Places, Locations
Asifabad
In 1977 Asifabad was the administrative capital of Asifabad District of Andhra Pradesh State. However, since the creation of Telangana State, the town is now that capital of Kumram Bheem District. In those days it was the main market and government centre. Here were the ashram high schools.
Jhoreghat. Site of the Babijheri Uprising in 1937.
This is ancestral home of Kumram Bhimu, who has now become the epic hero of the Raj Gond people. The Government has now built a large museum and cenotaph to Kumram Bhimu here. He was the leader of a tribal uprising against the Nizam of Hyderabad’s government that resulted from gross exploitation by local government officials and maltreatment and corruption by Forest Department officers in 1937.
Bat cave near Guddipet
A renowned cave near Rompalli village. Many Raj Gonds assume that this is the site of the cave in which their mythical hero ‘Pahandi Kupar Lingal‘ took them to discover their Great God, ‘Persa Pen‘. It is the site of many local ceremonies to various deities. The cave is in a limestone cliff and is the roost of thousands on bats and is unpleasant to enter.
Guddipet
A village 2 miles southwest of Ginnedhari that has close relations with Ginnedhari, with a history of intermarriage. It has many large ruined temples that are believed to be the remnants of the previous Bhuiya people, who occupied the area before the Raj Gonds migrated here and dominated the area.
Manikgarh Fort
This is now a ruined and uninhabited fortress that was once, from the 13th century until 1751, the feudal capital of the Raj Gond kings of Chanda, when they were defending their kingdom against inroads of the neighbouring Maratha kingdoms.
It is situated on a hilltop 28 miles north of Asifabad in Maharashtra State. In modern times the Raj Gond king has a substantial palace in Chanda.
Rompalli
This large Raj Gond village is ten miles south of Ginnedhari in Luxettipet Taluq. The Ada clan are the headmen. It is the home town of Ada Jalpatirao, who was my researcher and translator. Many of the farmers here were landless labourers on their ancestral land, which they had mortgaged to a nearby Hindu moneylender from Mandamari, called Madavarao. However the forward thinking headmen had started a primary school in the village. It now has a leading high school.
SamthulaGundam waterfall
Also called the Savattigungam falls. These magnificent waterfalls lie on the edge of the central Indian granite massif, called ‘Gondwanaland‘, which here drops the the eastern coastal plains. It is 11 mile northwest of Ginnedhari. During the monsoon rains this is a massive torrent on a side stream of the Vatti Vagu river.
Sungapur
This was a particularly large Kolam village about 3 miles northwest of Ginnedhari. The headman was Tekam Katti Patel, with his son Tekam Bhim Patel. The village then had no school, but it is now electrified and has a high school. The Kolam people are ‘Adivasi‘ tribals and have a close relationship with the Raj Gonds. They share in many common religious practices and ceremonies, especially that of ‘Dandari‘. The Kolam tribe are renowned for their use of forest produce and collecting wild bee honey.
Vatti Vagu river
This river drains the valleys south of Asifabad and flows into the Pedda Vagu river just north of Asifabad. Today it has been been dammed to create the Vatti Vagu reservoir, that has flooded a number of Rag Gond villages. I always had to cross it on my journey from Ginnedhari to Asifabad. While it is easily fordable for most of the year, it becomes a torrent in the monsoons. Today there are new and extensive coal mines just southwest of the reservoir feeding the steel furnaces at Bellampalli.