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Swarnakar an
artisan group
working as goldsmith or silversmith. The Bengali name of the
occupation is derived as a compound of two words swarna
(gold) and kar (worker). Swarnakars produce innumerable
silver or gold
ornaments such as
churi (bangle), bajuband (armlet), har
(necklace), hansuli (ornament for the neck), sinthipati
(ornament put on the head in the parting of hair), dul
(earring), kanpasha (ear ornament), nolak (nose-ring),
nath (big nose ring put on the nostril), nakchhabi
(small star-shaped ornament put on the nostril), mal (anklet)
etc. Some of these, however, have gone out of fashion now. Over
time, the ornaments made by swarnakars have changed in design, in
the amount of metal and in the combination of metal with various
non-metal items in them.
Traditionally, the goldsmith uses a fireplace and
bellows, smaller than those used by blacksmith. He melts gold or
silver by putting its pieces in a crucible and blowing it with flame
by means of a phukni (blowpipe) made generally of brass.
Swarnakars in India historically formed a Hindu caste called
Shankra (or Suvarnakar, in book language goldsmith) and
in Bengal, they were divided into four sub-castes Brahman-Desi,
Dakksin radi, Khalangi, and Uttar radi.
In a swarnakar community, girls were married at
early age. The
marriage ceremony
is still observed in an orthodox fashion, its essential and binding
portion being the gift of the bride to bridegroom and his formal
acceptance of the gift. Widows may not marry again and divorce is
permitted only
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on the ground of the wife's adultery. The religion
of the caste is that of the average middle class Hindu Sakta
or Vaishnava. The divine artisan, Viswakarma, is
reverenced as the special patron of the caste. The women of the
swarnakar community have a special ceremony called Kulais,
which is performed during the rains without the assistance of any
priest. Brahmans are employed for religious and ceremonial purposes,
but Brahmans serving the higher castes do not accept invitations
only on a discretionary basis.
In the past, the swarnakars might have been engaged
exclusively in their profession only. Now many of them have
secondary occupations like farming or petty trading. Historically,
the social status of swarnakars had been low and this continues to
be so more because of their relatively poor incomes than their caste
position. Some swarnakars, however, become traders in gold and
ornaments, earn money and with that, the reputation and social
status. The development of modern jewellery, imitation ornaments and
the introduction of machinery in ornament making industry have
squeezed the working scope of swarnakars. Most of them are now
forced out of business because of the shortage of capital and
difficulties in imports or in competition with others in sales in
the local market. Gold traders and gold traffickers now dominate in
the jewellery business and swarnakars work under them on salary
basis. Modern jewellery business is no more a trade of Hindus alone.
Muslims have now adopted the profession in such a scale that it has
lost its the original caste character. [Gofran Faroqi]
Source:
Asiatic Society of Bangladesh |
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