Ethnic Madhesi ?
- Ram Manohar
I second you, when you say, “Madhesi is not the right
word to indicate the current Terai boundaryâ€. But, why to blame
madhesi’s for that. In House of Gurkha’s politics Madhesi word was
conceived, created, and nurtured just to create fear among hilly people
about the black people south of Mahabharata range. The Tarai people
were projected as “Ghost†to Hilly people, so that ruler can draw reign
line.
Here is one of the well known saying in CK lal words
Not Man, a Madhesi
Old-timers insist that there is no exaggeration to the following
anecdote, and that it is based on real life. In the days when there
were no toilets, the ladies of noble families also visited the banks of
Bagamati to attend to the calls of nature. Some of them had servants.
These servants were instructed to shout ‘Man’ to save the ladies the
embarrassment of exposed derriËres. On one misty winter morning, a
servant could not recognize a Madhesi and did the shouting as per the
instructions. The lady sat up, threw a glance towards the intruder, and
resumed her business nonchalantly. The ignorant servant was duly
reprimanded, “Didn’t you see? He was a Madhesi, not a man.†Ladies go
to toilet nowadays, but this attitude has not changed much.
The reason why this Ghost word “Madhesi†was coined is better
justified by Subodh Kumar Singh in his book The Return of The Mauriyas
. “The word “Madhesh†was coined by the Shah and Rana rulers with
a view to degrade the status of the vanquished Tharu rulers of the
Terai.â€
Authenticity and physical boundary of word “Madhesh†can be validated from attached JPG file, abstracted on 07-july-2008.
The origin of word “Madhesi†may be explored with generosity. Why
only consider Madhya-desh, when we have many other close proximity
geographies as
Madhes => Madhya + desh = Middle Country
Madhes => Majhim + desh = Middle Country
Madhes => Magadha + desh = Kingdom of Ashoka, claimed to be tharu kingdom recently
Madhes => Matsya + desh = Fish Country
But the generalization of “Madhesi†word from mechi to mahakali
itself is a very interesting subject for research. To understand the
generalization you should read “Madhesis: A Political Force in the
Making?†by K Yhome (July 2006) who states “Despite the many
differences and divisions among them, one of the most important uniting
factors that binds all the groups together is the sense of being
‘discriminated against’â€.
Mine hesitation of using the word “Madhesi†as ethnicity is narrowed
down by Arjun Guneratne in his paper “Modernization, the State, and the
Construction of a Tharu Identity in Nepal†who states ethnicity as a
dynamic entity in following form “It is not, however, the
substantive content of their culture systems that shapes a people’s
ethnic identity but the history of their relationship to the state and
their position in the structure of society as a whole. It is not
cultural symbols and primordial loyalties that generate ethnic
consciousness, but the nature and dynamic of the relationship that
exists both among different communities of people and between them and
the stateâ€.
And Arjun Guneratne saying is true not only for “Madhesi†but also
for pahari. Historically Pahari has many distinct groups, each having
different language and culture. Parwate, Newari, Khas, Rai, Limbu,
Magar, Sherpa are few examples, but over a period of time all qualifies
to be pahari. Same is case for Tharu, for which Arjun Guneratne states “The
Tharus comprise a number of culturally distinctive and localized
groups, all of which considered each other to be seperate jat. To marry
outside jat was to run the risk of being made an outcaste. Among the
largest and most important of these groups, from west to east along the
terai, are the Rana, the Kathariya, the Dangaura, the Tharus of Chitwan
and Nawalparasi, and the Kochila, who occupy the territory between the
Bagmati and Kosi rivers…. In short, the Tharus are
culturally and linguistically very heterogeneous; they share no common
culture symbol, such as language or religion, or even a common myth of
origin on which they might anchor their imagining of community.
Nevertheless, they have come to constitute their identity subjectively
in modern times as a single ethnic group in a multiethnic stateâ€.
That’s all for now.