Lets Put In Hands Together To Save Our Beautiful Culture, Society,Religion, Language and Our Recognition..Listen Rajbanshi Songs...>O Ge Beti Jaasis Ge..... # Naya Saalat...

A Tale Of Chorok Puja In B'desh

O Holy Night (CD/DVD)Nearly 40 kilometers away from the city of Dhaka, situated along the Dhaka-Mymensingh highway in Gazipur, happens to be a forest named Bhawal Forest – home of the Koch tribe made up of indigenous people, the ‘Rajbangshi’s.  In the past, the Rajbangshis used to be the worshippers of nature, and in course of time they converted themselves into Koch in 1954, by the influence of the Hindu religion. They mainly follow the shamanic religion, and are the worshippers of Kali in addition to their boundless respect for the colored skull they keep in every ritual. They call themselves the warriors of the sun, and also claim that they are the descendants of the kings of the Indian sub-continent.

     Every year, the people of Rajbangshi tribe hold a festival of Chaitra Puja, part of which is the ‘Chorok Puja’, where the young-adult males of the Rajbangshi tribe are hooked from the skin of their abdominal back, and hung from a huge revolving T-shaped structure. This is a part of their rituals and this task attracts hundreds of audiences who pay a visit to see this.

The Rajbangshi From Bangladesh

The Rajbangshi is another small ethnic group of Bangladesh. They entered this country from the Himalayan region and the Brahmaputra valley. They live mostly in Rangpur, Dinajpur and Rajshahi districts and a small number of them in Bogra and Mymensingh. 

In 1991, their total population was a little more than five thousand. They are now a declining community in Bangladesh. They are short and have flat noses with raised jaws. They are the followers of Vaisnavism. Some of them recently adopted Islam or Christianity.

Agriculture is the main profession of the Rajbangshi. They are also involved in the fishing industry. Rajbangshi women are adroit at handicrafts and good at running cottage industries. Among the Rajbangshis, the father is the head of the family and only male children inherit the property of their father after his death as a result of a strong patriarchal bias.

Rajbangshis have their own religious rites and rituals related to fertility and procreation. Many are animists, while others worship nature, including mountains, rivers, forests and the soil. Their religious festivals are full of indigenous songs and dances.

Rajbangshis have no written language or alphabet. Their spoken language is considered by many to be a distorted version of Bangla. All of them can speak in their own language as well as Bangla. The Rajbangshis burn the bodies of the dead and organize sraddha after one month of death.