Tharu Culture of Chitwan
Chitwan National Park is the Homeland of the Tharu who are the
original tribe of this region. They have their own language, culture
and traditional beliefs. They were the only inhabitants of Chitwan up
until the late 1950s. Lord Buddha was a Tharu. Originally all the Tharu
were Buddhists, but nowadays, some Tharus are Buddhist and some are
Hindu. Buddhist and Hindu Tharu live peacefully side by side.
The Tharu excursions benefit both you and the Tharu people. The Tharu culture excursions offer you insight into the daily life of
the Tharu people. Many Tharu think they should do everything the
western way and, by doing so, they abandon their own culture. These
excursions aim to make the Tharu feel proud of their culture again. We
also try to preserve the culture by giving the local community an
economical base for preserving it. 50% of the earnings of these
excursions go directly to the local people. The other 50% supports
other Sapana projects.
History of Chitwan
Tharu Girl |
What are their lives like?
The Tharu have lived quiet,
simple lives for four centuries. They are a gentle people. They live in
villages in houses plastered inside and out with mud and cow dung, so
fine it feels like silky skin. They make almost everything they use
themselves, with a touch of art in everything. Their walls are
decorated with relief plaster sculpture and windows in geometric
patterns. Their houses are large and communal; a family group lives
together, and the women cook together, care jointly for their children
and pass on their culture and traditions to the next generation. Their
clothes are colorful and beautifully embroidered; they buy scraps of
left-over fabric from the fabric merchant and each woman puts her own
dress together in a unique and gorgeous fashion. They wear beautiful
jewelry. They make their own clay pots cook stoves, woven baskets and
fishing nets that look like butterfly wings. Rice is their staple crop;
they also grow corn. The men plow, plant and weave the nets that the
women use to fish. They also hunt in the forest that is the backdrop to
their neat fields and villages. The women plaster their houses and make
the pots and baskets.
What are their beliefs?
They have their own gods and follow a
Bharra (shaman). Their religion is animist. Besides the Bharra, who
treats their diseases, the village headman, bhalamansa, and the
Desi-Mahajan - an Indian moneylender, are important people within the
village.