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Chadar Badani

Chadar Badni often referred to as Chadar Badar is a unique form of puppetry that is practised by just a few members of the  Santal community. Practically extinct among the Santals themselves, it first came into the limelight around 1985, when cultural ethnographer Ravikant Dwivedi chanced upon it during a field trip to Dumka, in the Santhal Parganas of Jharkhand. Since then, a few instances of it have also surfaced in West Bengal. 



Chadar Badani often referred to as Chadar Badar is a unique form of puppetry that is practised by just a few members of the  Santal community. Practically extinct among the Santals themselves, it first came into the limelight around 1985, when cultural ethnographer Ravikant Dwivedi chanced upon it during a field trip to Dumka, in the Santhal Parganas of Jharkhand. Since then, a few instances of it have also surfaced in West Bengal. 

The Chadar Badani is the performance of a group of miniature wooden or bamboo puppets, 7" to 9" tall arranged within an intricately engineered wooden cage like structure, and manipulated by an amazing system of levers, sticks and a cord.  To the rhythm of the puppeteer`s song, accompanied by banam or flute and drumbeats, the puppets are made to revolve, bob up and down, swing their arms and beat  tiny wooden drums, in unison. The scene is typical of any  Santali dance performance, where the dancers and the musicians face each other. The end result, a rivetting, rhythmic Santal dance that is almost  surreal!

In its most basic form, male and female puppets are arranged on wooden plates on either side of a hollow central pole through which passes a cord that is tied to the main lever. The jointed limbs of the miniature puppets are attached to small sticks.  The manipulator tugs the central cord which pulls the main lever, which in turn , pushes some  sticks upward and some downward. Thus the puppets are made to  move. The cord and the lever framework are curtained off on three sides with a colourful cloth, while a cloth awning is tied to wooden posts  on the four corners of the outer wooden frame. It is commonly believed that the name Chadar Badani is derived from this cloth awning (chadar) which is tied (bandhan) around the framework on which the puppets  perform. But there may be another interpretation too : – A girl who is constantly dressing up or changing her attire is referred to, with contempt perhaps, as a Chhodor Bodoni  - Bodoni being a common Santali name for a girl. Since the Chadar Badani dolls are dressed up differently for different festivals – for Sohrai or for a wedding or for Dasae, there may be some truth to this interpretation.

Puppet maker Som Murmu also told us the story of the origin of Chadar Badani. There was once  a village chief (morol) who was approached by the dance guru of the village with a request. The guru wished that the village should have a group of dancers selected by the morol who would accompany him (the guru) to performances in neighbouring villages. The morol  approached a man of the Kisku clan first -  but he  was reluctant to offer his wife or daughter – so the morol memorized her face. A member of the Soren clan was then approached -who agreed to drum – but he too refused to send his wife. The likeness of her face too was memorized. Similarly the Tudus, traditional musicians were approached - who agreed to play an instrument. But nobody would allow his wife or daughter to accompany the dance guru. The faces of all these women were reproduced on the Chadar Badani dolls - and thus, when the Chadar Badani performer, travelled from village to village, it was as if the dancers of his village accompanied him.

Both the dolls and the contraption on which they are manipulated are usually made by the puppeteer himself. The workmanship and the mechanism vary from puppeteer to puppeteer. The entire structure rests on a central wooden or bamboo pole, which is held by one hand, balanced on the floor, stuck into the ground or even placed on a stand on a table. Thus the puppeteer can use either his hand or his foot to tug the cord and manipulate the puppets.

The puppets are draped with bits of colourful cloth - saris for the women, dhotis for the men. They are usually painted with facial features and adorned with all kinds of finery - turbans and feathers for the men, beads and faux flowers for the women and so on. It takes several months to carve the puppets and build the wooden framework, levers and all.  There could be as many puppets as the puppeteer wishes, but usually a minimum set of five to six female dancers and three male drummers, facing each other. 

These puppeteers usually perform during festival time - Dasae (Durga Puja), Sohrai and even Hindu festivals like Charok. The songs that are sung are from the puppeteer`s imagination and woven around Santal life. During our field visits to Purulia, we came across villagers who remembered the tradition from their childhood days, and a villager showed us an old set of dolls that his father used to perform with when this villager was a young boy. But in general, there is very little knowledge of this form within the community. 

Today, there are just a handful of known exponents of this rare art in West Bengal. While  the late Damon Murmu imbibed the art from visiting relatives from Dumka and eked out a living from it, cycling around with his dolls in and around his village in Uttar (North) Dinajpur since 2002,  Sukan Mardi has been practising the form for the last 18 years. There is also Som Murmu of Birbhum, a master wood carver, who other than carving Santal instruments like the Dhodro Banam, also carves Chadar Badani puppets along with the cage like structure on which they revolve.  

Som Murmu, who is known more as a wood carver, than a puppeteer, has been associated with Chadar Badani for more than 40 years! To his knowledge, this folk form has been around for more than 7 generations - he himself learnt from his wife`s grandfather, a craftsman called Tashok Hansda of Parui village. Tashok who would roam the villages with his puppets crudely carved with the limited tools at his disposal, had in turn learnt from his grandfather. Even then, knowledge was restricted to only a few. 

Som`s wooden puppets made from "Gamar" wood, are firmly fixed on a complex arrangement of wooden bars and levers that span a circular frame. The circular frame in turn revolves within a square frame. The arms of the female puppets are attached in a way that allows them to swing gently with each tug, while the jointed arms of the male drummers are attached to strings which connect with the central cord. Som`s wizardry even has some puppets jointed at the waist. The puppeteer tugs the cord which turns the lever system, which in turn, rocks the bars in a see-saw motion, causing the puppets’ limbs to move and the circular frame to revolve.   

On the verge of extinction, some efforts have been made to stem Chadar Badani`s decline. In 2009, a four month workshop was held, under Dwivedi, where eight Santal youths were taught to make puppets with their intricate lever-controlled mechanisms by master trainers, including Som Murmu. In 2015, the late Damon Murmu was felicitated in Kolkata by Anthropological Survey of India (Eastern Region) along with an NGO, Sambhav,  in an attempt to bring  some recognition to this dying art.