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.