Siddhi people of gujarat in high spirits!
Dancers and musicians of
Siddhi village.
The Siddhi, also known as
Habshi, are an
Indian and
Pakistani ethnic group of
Black African and/or Afro-Arab descent. The
Siddi population is currently estimated to be 20,000--55,
000, with
Gujarat and
Hyderabad in
India and
Makran and
Karachi in
Pakistan as the main population centres.
Siddis are mainly
Sufi Muslims, although some are Hindus and some
Roman Catholic Christians. Villages in the forests of northern
Karnataka, for instance, have residents who likely are descended from Mozambican/Angolan slaves who escaped from
Portuguese traders and ships.
The first Siddis are thought to have arrived in the
Indian subcontinent in 628 AD at the
Bharuch port. Several others followed with the first
Arab Islamic invasions of the subcontinent in
712 AD. The latter group are believed to have been soldiers with
Muhammad bin Qasim's Arab army, and were called Zanjis.
Most Siddis, however, are believed to be the descendants of slaves, sailors, servants and merchants from
East Africa who arrived and became resident in the subcontinent during the 1200-1900 AD period. A large influx of Siddis to the region occurred in the
17th century when Portuguese slave traders sold a number of them to local princes.
Flag of the Siddis from Murud-Janjira an important vassal of the
Mughal Empire.
In
Western India (the modern
Indian states of Gujarat and
Maharashtra), the Siddi gained a reputation for physical strength and loyalty, and were sought out as mercenaries by local rulers, and as domestic servants and farm labor. Some Siddis escaped slavery to establish communities in forested areas, and some even established small Siddi principalities on Janjira
Island and at
Jaffrabad as early as the twelfth century. A former alternative name of Janjira was Habshan (i.e., land of the
Habshis)
. In the Delhi Sultanate period prior to the rise of the
Mughals in India,
Jamal-ud-Din Yaqut was a prominent Siddi slave-turned-nobleman who was a close confidant of
Razia Sultana (1205--1240 CE). Although this is disputed, he may also have been her lover.
As a power centre, Siddis were sometimes allied with the Mughal Empire in its power-struggle with the
Maratha Confederacy. However,
Malik Ambar, a prominent Siddi figure in
Indian history at large, is sometimes regarded as the "military guru of the Marathas", and was deeply allied with them. He established the town of Khirki which later became the modern city of
Aurangabad, and helped establish the Marathas as a major force in the
Deccan.
Later, the Marathas adapted Siddi guerrilla warfare tactics to grow their power and ultimately demolish the
Mughal empire. Some accounts describe the
Mughal emperor Jahangir as obsessed by
Ambar due to the Mughal empire's consistent failures in crushing him and his Maratha cavalry, describing him derogatorily as "the black faced" and "the ill-starred" in the royal chronicles and even having a painting commissioned that showed Jahangir killing Ambar, a fantasy which was never realised in reality.
Supposedly presented as slaves by the Portuguese to the local
Prince,
Nawab of Junagadh, the Siddis also live around
Gir Forest National Park and
Wildlife Sanctuary, the last refuge in the world of the almost extinct
Asiatic Lions, in
Junagadh a district of the state of
Gujarat, India.
On the way to Deva-dungar is the quaint village of
Sirvan, inhabited entirely by Siddis, a tribe of
African people. They were brought
300 years ago from
Africa, by the Portuguese for the Nawab of Junagadh.
Today, they follow very few of their original customs, with a few exceptions like the traditional Dhamal dance.
Although
Gujarati Siddis have adopted the language and many customs of their surrounding populations, some African traditions have been preserved. These include the
Goma music and dance form, which is sometimes called
Dhamaal.The term is believed to be derived from the
Ngoma drumming and dance forms of
Bantu East Africa. The Goma also has a spiritual significance and, at the climax of the dance, some dancers are believed to be vehicles for the presence of Siddi saints of the past
Source:
Wikipedia
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