The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

213


Members of the Baiga take part
in the three-day Dharohar festival
hosted in Indore, India. The event
is a celebration of World Tribal Day,
held annually on August 9, and
is a showcase of tribal culture.

See also: Brahma creates the cosmos 200 ■ The birth of Ganesha 201 ■ The game of dice 202–03 ■ The Ramayana 204–09

ASIA


Bhagavan saw that many were
dressed in their finery, while Nanga
(meaning nude) Baiga wore nothing
but leaves. He took Nanga Baiga
and positioned him on his throne,
making him king over all the world.
Nanga Baiga was pleased, but
because a member of the Gond
people had once shown great
kindness to him, he replied: “Make
the Gond king, for he is my brother.”
The Creator honored the request
and rewarded Nanga Baiga with
his blessing.

Serving Mother Earth
Bhagavan told Nanga Baiga that,
as long as they did not forsake
the Earth, the Baiga people would
survive. Then he told him how to
cultivate the land. He said that the
Baiga could dig roots and eat them,
or pick leaves and sell them, but

that they must never plow the
Earth for she was their mother.
Instead, he told them to cut down
the undergrowth, burn it, and sow
seeds in the ashes. They would not
gain riches, but they would grow
enough to survive.
Bhagavan then showed Nanga
Baiga how to follow this slash-and-
burn method of farming, and told
him that the seeds are best sown

when rainfall is expected. Once the
Creator had taught Nanga Baiga
everything he needed to know for
his people to survive, it was time
for the Baiga to receive the seeds.
As Nanga Baiga took them from
Bhagavan, some fell from his hand.
The Creator told him: “It is good, it
should be so, for only the poor will
ever be content to be servants of
Dharti Mata.” ■

Baiga farming today


An Adivasi (tribal) group, most of
whom live in and around the state
of Madhya Pradesh, central India,
the Baiga farmers often live in
hilly terrain and avoid the plow.
Instead, they practice a traditional
form of slash-and-burn cultivation
called bewar, as described in the
Baiga foundation myth above.
It is out of the same respect
for Mother Earth that the Baiga
remain semi-nomadic. The
practice of shifting, or rotating,
cultivation means that they move
to a new plot of ground every few

years, rather than staying put
and exhausting the ground by
continually cultivating it.
During the 19th century,
colonial forest officials forced
many Baiga people to adopt the
plow. One Baiga is reported to
have said, “When ... we first
touched the plow, a man died in
every village.”
The Baiga people coexist
with the Gond people—another
Adivasi group—and have done
so for many centuries. The Gond
favor the same agricultural
practices, which are sustainable
in the face of climate change.

Women collect leaves in the
forest. Like other Baiga farmers, they
continue to follow the agricultural
practices set out by Bhagavan.

US_212-213_The_origins_of_the_baiga.indd 213 30/11/17 4:56 pm

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