CELEBRATING GIRMIT: SOME ARTIFACTS, EQUIPMENT AND
TOOLS OF GIRMIT AND PIONEER INDIANS IN FIJI
Thakur Ranjit Singh
The greatest Fiji Historian
and Girmit son, Professor Brij Lal said our Girmitiyas were ordinary people who did extraordinary things in
extraordinary circumstances. We have inherited their trait to never give
up and we never compromise. There is a kind of dignity within us, where did it
come from? It comes from people who travelled thousands of miles in difficult
circumstances, but never gave up. This is the legacy of Girmit that I think we
are celebrating, not those horrible things we read in books many years ago.
And in doing so, they developed and used items before the modernisation to make their living-the artifacts, tools and equipment to make their living.
This article illustrated and explains some of
them. They are not exhaustive, but includes many.
Dhenki (pronounced as “dharki” as well)
This traditional rice husker was constructed
using a wooden beam and a stone bowl. To work this machine one had to step on
the rear end of the beam, which had crude cuts to provide some grip. Once
stepped on, the beam was then released, allowing the front of the beam to fall
into the stone bowl containing the grains of rice. This process was repeated
until all the grains were husked and ready to be separated from the chaff using
the soop. Length: 2.3m.
Soop
Originally known as the kula in India, this type of basket was woven
from strips of bamboo and was brought to Fiji by the Girmitiyas who later
called it 'soop' in Fiji Hindi. After the rice was separated from the stalks
(threshing) and husked using the dhenki (rice husker), women used the soop to
shake and toss the rice so that only the grain was left as the chaff blew away
into the air.
Hasua
Fiji Indians
call this agricultural tool the hasua. There were two variants of this sickle.
One was constructed from a curved metal blade attached to a wooden handle and
the other was forged entirely out of metal. The hasua was generally used by
Girmitiyas to harvest crops like rice and wheat.
The
chakki is a grinding tool made from naturally occurring stones with rough
surfaces and was used to grind spices and grains. It consists of a stationary
stone disk on the bottom, upon which another stone disk is rotated using an
attached wooden handle.
Crosscut saw
There was
more than one type of crosscut saw used during indenture. This two-person
crosscut saw was symmetrical and had a peg-tooth design which ran the entire
length of the saw. The tooth side of the saw was slightly crescent-shaped. The
attached wooden handles allowed labourers to each pull on their end and thus
accomplish the task of sawing timber.
Hand rice pounder
Although
it required more labour than when using the dhenki, this simple but carefully
designed tool was also used to husk rice. It basically works like a mortar and
pestle. The object shown is the pestle, while the mortar part of the pounder
(not shown) is generally a stone cylinder, but in some countries in Asia it is
also wooden. The thicker part with a metal ring on the end is what goes into
the rice-filled mortar. The narrow section closer to the top of the pounder is
where women would hold it.
Kurpi
The Kurpi was fashioned out of tin and steel
with a curved wooden handle attached to it. When not using their bare hands,
women would squat in fields using this type of traditional hand hoe to clear
the weeds.
Wood planer
This type
of wood planer from the Girmit era has been used throughout the centuries across
many cultures. It is a woodworking tool which was simply used to smooth out
rough or uneven wooden surfaces.
Sil-Lohra
Sil -Lohra and Karahi |
Sil is only useful with a lorha.
An East Indian utensil made of stone and
is used to grind seasonings and spices. The sil is the flat stone where the
seasonings or spices are placed on top of. The Lorha grinds the
seasonings on top of the sil.
Their union is so essential that even in Hindu weddings, the bride and groom have to touch their foot to sil - lorha when going round the fire in "bhawar" to symbolise that one is useless without the other.
Karahi and Channa- (Puri waala -Above Sil-Lohra in the photo above)
The black Karahi or what Chinese call a wok, is used for deep-frying/making Puri during weddings and other functions. Puri is taken out from the boiling oil/Ghee with the help of channa, a metal scoop with holes , that collects puri, but lets the oil dring back into the Karahi. A Chimta may also be used.
Mathni
Churning of milk-dahi to extract butter
and then by product Matha-buttermilk -used for making lassi and other drinks.
Coal-Iron
Hurricane Lamp
Hand-pushed grass -cutter
Benzine/kerosene light
Cane-top, grass -chopper
It used to be worn in thick black thread around neck of women and were passed down the generations during weddings. Like a new bride gets one or some from the woman leader of the family.