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People and their culture                                               The tribal Gods called Baba Dev, Baba Pithora, and Pithora Dev are painted and
                                                             Chhota  Udepur  is  a  tribally  dominant                              adored  in  Chhota  Udepur's  traditional  Pithora  painting  as  an  expression  of
                                                             district. The total population of Chhota                               gratitude (Figure 3). This is especially popular with the Rathwa community of

                                                             Udepur         district       is       241,377                         that region. Pithoro God is painted with bright colors on the walls of the house
                                                             (censusindia2011.com).  Most  of  the                                  and  is  then  worshiped  to  please  the  God.  Most  common  paintings  include
                                                             population  belongs  to  the  scheduled                                Pithora's  marriage,  long-necked  horses,  kings,  farmers,  cows,  bulls,  and  forest
                                                             tribes  of  Rathwa,  Baria,  Nayaka  (or                               creatures with yellow, indigo, orange, green, red, black, and silver colors. These
                                                             Nayak), Koli, and Bhil communities. The                                paintings are created for various purposes, such as when children, women, or
                                                             Bhils  who  occupy  the  rath  (hills  or                              men  are  sick  for  a  prolonged  time,  when  crops  fail,  or  when  there  are  other
                                                             plateaus) are called Rathias or Rathwas                                difficulties at home. They are associated with God’s wrath, and people believe
                                                             in  Gujarat.  Majority  of  Rathwas  are                               that  Bhuva  (priest)  can  provide  the  necessary  protection  and  security  from
                                                             socially and economically marginalized                                 God's wrath. Pithora paintings are more of a ritual than an art form (Karolia et
                                                             (Modi,    2013).    In    Chhota      Udepur,                          al., 2017).
                                                             Rathwas dominate not only in terms of                                   © Pratik Desai
                                                             numbers  but  also  in  terms  of  culture,
                                                             politics,  and  economics  (Alles,  2020).
                                                             Nayak  is  the  warrior  caste,  today  their
                                                             economic condition is bad (Chaudhari,
                                                             2020).


                                                             They  speak  a  very  distinct  dialect  of

                                                             Gujarati  -  ‘Rathvi’  and  their  main
                                                             occupation  is  agriculture  and  livestock
                                                             farming      (chhotaudepur.nic.in).        The
                                                             most  common  agricultural  crop  they
                                                             grow  is  maize,  and  other  crops  are
                                                             cotton, tuver (pigeon pea), barley crop,
                                                             paddy crop, and seasonal vegetables. In
                                                             their  daily  lives,  they  eat  roti/bread
                                                             (made  from  maize)  with  seasonal
                                                             vegetables, chicken, dal, rice, and Pania
                                                             (a  typical  Rathva  recipe  made  from
                                                             maize  and  black  gram).  The  main
                                                             festivals  of  the  local  community  are
                                                             Holi,  Divaso,  Dussehra,  Dev-Diwali,  and

                                                             Akhatrij (www.gujarat tourism.in). Their
                                                             pottery is distinctive to this region and
                                                             well  worth  seeing.  Every  day  in
                                                             adjacent  villages,  there  are  beautiful                              © Shalu Mesaria                                 © Shalu Mesaria
                                                             "Haats" (tribal fairs), which serve as the
  © Shalu Mesaria
                                                             tribals' primary selling occasions.


              09                                                   Sloth bear Conservation Education Programme                       10                                                   Sloth bear Conservation Education Programme
                                                                                          WCB Research Foundation                                                                                                WCB Research Foundation
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