Garo Hills Explained

The Garo Hills (IPA: ˈgɑ:ro:) are part of the Garo-Khasi range in Meghalaya state of India.[1] They are inhabited by the Garo people.[2] It is one of the wettest places in the world. The range is part of the Meghalaya subtropical forests ecoregion.[3] [4]

Description

Garo Hills was a single district of British India.[5] The region now comprises five districts namely East Garo Hills, North Garo Hills, South Garo Hills, West Garo Hills, South West Garo Hills.[6] It has a total population of 1,103,542. Tura is the largest town with a population of about 74,858 located at the foothills of often cloud-covered Tura peak. The town is centrally located to other popular game and wildlife sanctuaries in the district such as the national parks of Balphakram and Nokrek, and several natural limestone caves (the Siju Cave is among the longest in Asia). These places are rich reserves of natural flora and fauna and a refuge for endangered animals.[7]

Society

The society is matrilineal like the Khasis and the Jaintias. Till death, the newborn baby belongs to the mother's family, irrespective of sex, even after marriage. Marriage within the clan is completely prohibited and severely punishable for both the Khasis and the Garos. Till now, the institution of Bachelors dormitories which is gradually disappearing amongst the tribes of the northeastern region, is found in the Garo villages. In such dormitories young people stay and live together till they are married. They receive various training in the dormitories like making various A'chik music instruments, wrestling or traditional sports, and making traditional bamboo baskets. This institution is similar to ancient agoges of Sparta. The Khasis and Garos are now mostly Christians. Earlier, they were nature-worshippers.[8]

The traditional Garo female dress is a piece of cloth around the waist and a blouse or vest. The men usually wear, in addition to cloth, a turban. Males and females both wear bangles and earrings. The staple cereal food is rice. They also eat millet, maize, tapioca etc. Garos are very liberal in their food habits. Practically all available types of meat and animals are eaten. The liquor is not distilled, but prepared by brewing food grains.

Places of interest

Garo Hills, known for its abundance of wildlife, attracts naturalists and photographers to capture the multifaceted sights of a unique range of flora and fauna. Two mountain ranges - the Arabella range and the Tura range, pass through the Garo Hills, forming the great Balpakram valley in between. The headquarters town of Tura, at an altitude of 657 m, is 305km (190miles) from the state capital Shillong.[9] The highest point in the Garo Hills is Nokrek Peak with elevation of 1412m (4,633feet).[10]

Tura has a picturesque landscape of hills against a backdrop of low-lying plains.[11] A sunset view can be best seen from Tura Peak at 1400m (4,600feet) and its summit can be reached by a 5km (03miles) trek, partly by hiking and also by rock-climbing.

These are locations in and around Garo Hills which are tourist spots. These include:[12]

The highest point of the Garo Hills region of the State, Nokrek Peak stands 1412m (4,633feet) above sea level. The mother germoplasm of Citrus-India has been discovered by scientific researchers within Nokrek Range. This discovery led to the establishment of the National CitrusGene Sanctuary-cum-Biosphere Reserve at Nokrek covering an area of 47km2.

A National Wildlife Park, located in South Garo Hills and 167 km from Tura. It is home to the rare Lesser Panda, the Indian bison and the stag-like Serow. A variety of medicinal herbs locally called "dikges" grow abundantly in Balpakram.

The famous limestone caves of Siju are located near Simsang River in Siju village.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Garo Hills-The Ecological Canvas of Meghalaya. 3 May 2012. 29 October 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131029084022/http://megtourism.gov.in/dest-garo.html. dead.
  2. Book: Subba . T.B. . Ghosh . G.C. . The anthropology of North-East India . 2003 . Orient Longman . Hyderabad . 81-250-2335-6.
  3. Book: Joshi, H.G. . Meghalaya: past and present . 2004 . Mittal Publications . New Delhi . 81-7099-980-4 . 1st.
  4. Book: Singh . V.B. . Sema . K. Akali . Alila . Pauline . Horticulture for sustainable income and environmental protection . 2006 . Concept Pub. Co. . New Delhi . 81-8069-221-3.
  5. Garo Hills. 11. 473. This includes a history of the district from a British point of view.
  6. Web site: Districts. . The official web portal, Government of Meghalaya . 26 November 2024.
  7. Book: Karlsson, Bengt G. . Unruly hills: a political ecology of India's northeast . 2010 . Berghahn Books . New York . 978-0-85745-104-0.
  8. Web site: People of Meghalaya . 20 October 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171108110212/http://shillong.com/content/people-meghalaya . 8 November 2017 . dead .
  9. Web site: 9 November 2024 . Directions: Tura, West Garo Hills - Shillong, East Khasi Hills . 9 November 2024 . OpenStreetMap.
  10. Book: Bhatt . S. C. . Bhargava . Gopal K. . Meghalaya . 2006 . Kalpaz publ. . Delhi . 81-7835-374-1.
  11. Book: West garo hills . 2010 . General Books . [S.l.] . 978-1-158-71563-3.
  12. Web site: Places of Interest for Tourists Shillong.com . 20 October 2012 . 3 October 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221003042509/http://shillong.com/content/places-interest-tourists . dead .