|title=End of a terror trail|work=Frontline|date=27 September 2002|first=Kalyan |last=Chaudhuri|access-date=19 December 2018}}</ref> Bhumi Sena was much feared in the Patna region and also had influence in the districts of Nalanda, Jehanabad and Gaya.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://archive.indianexpress.com/news/a-lasting-signature-on-bihar-s-most-violent-years/957421/2|title=A lasting signature on Bihar's most violent years|work=]|access-date=18 December 2018|archive-date=2 June 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200602172108/http://archive.indianexpress.com/news/a-lasting-signature-on-bihar-s-most-violent-years/957421/2|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2011}} | |||
== |
==Kurmis in Nepal== | ||
The ] of Nepal classifies the Kurmi as a subgroup within the broader social group of ] Other Caste.<ref>Population Monograph of Nepal, Volume II {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211126164846/https://nepal.unfpa.org/sites/default/files/pub-pdf/Population%20Monograph%20V02.pdf|date=26 November 2021}}</ref> At the time of the ], 231,129 people (0.9% of the population of Nepal) were Kurmi. The frequency of Kurmis by province was as follows: | |||
*{{cite book|author=William R. Pinch|title=Peasants and monks in British India|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=uEP-ceGYsnYC&pg=PA200|accessdate=13 April 2011|year=1996|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=9780520200616}}<!-- THIS BOOK HAS _EXTENSIVE_ COVERAGE OF THE SHUDRA/KSHATRIYA KURMI DEBATE --> | |||
* ] (2.8%) | |||
* ] (1.6%) | |||
* ] (0.1%) | |||
* ] (0.0%) | |||
* ] (0.0%) | |||
* ] (0.0%) | |||
* ] (0.0%) | |||
The frequency of Kurmis was higher than national average (0.9%) in the following districts:<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://cbs.gov.np/wp-content/upLoads/2018/12/Volume05Part02.pdf |title=2011 Nepal Census, District Level Detail Report |access-date=10 April 2023 |archive-date=14 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230314170005/https://cbs.gov.np/wp-content/upLoads/2018/12/Volume05Part02.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
* ] (8.4%) | |||
* ] (6.3%) | |||
* ] (5.7%) | |||
* ] (3.9%) | |||
* ] (2.2%) | |||
* ] (2.2%) | |||
* ] (2.0%) | |||
* ] (1.7%) | |||
* ] (1.3%) | |||
== See also == | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
== References == | |||
'''Notes''' | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
'''Citations''' | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
*{{cite book|last1=Bhattacharya|first1=Ranjit Kumar|last2=Das|first2=Nava Kishor|author3=Anthropological Survey of India|title=Anthropology of weaker sections|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pjVdJMBeXU8C|access-date=1 August 2011|date=1 January 1993|publisher=Concept Publishing Company|isbn=978-81-7022-491-4}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Gooptu|first=Nandini|title=The politics of the urban poor in early twentieth-century India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yRrbSzEvNCMC|access-date=1 August 2011|date=1 July 2001|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-44366-1}} | |||
*{{cite book|editor-last1=Singer|editor-first1=Milton |editor-last2=Cohn|editor-first2=Bernard S. |title=Structure and Change in Indian Society|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_g-_r-9Oa_sC|access-date=1 August 2011|year=2007|publisher=Transaction Publishers|isbn=978-0-202-36138-3}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Yang|first=Anand A.|title=The limited Raj: agrarian relations in colonial India, Saran District, 1793–1920|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ck4jmD7H34UC|access-date=1 August 2011|year=1989|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-05711-1}} | |||
*{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oDeFAAAAIAAJ|title=Daughters of The Earth|last=Jassal|first=Smita Tewari|publisher=Technical Publications|year=2001|isbn=978-8-17304-375-8|page=57}} | |||
*{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QCp0JQcFik8C&q=awadhiya&pg=PA78|title=Anthropological Methods for Communication Research: Experiences and Encounters During SITE|last=Viswanath|first=Sashikala|date=1985|publisher=Concept Publishing Company|language=en}} | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
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Latest revision as of 21:41, 4 October 2024
Hindu agricultural caste of India This article is about the Hindu agricultural community. For the people of Greater Jharkhand, see Kudumi Mahato. For the district in Nigeria, see Kurmi, Nigeria.
Kurmi | |
---|---|
A group of Kurmi women in traditional "Hindustani dress". | |
Classification | Other Backward Class |
Religions | Hinduism, Islam |
Languages | Awadhi, Bhojpuri, Hindi-Urdu |
Country | India and Nepal |
Region | Awadh, Bhojpur, Madhesh, Lumbini |
Kurmi is traditionally a non-elite tiller caste in the lower Gangetic plain of India, especially southern regions of Awadh, eastern Uttar Pradesh and parts of Bihar and Jharkhand. The Kurmis came to be known for their exceptional work ethic, superior tillage and manuring, and gender-neutral culture, bringing praise from Mughal and British administrators alike.
Etymology
There are several late-19th century theories of the etymology of Kurmi. According to Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya (1896), the word may be derived from an Indian tribal language, or be a Sanskrit compound term krishi karmi, "agriculturalist." A theory of Gustav Salomon Oppert (1893) holds that it may be derived from kṛṣmi, meaning "ploughman".
According to Suniti Kumar Chatterji (1926), the Bengali word kuṛmī or kurmī derives from Sanskrit kuṭumbin. This view is endorsed in Ralph Lilley Turner's A Comparitive Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages (1962-1985), where he lists cognates across many Indo-Aryan languages including Bhojpuri, Bihari, and Eastern Hindi.
History
Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
With the continued waning of Mughal rule in the early 18th century, the Indian subcontinent's hinterland dwellers, many of whom were armed and nomadic, began to appear more frequently in settled areas and interact with townspeople and agriculturists. Many new rulers of the 18th century came from such nomadic backgrounds. The effect of this interaction on India's social organisation lasted well into the colonial period. During much of this time, non-elite tillers and pastoralists, such as the Kurmi, were part of a social spectrum that blended only indistinctly into the elite landowning classes at one end, and the menial or ritually polluting classes at the other.
The Kurmi were famed as market gardeners. In western and northern Awadh, for example, for much of the eighteenth century, the Muslim gentry offered the Kurmi highly discounted rental rates for clearing the jungle and cultivating it. Once the land had been brought stably under the plough, however, the land rent was usually raised to 30 to 80 per cent above the going rate. Although British revenue officials later ascribed the high rent to the prejudice among the elite rural castes against handling the plough, the main reason was the greater productivity of the Kurmi, whose success lay in superior manuring. According to historian Christopher Bayly,
Whereas the majority of cultivators manured only the lands immediately around the village and used these lands for growing food grains, Kurmis avoided using animal dung for fuel and manured the poorer lands farther from the village (the manjha). They were able, therefore, to grow valuable market crops such as potatoes, melons and tobacco immediately around the village, sow fine grains in the manjha, and restrict the poor millet subsistence crops to the periphery. A network of ganjs (fixed rural markets) and Kurmi or Kacchi settlements could transform a local economy within a year or two.
Cross-cultural influences were felt also. Hindu tillers worshipped at Muslim shrines in the small towns founded by their Muslim overlords. The Hindu Kurmis of Chunar and Jaunpur, for instance, took up the Muslim custom of marrying first cousins and of burying their dead. In some regions, the Kurmis' success as tillers led to land ownership, and to avowals of high status, as noted, for examples, by Francis Buchanan in the early 19th century among the Ayodhya Kurmis of the Awadh. Earlier, in the late eighteenth century, when Asaf-Ud-Dowlah, the fourth Nawab of Awadh, attempted to grant the kshatriya title of Raja to a group of influential landed Ayodhya Kurmis, he was thwarted by a united opposition of Rajputs, who were themselves (as described by Buchanan), "a group of newcomers to the court, who had been peasant soldiers only a few years before ..." According to historian William Pinch:
Rajputs of Awadh, who along with brahmans constituted the main beneficiaries of what historian Richard Barnett characterizes as "Asaf's permissive program of social mobility," were not willing to let that mobility reach beyond certain arbitrary socio-cultural boundaries. ... The divergent claims to status in the nineteenth century (and earlier) illustrate the point that for non-Muslims, while varna was generally accepted as the basis for identity, on the whole little agreement prevailed with respect to the place of the individual and the jati within a varna hierarchy.
Although the free peasant farm was the mainstay of farming in many parts of north India in the 18th century, in some regions, a combination of climatic, political, and demographic factors led to the increased dependence of peasant cultivators such as the Kurmi. In the Benares division, which had come under the revenue purview of the British East India Company in 1779, the Chalisa famine of 1783 and the relentless revenue demand from the Company reduced the status of many Kurmi cultivators. A British revenue agent wrote in 1790, "It unfortunately happened that during the famine aforesaid a great proportion of the Kurmis, Kacchis and Koeris were in this district as well as in others supplanted by Brahmans ... " and bemoaned the loss of agricultural revenue in part due to, "this unfavourable mutation amongst the cultivators ..."
In the first half of the nineteenth century, economic pressures on the large landowning classes increased noticeably. The prices of agricultural lands fell at the same time that the East India Company, after acquiring the Ceded and Conquered Provinces (later the North-Western Provinces) in 1805, began to press landowners for more land revenue. The annexation of Awadh in 1856 created more fear and discontent among the landed elite, and may have contributed to the Indian rebellion of 1857. Economic pressures also opened marginal areas to intensive agriculture and turned the fortunes of the non-elite peasants, such as the Kurmi, who worked them. After the rebellion, the landowning classes, defeated but still pressed economically in the new British Raj, attempted to treat their tenants and labourers as people of lowly birth and to demand unpaid labour from them. According to historical anthropologist Susan Bayly,
In some instances these were attempts to stave off decline by reinvigorating or intensifying existing forms of customary service. Elsewhere these were wholly novel demands, many being imposed on 'clean' tillers and cattle-keepers like the Ram- and Krishna-loving Koeris, Kurmis and Ahirs ... In either case, these calls were buttressed with appeals to Sanskritic varna theory and Brahmanical caste convention. ... Kurmi and Goala/Ahir tillers who held tenancies from these 'squireens' found themselves being identified as Shudras, that is, people who were mandated to serve those of the superior Kshatriya and Brahman varnas.
The elite landowning classes, such as Rajputs and Bhumihars, now sought to present themselves as flagbearers of the ancient Hindu tradition. At the same time, there was a proliferation of Brahmanical rituals in the daily life of the elite, a greater stress on pure bloodlines, more stringent conditions placed on matrimonial alliances, and, as noted by some social reformers of the day, an increase among the Rajputs of female infanticide, a practice that had little history among the Kurmi.
- The map of the prevailing "races" of India (now discredited) based on the 1901 Census of British India. The Kurmi are shown both in the United Provinces (UP) and the Central Provinces.
- An "ethnographic" photograph from 1916 showing Kurmi farmers, both men and women, sowing a field
- Another ethnographic print from 1916 showing a Kurmi family employing its beasts of burden to thresh wheat
- A third print from the same collection showing the Kurmi family winnowing
The second half of the nineteenth century also largely overlapped with the coming of age of ethnology—interpreted then as the science of race—in the study of societies the world over. Although later to be discredited, the methods of this discipline were eagerly absorbed and adopted in British India, as were those of the emerging science of anthropology. Driven in part by the intellectual ferment of the discipline and in part by the political compulsions in both Britain and India, two dominant views of caste emerged among the administrator-scholars of the day. According to Susan Bayly:
Those like (Sir William) Hunter, as well as the key figures of H. H. Risley (1851–1911) and his protégé Edgar Thurston, who were disciples of the French race theorist Topinard and his European followers, subsumed discussions of caste into theories of biologically determined race essences, ... Their great rivals were the material or occupational theorists led by the ethnographer and folklorist William Crooke (1848–1923), author of one of the most widely read provincial Castes and Tribes surveys, and such other influential scholar-officials as Denzil Ibbetson and E. A. H. Blunt.
Seeing caste as a fundamental force in Indian life, Risley, especially, influenced official views as expressed in both the Censuses of British India and the Imperial Gazetteer brought out by Hunter. Risley is best known for the now discounted attribution of all differences in caste to varying proportions of seven racial types which included "Dravidian," "Aryo-Dravidian," and "Indo-Aryan". The Kurmi fell into two such categories. In the ethnological map of India published in the 1909 Imperial Gazetteer of India and based on the 1901 Census supervised by Risley, the Kurmi of the United Provinces were classified as "Aryo-Dravidian," whereas the Kurmi of the Central Provinces were counted among "Dravidians". In the 1901 Census of India, the category of varna, the four-fold graded system, was included in the official classification of caste, the only time this was the case. In the United Provinces (UP), the Kurmi were classified under "Class VIII: Castes from whom some of the twice-born would take water and pakki (food cooked with ghee), without question;" whereas, in Bihar, they were listed under: "Class III, Clean Sudra, Subclass (a)." According to William Pinch, "Risley's hierarchy (for United Provinces) was far more elaborate than that for Bihar, suggesting that contending claims of social respectability may have been more deeply entrenched in the western half of the Gangetic Plain."
In the writings of the occupational theorists, the Kurmis and the Jats came to be extolled for their yeoman-like purposefulness, tirelessness, and thrift, all of which, according to writers such as Crooke, Ibbetson, and Blunt had been largely abandoned by the landed elite. Crooke wrote about the Kurmi in 1897:
They are about the most industrious and hard-working agricultural tribe in the Province. The industry of his wife has passed into a proverb:
Bhali jât Kurmin, khurpi hât,
Khet nirâwê apan pî kê sâth.
"A good lot is the Kurmi woman; she takes her spud and weeds the field with her lord."
According to Susan Bayly,
By the mid-nineteenth century, influential revenue specialists were reporting that they could tell the caste of a landed man by simply glancing at his crops. In the north, these observers claimed, a field of 'second-rate barley' would belong to a Rajput or Brahman who took pride in shunning the plough and secluding his womenfolk. Such a man was to be blamed for his own decline, fecklessly mortgaging and then selling off his lands to maintain his unproductive dependents. By the same logic, a flourishing field of wheat would belong to a non-twice-born tiller, wheat being a crop requiring skill and enterprise on the part of the cultivator. These, said such commentators as Denzil Ibbetson and E. A. H. Blunt, were the qualities of the non-patrician 'peasant' – the thrifty Jat or canny Kurmi in upper India, .... Similar virtues would be found among the smaller market-gardening populations, these being the people known as Keoris in Hindustan, ....
Twentieth century
As the economic pressures on the patrician landed groups continued through the remainder of the nineteenth century and into the early twentieth, there were increasing demands for unpaid labour directed at the Kurmi and other non-elite cultivators. The landed elites' demands were couched in avowals of their ancient rights as "twice-born" landowners and of the Kurmi's alleged lowly, even servile, status, which required them to serve. At times encouraged by sympathetic British officials and at other times carried by the groundswell of egalitarian sentiment being espoused then by the devotional Vaishnava movements, especially those based on Tulsidas's Ramcharitmanas, the Kurmi largely resisted these demands. Their resistance, however, did not take the form of denial of caste or of caste-based imposition, but rather of disagreement about where they stood in the caste ranking. A noteworthy attribute of the resulting Kurmi-kshatriya movement was the leadership provided by educated Kurmis who were now filling the lower and middle levels of government jobs. According to William Pinch:
The mantle of leadership in this phase befell the well-connected Ramdin Sinha, a government forester who had gained notoriety by resigning from his official post to protest a provincial circular of 1894 that included Kurmis as a "depressed community" and barred them therefore from recruitment into the police service. The governor’s office was flooded with letters from an outraged Kurmi-kshatriya public and was soon obliged to rescind the allegation in an 1896 communique to the police department "His Honor is ... of the opinion that Kurmis constitute a respectable community which he would be reluctant to exclude from Government service."
The first Kurmi caste association had been formed in 1894 at Lucknow to protest against the police recruitment policy. This was followed by an organisation in Awadh that sought to draw other communities — such as the Patidars, Marathas, Kapus, Reddys and Naidus — under the umbrella of the Kurmi name. This body then campaigned for Kurmis to classify themselves as Kshatriya in the 1901 census and, in 1910, led to the formation of the All India Kurmi Kshatriya Mahasabha. Simultaneously, newly constituted farmers' unions, or Kisan Sabhas—composed of cultivators and pastoralists, many of whom were Kurmi, Ahir, and Yadav (Goala), and inspired by Hindu mendicants, such as Baba Ram Chandra and Swami Sahajanand Saraswati—denounced the Brahman and Rajput landlords as ineffective and their morality as false. In the rural Ganges valley of Bihar and Eastern United Provinces, the Bhakti cults of Rama, the incorruptible Kshatriya god-king of Hindu tradition, and Krishna, the divine cowherd of Gokul, had long been entrenched among the Kurmi and Ahir. The leaders of the Kisan Sabhas urged their Kurmi and Ahir followers to lay claim to the Kshatriya mantle. Promoting what was advertised as soldierly manliness, the Kisan Sabhas agitated for the entry of non-elite farmers into the British Indian army during World War I; they formed cow protection societies; they asked their members to wear the sacred thread of the twice-born, and, in contrast to the Kurmis own traditions, to sequester their women in the manner of Rajputs and Brahmins.
In 1930, the Kurmis of Bihar joined with the Yadav and Koeri agriculturalists to enter local elections. They lost badly but in 1934 the three communities formed the Triveni Sangh political party, which allegedly had a million dues-paying members by 1936. However, the organisation was hobbled by competition from the Congress-backed Backward Class Federation, which was formed around the same time, and by co-option of community leaders by the Congress party. The Triveni Sangh suffered badly in the 1937 elections, although it did win in some areas. The organisation also suffered from caste rivalries, notably the superior organisational ability of the higher castes who opposed it, as well as the inability of the Yadavs to renounce their belief that they were natural leaders and that the Kurmi were somehow inferior. Similar problems beset a later planned caste union, the Raghav Samaj, with the Koeris.
Again in the 1970s, the India Kurmi Kshatriya Sabha attempted to bring the Koeris under their wing, but disunity troubled this alliance.
Many private caste-based armies surfaced in Bihar between the 1970s and 1990s, largely influenced by landlord farmers reacting to the growing influence of left extremist groups. Among these was the Bhumi Sena, the membership of which was drawn mainly from youths who had a Kurmi origin. Bhumi Sena was much feared in the Patna region and also had influence in the districts of Nalanda, Jehanabad and Gaya.
Kurmis in Nepal
The Central Bureau of Statistics of Nepal classifies the Kurmi as a subgroup within the broader social group of Madheshi Other Caste. At the time of the 2011 Nepal census, 231,129 people (0.9% of the population of Nepal) were Kurmi. The frequency of Kurmis by province was as follows:
- Madhesh Province (2.8%)
- Lumbini Province (1.6%)
- Koshi Province (0.1%)
- Bagmati Province (0.0%)
- Gandaki Province (0.0%)
- Karnali Province (0.0%)
- Sudurpashchim Province (0.0%)
The frequency of Kurmis was higher than national average (0.9%) in the following districts:
- Parsa (8.4%)
- Kapilvastu (6.3%)
- Rautahat (5.7%)
- Bara (3.9%)
- Banke (2.2%)
- Sarlahi (2.2%)
- Rupandehi (2.0%)
- Parasi (1.7%)
- Dhanusha (1.3%)
See also
References
Notes
- Although influential, Risley's attempt did not achieve the end which he sought: people were unable to determine in which group they should classify themselves, the localised system he adopted could not be transposed onto the national stage, and some groups took advantage of the situation deliberately to seek reclassification and therefore satisfy their aspirations. L. I. and S. H. Rudolph have commented that "Risley's work, as a scientific effort, seemed based on mistaken premises. Varna was not a behavioral concept."
- Indian censuses of the British Raj period are not usually considered to be particularly reliable except for overall population figures. Those for some areas of the country could be more reliable than others.
Citations
- Bayly, Susan (2001), Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age, Cambridge University Press, pp. 200–, ISBN 978-0-521-79842-6,
In southern Awadh, eastern NWP, and much of Bihar, non-labouring gentry groups lived in tightly-knit enclaves among much larger populations of non-elite 'peasants' and labouring people. These other groupings included ... non-elite tilling and cattle-keeping people who came to be known by such titles as Kurmi, Koeri and Goala/Ahir.
- ^ Bayly, C. A. (1988). Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars: North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion, 1770–1870. CUP Archive. p. 478. ISBN 978-0-521-31054-3.
- ^ Bayly, C. A. (1988). Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars: North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion, 1770–1870. CUP Archive. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-521-31054-3.
- ^ Bayly, Susan (2001), Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age, Cambridge University Press, p. 41, ISBN 978-0-521-79842-6
- Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya (1896). Hindu castes and sects: an exposition of the origin of the Hindu caste system and the bearing of the sects towards each other and towards other religious systems / Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya. Thacker, Spink. pp. 270–.
- Gustav Salomon Oppert (February 1978). On the original inhabitants of Bharatavarṣa or India. Arno Press. ISBN 978-0-405-10557-9.
- Chatterji, Suniti Kumar (1926). The Origin and Development of the Bengali Language. Calcutta University Press. p. 333.
- Turner, Ralph Lilley (1962–1985). A Comparative Dictionary of Indo-Aryan Languages. Oxford University Press. p. 166.
- ^ Pinch, William R. (1996). Peasants and monks in British India. University of California Press. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-520-20061-6.
- Rudolph, Lloyd I.; Rudolph, Susanne Hoeber (1984). The Modernity of Tradition: Political Development in India. University of Chicago Press. p. 116. ISBN 978-0-226-73137-7.
- Rudolph, Lloyd I.; Rudolph, Susanne Hoeber (1984). The Modernity of Tradition: Political Development in India. University of Chicago Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-226-73137-7.
- Quote: "The Hindu draws a distinction between kachcha food, which is cooked in water, and pakka food, which is cooked in ghi (clarified butter). This distinction depends on the principle that ghi, like all products of the sacred cow protects from impurity ... and enables the Hindu to be less particular in the case of pakka than of kachcha food, and allows him to relax his restrictions accordingly." In Blunt, Sir Edward Arthur Henry (1931). The caste system of northern India: with special reference to the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh. H. Milford, Oxford University Press. p. 89.
- India. Census Commissioner; Risley, Sir Herbert Hope (1903). Census of India, 1901: Volume I. India. Ethnographic appendices, being the data upon which the caste chapter of the Report is based. Calcutta: Office of the Supt. of Govt. Printing, India. pp. 56–57.
- Anstey, Vera Powell (1977) . The economic development of India (Reprinted ed.). Ayer Publishing. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-405-09775-1.
... a vast army of enumerators are utilized, many of whom have a very limited understanding of what is required. Hence the Indian census provides at times more food for merriment than is usually connected with statistical compilations.
Maheshwari, Shriram (1996). The census administration under the raj and after. Concept Publishing Company. pp. 104–116. ISBN 978-81-7022-585-0. - Atal, Yogesh (2003). Social Sciences: The Indian Scene. Abhinav Publications. p. 124. ISBN 978-81-7017-042-6.
- Caplan, Lionel (2003). Children of Colonialism: Anglo-Indians in a Postcolonial World. Berg. pp. 66–67. ISBN 978-1-85973-632-6.
- Sinha, E. Zacharia (12 April 1984). Elements Of Demography. Allied Publishers. p. 290. ISBN 978-81-7764-044-1.
- Crooke, William (1896). The tribes and castes of the North-western Provinces and Oudh, Volume III. Office of the superintendent of government printing. pp. 353–354.
- Bayly, Susan (2001), Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age, Cambridge University Press, p. 212, ISBN 978-0-521-79842-6
- ^ Jaffrelot, Christophe (2003). India's silent revolution: the rise of the lower castes in North India. London: C. Hurst & Co. p. 197. ISBN 978-1-85065-670-8. Archived from the original on 2 February 2023. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
- Mukul, Akshaya (12 March 2004). "Mighty Kurmis of Bihar". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 27 November 2010. Retrieved 17 June 2011.
- Gargi Parsai (31 October 2003). "Fernandes to head Janata Dal (United)". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012.
- Chaudhuri, Kalyan (27 September 2002). "End of a terror trail". Frontline. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
- "A lasting signature on Bihar's most violent years". The Indian Express. Archived from the original on 2 June 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- Population Monograph of Nepal, Volume II Archived 26 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- "2011 Nepal Census, District Level Detail Report" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 March 2023. Retrieved 10 April 2023.
Further reading
- Bhattacharya, Ranjit Kumar; Das, Nava Kishor; Anthropological Survey of India (1 January 1993). Anthropology of weaker sections. Concept Publishing Company. ISBN 978-81-7022-491-4. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
- Gooptu, Nandini (1 July 2001). The politics of the urban poor in early twentieth-century India. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-44366-1. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
- Singer, Milton; Cohn, Bernard S., eds. (2007). Structure and Change in Indian Society. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-0-202-36138-3. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
- Yang, Anand A. (1989). The limited Raj: agrarian relations in colonial India, Saran District, 1793–1920. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-05711-1. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
- Jassal, Smita Tewari (2001). Daughters of The Earth. Technical Publications. p. 57. ISBN 978-8-17304-375-8.
- Viswanath, Sashikala (1985). Anthropological Methods for Communication Research: Experiences and Encounters During SITE. Concept Publishing Company.