Malana, is an isolated village of Himachal Pradesh, having their own parliament and constitution. The people of the village don’t consider themselves to be Indians, but Aryans so special you can not even touch them or their belongings. And they grow marijuana – it is everywhere. Discover Myths, folklore and taboos of Malana.
In this Article
From Kasol, Malana is about 21 km. A jeep carries you over the first 18 km, and then you trek uphill. But the climb up the frost-hardened slopes is still tough.
Malana is located on a narrow plateau, high on one side of a wild and remote glen that abuts the river Parvati in the Kullu valley of Himachal Pradesh.
The Malana Nullah, which flows through the valley, comes from Deotibba, 6,000 meter or 20,000 feet, snow-covered peak that overhangs the glen and the village.
“Touch the temple or a local and pay a Rs 1,000 fine”,
we are told on our way to Malana. In the far north of India in the Himalayas, in the Kullu Valley, under the majestic peaks, there is a village of about two hundred houses called Malana. They call some neighboring villages cousins, like Ghor or Gohar, Rasol and Tos or Tosh in the West, where such a taboo also exists.
The people of the village don’t consider themselves to be Indians, but Aryans so special you can not even touch them or their belongings. This unique settlement of about 2,000 inhabitants, is self-governing with a system that is considered democratic, working according to the orders of their powerful deity ‘Jamlu Devta’.
MYTHS, FOLKLORE & TABOOS OF MALANA
How Malana came to be
Jamlu Rishi
According to the Puranas, Jamdagni Rishi (sage) is the father of Parashuram, one of the ten incarnations of Lord Vishnu (Dashavatara). After his intense prayers, Lord Shiva appeared before him. Jamdagni Rishi asked for a secluded place, full of nature’s bounty. Lord Shiva told him to go to Malana.
Another myth tells that, Jamdagni Rishi, named in local dialect Jamlu Rishi lived with two brothers. Jamdagni stayed and the brother went away. One of them to Lahaul and the other to the Banjar valley. He is believed to dwell in this part of Himachal Pradesh, gradually forming a community and making rules and regulations for his devotees. Jumlu Rishi is a God-like figure to the people of Malana.
We headed straight for their main temple of Jamdagni Rishi that is richly decorated with wood carvings depicting flora, fauna and dancers. The presiding deity within this wooden temple, is veiled behind the facade and adorned by the horns and skeletons of animals sacrificed to him.
However it is only the people of Malana who have access to the sanctum. We read a sign:
NO TOUCHING — PHOTO OF JAMDAGNI RISHI 1000 RS FINE
Akbar
Legend has it, that the residents of Malana are the descendant of Aryans, and they acquired their independence during the Mughal reign.
The story goes that – Emperor Akbar’s tax gatherers charged tax from a man in Delhi who had been given a gold piece from Jamlu’s treasury in Malana. Akbar was immediately struck with leprosy, he sent his men with the piece of gold back to Malana with more gold and silver. Jamlu Devta was pleased and Akbar was cured. He never collected any tax from the village of Malana thereafter. Every year this incident is enacted at Malana in the festival of Fagli or Phagli, and the gold images are brought out from inside Jamlu Devta’s temple.
Phagli — The village fair
As the name suggests, Phagli fair begins during the month of Phalgun (February and March). Phagli is celebrated in most of the villages of Kullu valley but it holds a very important place among the people of village Malana. It depicts the victory of good over evil and shows the struggle between Gods and demons for supremacy. Ultimately, God emerges victorious.
A person is disguised as a demon by putting a mask on his face and tying some grass around his body. God is represented by a ‘Gur’ (God’s spokesman). They perform dances called Deo Khel (acted upon by the Gur) and Raksh Khel (performed by the person who is personating the demon). The demon was known as “Tundi Raksh” who used to trouble the people living between Malana and Archhandi villages. He was finally killed by Manu Rishi and Shandalya Rishi. To commemorate this event, the fair is held in Malana, Jana, Soil, and Halan villages and in all the temples of Jamlu devta.
Alexander the Great
The green eyes and sharp features of the locals lay claim to being descendants of the Aryan army of ‘Alexander – The great’ of Greece.
Popular folklore holds that Malana villagers are descendants from the remnants of Alexander’s Greek soldiers who chose to stay back after his conquest in 326 BC.
In 4th Century BC, some soldiers while returning to their homeland liked Malana so much that they decided to settle down here. This is also supported by the local folklore of some carvings, showing soldiers on the wooden houses. Thus Malana is also known as the “Athens of Himalayas” or “Little Greece.”
FOLKLORE: Customs and Traditions
Entering the village we see a sign:
touch the temple or a local and pay a Rs 1,000 fine.
We follow a stone path, dotted with various sacred stones, that passes through the center of the village.
The houses are built of wood and stone with two or three floors and each floor has a specific function, the ground floor is called Khudang and is used as stables for livestock. The first floor, Gaying, is used as a warehouse for food, clothing and firewood. The top floor has a large balcony and is the residential area.
Kanashi
A little girl carrying a hay bale, wait it is marijuana on her shoulders shouts to us :
don’t touch – don’t touch.
Her native language is Kanashi. The language of Malana, does not resemble any of the dialects spoken in the Parvati valley where they speak languages belonging to the Indo-European family. Kanashi has been classified as a Sino- Tibetan language. Although the inhabitants claim to be descendants of Alexander the Great’s soldiers, there is no evidence of lexical links with Greek and Macedonian languages. The Malanese speak a language that has no script.
Old village folk watched us, sitting on a stone platform in the village main square, while serenely gurgling on their Chillums. The central square, is the place where the village council makes its decisions, just as in ancient Greece.
DEMOCRACY
Malana village doesn’t have any police or court; they have their own laws to solve any problem. It thus has an Upper house and a Lower house where rules and regulations are formulated.
The Malana administration is based on religion and the elected members are selected among the inhabitants of Bhandaria which are assigned the tasks of collecting tax on the land area, which falls under the jurisdiction of the village shrine, deposit all revenue in the sanctuary treasure, keep the profit and loss account, collect and deposit the offers, arrange funds for functions and organize the festivities, hold the symbols of Jamlu Devata during religious processions.
The priestly office is hereditary. Jamlu is the deity who is considered lord of the village. His courtiers are elected and raise funds for the maintenance of civic services by revenues produced by the village land, strangers who graze their cattle, cash contributions from devotees, gold and silver horse and visitors offers.
The parliament of Malana is a bicameral parliament, comprising of a lower house called Kanishthang and an Upper house called Jayeshthang.
There are 11 members in the Upper House (Temporary-8, Permanent-3). The 8 members are from 4 wards who are elected and called ‘jethra’.
Out of the 3 permanent members:
- one is the village head who is also the principal administrator of the Upper house and works according to the orders of their powerful deity ‘Jamlu Devta’.
- The second member is a priest whose main responsibilities include offerings to Jamlu Devta and make people follow the religious customs.
- The third member is known as ‘Gur’ or ‘Goor’ who is believed to have direct connection with the deity. At times it is believed that the deity himself chooses a person and enters into his body, following which the person starts shivering and then predicts future of anyone. That particular person is called ‘Gur’ and thus is not elected by the villagers. There may also be two Goor, or none, as happened after the 1985 death of Madgu that was not replaced (due to bad influences of evil forces). Tradition has it that when a Goor is recognized as such, you wear a white hat and let your hair grow. On occasion the Goor, in a rite of shamanic type, dance in ecstasy possessed by the spirit of Jamlu Devta. On these occasions hears the complaints of citizens and expresses its opinions.
The other members are elected. The justice is self-managed. Judgments are discussed first from the bottom board, until it reaches unanimity. They are then issued by the High Council and especially, monetary fines. Sometimes decisions are re-discussed and after weighing the interests of the village, the pros and cons, are changed. Anyone who does not accept the verdict is driven away from the valley. The most severe sentence on the theft of sacred objects, provides that the offender be tied to a stone and thrown off a cliff.
In the earlier days none of the cases of Malana went to the court of Kullu but recently few cases related to drug trafficking have entered the court.
Animal sacrifices
When there is an upcoming decision to be made about an unresolved conflict between two parties, the right foreleg of two lambs are cut about one and a half inches deep, stuffed it with poison and sewn right back up. Each lamb is assigned to a party and whichever lamb dies first, that particular party loses the judgment. This is done because they believe the decision is made by their Devta.
Environmental regulations
Subjected to their rules, it clearly briefs them as highly environment-friendly,
- its prohibited to chop down trees for any purpose,
- even fixing a nail in its stem for that matter;
- villagers are only permitted to collect dry wood or twig as fuel;
- hunting is only allowed in certain period of a year with permission of village council, hunter is rewarded if one kills a bear but then its skin, according to the rule book, needs to be submitted to the temple authority.
Taboos – DON`T TOUCH
In this democracy there are also rules to follow for us. The people are friendly, but we need to keep our distance and not touch anything in the village.
Any visitor touching a resident must pay a fine of 1,000 rupees.
Anything which is touched by a visitor is purified by the blood of a sacrificed animal, usually a lamb, a goat or a goose. We are also not allowed to take photographs of the religious monuments of the village. Also it is not accepted to enter the temples.
Malana Cream
The Kulu District in the Himachal Pradesh State of northern India is home to an ancient culture of hand-rubbed hashish.
Local legends tell us that Shiva and his wife Parvatti brought ganja seeds to the Kulu valley, took up residence there, and smoked the chillum. In South Asia, the chillum is a straight tapered pipe, usually made of clay or stone, that is held vertically when smoked.
The traditional charas-producing areas lie in the Parvatti Valley near Malana and in the Kulu Valley by Manali. The Hippie Hashish Trail reached the remote Kulu Valley after the Himalayan Foothill areas nearer Katmandu had been explored. The ganja fields of Kulu thrive at altitudes from 3,200 to 3,800 m.
The use of ‘Bhaang‘, cannabis (Cannabis is the genus name for the marijuana or hemp plant.), has been an integral part of the lower areas of the Parvati valley from medicine to footwear. Malanis bartered ghee, wool, honey and game birds with the other Kullu villages for salt, food and tools. Today, nobody barters because a thriving illegal charas trade has made the villagers cash rich.
Two different types of ganja grow here, from which two distinctive kinds of charas are made. Wild ganja is called jungli. Charas made from jungli is the traditional charas of Kulu, but it is becoming scarce. Cultivated ganja is made into charas called begij. The rapid growth in hashish popularity during the 1960s and 1970s resulted in increased plantings of ganja fields. Begij is now the most common charas also called Malana cream.
At some point in the 70s, the cultivation of cannabis was introduced. Johnny tells us about Italian hippies from Sardegna – Cagliari, that have bought some quality Indica plants to Malana. Legend has it, that they escaped visa controls and where hiding in Malana, a secluded place at the time. These pioneers would plant weed choosing the sunniest mountain slopes. Also they would share their knowledge about cultivation and how to rub the plant.
The wet, windy and sunny weather around Malana is excellent for cannabis cultivation. Resin is produced by various parts of the plant, but it is most heavily concentrated on the buds of um-pollinated female cannabis flowers. Female plants are grown and harvested for their resin, that will give high quality charas (hashish).
Cannabis resin acts as an external immune system and communication network for the plant. The six types of sticky trichomes present on the plant offer numerous benefits, including protecting the plant from pests, infections, herbivores, and damaging UV rays.
Johnny knows: “Especially the cold nights would invite the plant to throw out resin to protect the flowers.” The higher the altitude, the plant grows, the more resin is produced.
Franco Casalone
Malanis tell the story of Glenu, an Italian who was hiding (visa issues) in the village and taught them how to rub the cream – the oily, cleaner and more potent charas suitable for an international market.
The valley’s most legendary long-term Italian resident is Franco Casalone a cannabis activist and the author of several books on cultivation and legalization. He had visited India several times in the late 1980s and early ’90s, and then, in 1996, had come to the Malana region, where he lived in a shelter built into the lee of a giant boulder. He stayed for a decade—where he became, as he’s been called,
“ the greatest European expert in traditional charas production techniques.”
The village now is famous the world over for producing ‘Malana cream’, considered one of the best quality charas in India. Generally it is more ‘creamy’, or clay-like, as compared to that produced in other parts of Bharat.
Hand rubbed Charas
The Himalayan Foothills are rainy throughout much of the late summer and fall when the local plants are rubbed for hashish. The rubbing is done when the plant has the right maturity and color, but is not to dry, Jhonny knows. As for the hight it is grown till 3500m (11482.94 Feet) and it shall be this charas that is the strongest.
Only the healthy flowers, with no lice or spiders are rubbed, the small leaves and seeds are taken away also. Vine plants are to be plucked, as they give a unwanted taste to the charas. Obviously the male plants are to be taken off the field before maturation.
The creaminess is determined by the amount of plant material that gets collected along with the resin. Lesser plant material makes the resin softer and smoother – creamy. All this is determined also by the experience and patience of the worker growing, harvesting and rubbing it.
The hash unleashes a complex blend of aromas, a pleasant mix, malty sweet, fruity, and hashy notes, some say the cream tastes ghee, – clarified butter like.
Anyway the taste and smell depends on the environment, it grows in — like neighboring plants — corn makes it yellow, mango tree — fruity, citronella — lemony and pines — woody.
The high is cerebral—clear, clean, stimulating—building to a heady plateau as more is smoked.
Medically, the “Malana” strain has been known to be of particular benefit for those suffering from fibromyalgia. Helping relieve associated symptoms such as insomnia and nausea.
Malana cream became an international brand. Hashish production grew as a home industry for each household. The high quality cannabis so produced, fetched fabulous prices. In fact, in 1995, Malana Cream was adjudged one of the finest hashish smokes at Cannabis Cup, Amsterdam.
As its fame grew, Malana soon became a center for recreational drug tourism, with smokers flooding the valley, as they continue to do today.
Historically, hand-rubbing was followed by the more efficient technique of drying whole plants, and then collecting their resin by sieving. If the supply of ripe plants is large and the time and physical conditions are not suitable for drying the plants, then hand- rubbing becomes a practical method for making hashish. Hand-rubbing is also appropriate for collecting resin in humid climates where drying and sieving are difficult, like in Malana.
The thick layer of fresh rubbed resin sticks to the rubbers, about 4 to 5 grams are rubbed in a days work, even more if someone cleans the plants for rubbing. Also, removing the precious resin from the hands is an arduous task, as the sticky resin can take of skin parts in the process.
Charas is illegal
While growing cannabis was part of the traditional crops in much of Kullu valley, it having been declared a contraband and its growing banned is resented by the villagers. From time to time they have been agitating to get marijuana cultivation legalized.
Villagers now produce this world- renowned Hashish out of its plantations, grown despite the laws of the Indian government. The police at times try to go and destroy the crops but it grows naturally and at a great length due to which they fail in this operation. Cannabis is grown in mountain fields around the villages and the hilly slopes of Kullu and Parvati valley are filled with weed — properly cultivated as we know of farms or estates.
Before leaving, we see Malana men gather in groups or loitering in the warm sunshine, some smoking and some taking part in an administrative discussion in front of the main temple. We have not seen woman smoking, but Johnny tells us, that once a year, at harvest festival woman will roast the seeds and eat it — spreading joy and laughing all night long.
Woman are hanging clothes, grandma is spinning yarn using a spindle, anther one is weaving. On the balconies woman and children are rubbing buds. Younger siblings are holding a goat on a string and joking.
The village is an enigmatic as we had heard. Malanis admire their culture, customs and religious beliefs. Though some traces of modernization are visible, like a bank and satellite bowls on the roofs.
Yet again we read a sign.
NO TOUCHING PHOTO OF JAMURGH RISHI, ONE THOUSAND RUPEES FINE
जमीन के इस पवित्र स्थान को हने पर 1000/- ना लिया जाएगा।
Note:
Johnny, an Italian friend we met in Goa, knew Glenu and Malana, he said:
“Malanis touch non Malanis and are touched, when outside of Malana.”
— There is a thick smell in the air, herbal… burned pine wood, or is it vanilla like…These high-altitude location, along with powerful genetics, create the perfect canvas for Mother Nature to create her magic.
~ ○ ~
Keep exploring:
Works Cited & Multimedia Sources
- Explore INDIA with earthstoriez.
- The story of Manala. http://www.aheadofdemocracy.com/story-of-malana.html
- Abhishek Madhukar. The Untouchables – Malana, India. 2003. http://www.bootsnall.com/articles/03-06/the-untouchables-malana-india.html
- Clarke, Connell Robert. HASHISH! 1998.
- Documentaries: 1. Malana: Globalization of a Himalayan Village and 2. Malana : A Lost Identity
- Judhajit Roychoudhury. Malana: oldest democracy, hashish and myth. http://www.indiatourism4u.in/tourism/436/Himachal-pradesh/Malana/
- Kalyan Panja. The Secrets of the Mysterious Village of Malana. 2017.
- Kamal Thakur. Malana – World’s Oldest Democracy – Kullu .2012. kullutourism.com/malana-village-kullu-trek.php
- Kullu Valley – The Land of Folklore and ‘Tharah Karadus’. The OK Travel. http://theoktravel.com/kullu-valley-the-land-of-folklore-and-tharah-karadus/1059/
- Malana Village and Drug Tourism. https://dexventure.com/2017/12/24/malana-village/#more-314
- PICS: मलाणा(Part-1)- यहाँ के लोग मानते है खुद को सिकंदर के सैनिकों का वंशज, यहाँ नहीं चलते भारतीय कानून
- मलाणा (Part-2)- यहाँ अकबर ने जमलू देवता से मांगी थी माफ़ी, इसलिए होती है पूजा
- मलाणा : हिमाचल के इस गांव में कुछ भी छुआ तो लगता है 1000 रुपए का जुर्माना
- Malana Elders- https://hillpost.in/2017/07/politics-divides-kullu-malana-village/109128/
- Tashminah Farzin. Malana-The Famous Malana Cream of Himachal Pradesh.2017. Parrotspeaks.com/malana-village-himachal-malana-cream
- Winds of change in Malana. https://travelshoebum.com/2016/03/12/winds-of-change-in-malana/amp/
- https://www.dolcevitaonline.it/grazie-galeno-grazie-di-tutto-il-ricordo-di-franco-casalone-per-un-maestro-di-vita-e-di-cannabis/
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CqFiucWKo-8