ID | 099932 |
Title Proper | Babon Gaji's many pasts |
Other Title Information | the adventures of a historian in a counter-archive |
Language | ENG |
Author | Mukharji, Projit B |
Publication | 2010. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Babon Gaji is a curious god. He is avowedly a Muslim, and the icons that represent him seek to capture his 'Muslim-ness' conspicuously in their attire, not to mention the name itself (Gaji = Ghazi = Muslim warrior-monk) and local lore. Yet he is worshipped by Brahmin Hindu priests who are equally conspicuous in flaunting their Hindu-Brahmin identity. There are no stories about the Gaji ever having been a Hindu or having had anything more than an intellectual interest in Hinduism. He remains, thus, in his afterlife a Muslim; yet, he receives worship through Brahmin priests. Both Hindus and Muslims come to him in large numbers today, in search of a cure for their afflictions. Local accounts place the origins of his shrine at Tajpur, South 24 Parganahs a little over 100 years ago, yet, no account of either the cult or the shrine - to the best of my knowledge - exists in the colonial archive. Neither are there any known written accounts outside the colonial archive that are more than a couple of decades old. For the historian of colonial medicine in the region, therefore, the Gaji presents a difficult challenge. |
`In' analytical Note | Contemporary South Asia Vol. 18, No. 1; Mar 2010: p.89 - 104 |
Journal Source | Contemporary South Asia Vol. 18, No. 1; Mar 2010: p.89 - 104 |
Key Words | Bengal ; History ; Healing Shrine ; Memory ; Popular Religion ; Counter - Archive |