Monday, December 10, 2012

Gadulia Lohar: Nomads in India

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Gadulia Lohar: Nomads in India

Source:

Nomads
 in India - International Institute for Asian Studi
http://www.iias.nl/sites/default/files/iias_nl57_1415.pdf



The Newsletter | No.57 | Summer 2011
14 | The Study
Gadulia Lohar: Nomads in India

1: An ayurvedic doctor. Maposa Goa 1969.
2: An ayurvedic doctor and a client or patient in his roadside pharmacy and consulting room.
Maposa Goa 1969.
3: On fallow plots
of land along the
roads people lived
with extremely
meagre possessions.
Calangute Goa 1969.
4: Three of the millions of homeless people in India. Calangute Goa 1969.
Right
5: A man with special powers and knowledge that he is willing to share in return for anything
you can afford and consider fair. Rajasthan 1969. I had taken few photographs until during a journey through Rajasthan in 1969 a friend lent me a camera. At that time, I still had some disdain for the
camera as an obstacle to the view, because I had seen people in special moments and amazing
places mainly busy with their devices. However, during a trip by train, bus and boat from New Delhi via Mumbai (in 1969 still called Bombay) to Goa, I shot in about five weeks over 250 pictures on four rolls of film. Ewald Vanvugt Long forgotten, my old negatives from that time have recently come to light again, and with the past now before my eyes I felt astounded and grateful. After more than forty
years, some of my own pictures from India were completely new to me, while others reminded me vividly of meetings with remarkable people.

Outside train stations and on fallow plots of land along the roads, people lived with extremely meagre possessions. Far from all were beggars; indeed, many managed to scratch a living as smiths, seasonal land labourers, travelling enter- tainers and even as ayurvedic doctors with their knowledge
of rare herbs and cures. Almost as poor as most wanderers, they possessed special skills and tools and costumes, some even owned a horse and wagon, marking them as people who worked for a living. Women and children without men stayed close to the improvised cooking fires. Nowhere did
I meet an interpreter to help me talk with them, but the gradations of their wealth and poverty and of the strength with which they carried their fate fascinated me. I photo- graphed such wandering people in several parts of Rajasthan without knowing who they were. Recently, I found myself with a copy of the National Geographic of February 2010 which carried an article about nomads in India, illustrated with superb photographs by Steve McCurry. Some of the people in his pictures I recognized immediately, because only days before I had seen the faces of their ances- tors in my own newly restored pictures. In the excellent article ‘Lost nomads’ John Lancaster explains precisely who I had photographed in 1969. The nomadic smiths belong to a people of wandering groups with the collective name Gadulia Lohar – after gaadi, Hindi for wagon or cart, and lohar, Hindi for smith.


(The Newsletter | No.57 | Summer 2011
The Study | 15)


6: A woman cares for at least four children and possibly considers the elderly couple in the back-
ground as family as well. Rajasthan 1969.
7: A nomadic smith at work on the side of a road, with his family and a custom- er. Rajasthan 1969.
8: Father and son,perhaps ancestors of the nomadic smiths in Steve McCurry’s similar picture from
2010 at http://ngm. nationalgeographic.com/2010/02/ nomads/mccurry- photography. Rajasthan 1969.

9: The travelling clown with two heads, four arms and four legs is mildly mocking a sacred person.
The white-haired and white-bearded man with the sign painted on his fore- head and the prayer beads in his hand clearly represents a Hindu holy man or sadhu who is being carried on the back of a disciple. The boys next to him have the skill to let air escape from a balloon with a penetrating sound that attracts the attention of every- body in the bazaar. Rajasthan 1969.

According to their oral tradition, they are descendants of of the smiths today is forging from scrap iron new kitchen an ancient Hindu people that lived homelessly ever since the spoons and other utensils. According to John Lancaster Mogul emperor Akbar conquered the massive fort Chittaurgarh and other reporters, the Gadulia Lohar are still treated with in South Rajasthan in 1568 by. The fort protected the capital of disrespect by everybody around them, including the author- Mewar, a kingdom of the high-caste Hindu rulers and warriors ities and in particular the police. And as is the case in so many
known as Rajputs. The Gadulia Lohar consider themselves to similar situations across time and space: deeply entrenched be Rajputs too: their ancestors served the kingdom as weapon- opinions about their untrustworthy nature hinder them in makers. Ashamed about the loss of their country they vowed finding work, and their resulting poverty and despair drive to live as exiles without a fixed abode. some to crime.

They are one the many nomadic groups in India. Some lived The Indian author and social activist Mahasweta Devi has off criminal activities, but the majority existed peacefully long argued for more compassion and funds for the nomadic alongside mainstream India and made useful contributions peoples from the Indian authorities and from the population. to the larger community. But sedentary society was so Mahasweta Devi has said many times: ‘These peoples belong preoccupied with the criminals that it was generally con- to the very poor, usually they are illiterate and not familiar vinced all nomads were thieves or worse. with the social programmes. Urgently needed are the political will and the social mobilisation for a more humane existence of the nomads.’ (See e.g. her article ‘India’s Denotified Tribes’
                                     
     at http://indiatribals.blogspot.com/2008/01/mahasweta-devi-on-indias-denotified.html)


In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, European colonial governments spent much energy and money to capture nomads in permanent settlements and deprive them of their right to travel. Less than eighty years ago, the British military and civil servants in India considered all wander- ing groups to be rebels and criminals, and treated them harshly – their European prejudices about gipsies reinforcing
their opinions about local nomads. The government of India still is striving for the settlement of the wandering groups. Bureaucracies don’t like people without a fixed address. Officially seven percent of India’s present population, or 80 million people, belong to one of the nomadic peoples.

The Gadulia Lohar stuck to their ancestral occupation as smiths and weapon-makers. Forty years ago I saw them sharpen knives and repair copper pots and kettles. Copper cooking pots have since become obsolete, so the main work If my old half-frame photo-negatives had not been scanned by the International Institute of Social History, the pictures would not have reappeared with such clarity and detail, each as large as a page in a newspaper. Then most likely I would never have recognised the faces in Steve McCurry’s contem-porary photographs as relatives of the people I once looked
in the eye. The photos from 1969 illustrate and underscore that the nomadic way of life and the lowly status of the Gadulia Lohar have hardly changed in generations.

Ewald Vanvugt
Independent writer and photographer
vanvugt2@hotmail.com


Some technical information is necessary to under-
stand the circumstances of the find in my archives.
The camera I used back in 1969 was an Olympus from
Japan, about as big as a fist. Because it only used half
of a regular negative for each photo, it was known
as a ‘half-frame camera’, very high-tech at the time,
allowing the photographer to fit 72 photos on to
a regular 36-exposure roll of film.
Over many years as an increasingly keen travel
photographer, I have used many different cameras,
using mostly film with 36 exposures, usually black
and white. Since the advent of digital photography
transformed our practices, my sheets of photo-
negatives have slumbered in boxes in the attic.
An old-fashioned contact print of a half-frame photo-
negative is hardly larger than a stamp (18 x 24 mm)
and even under a magnifying glass the image can be
rather vague. However, when the negative is digitally
scanned, the photo can be magnified to fill a large
computer monitor with translucent clarity and detail
Some years ago I made arrangements with the Inter-
national Institute of Social History (IISH) in Amsterdam
to store and take care of my personal papers. Last year
Frank de Jong of the IISH and I started to go through
my photo archive and in the process we unearthed
amongst several treasures the half-frame photo-
negatives made in India. So far, the IIHS has published
a selection of about 500 of my photos on Flickr (see
http://www.flickr.com/photos/iisg/sets), mostly taken
in Asia and South America in between 1969 and 1974.






By Kalidas Shinde
PhD Scholar

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