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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Jharkhand: Tribals to observe day's fast on Jan 30, demand freeing of Parasnath hills from Jains

The tribals have also warned of severe agitation if their demand was not met

PTI Ranchi Published 11.01.23, 09:41 AM
The shrine on the Parasnath Hills on a winter morning.

The shrine on the Parasnath Hills on a winter morning. File image

Tribals will observe a day's fast on January 30 at Ulihatu in Khunti district, the birthplace of tribal icon Birsa Munda, in solidarity with their movement to “save” the Parasnath hills, a member of a joint forum of Adiva bodies said.

A large number of tribals on Tuesday assembled near the Parasnath hills in Giridih district, urging the state government and the Centre to free their holy site from the “clutches” of the Jain community.

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They also warned of severe agitation if their demand was not met.

Hundreds of tribals from Jharkhand, West Bengal and Odisha demonstrated in the hill area, carrying traditional weapons and beating drums.

"Marang Buru’ (Parasnath) is the birthright of Jharkhand’s tribals, and no power in the world can deprive them of this right," a member of the ‘Jharkhand Bachao Morcha’, which claims to be an outfit of over 50 bodies, asserted on Tuesday.

“Tribals will observe a day's fast on January 30 at Ulihatu in Khunti, the birthplace of tribal icon Birsa Munda, in solidarity with their movement, he said. Jains across the country have been demanding the scrapping of a 2019 Jharkhand government notification designating Parasnath hills as a tourist place, fearing this would lead to an influx of tourists who may consume non-vegetarian food and liquor at their holy site.

Even as the Centre stayed the Jharkhand government’s move to promote tourism at the Parasnath hills after protests by Jains, tribals jumped into the fray staking a claim to the land and asking for it to be freed.

The Santhal tribe, one of the largest Scheduled Tribe community in the country, has a sizeable population in Jharkhand, Bihar, Odisha, Assam and West Bengal and are nature worshippers.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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