The Brave Baheliya Community.
The Baheliya community's main occupation revolved around hunting, gamekeeping during the hunt for the Maharajas, European visitors etc. Everybody have appreciated the bravery and knowledge of the community.
William Crooke states that there are others, who, though they lead a partially nomadic life, seldom offend against the law.Typical among these are the Baheliya or hunter, and the Chiryamar or fowler. The former, whenever he can secure a gun licence, wanders in the jungle and shoots game for sale in towns. To the east he is a fine, bold, athletic fellow. From this caste are drawn many of the best Shikaris, who track down game and arrange shooting parties for European sportsmen. It is he who ties up the young buffalo as a bait for a tiger, and at the first blush of dawn steals through the jungle and often watches the brute sleeping the sleep of repletion beside his victim. Some of them are exceedingly plucky in such dangerous work, and their knowledge of woodcraft, the habits of game, the marking down of footsteps in the sand of a dry watercourse, are often admirable.To the sportsman they are indispensable from their marvellous knowledge of the jungle, and if he treats them well and believes a tithe of what he is told they will show him game.[i].
Baheliyas are a brave lot and usually supply the beat shikaris who track down game and arrange shooting parties. The unanimous testimony of hunters, European and Indian, stamps the Baheliya as a fine athletic, bold, plucky and sociable tribe[ii].
Written by- Ashutosh Kumar
[i] W. Crooke, The North Western Provinces of India, 1897, Pg. 212
[ii] D. N. Majumdar, The Fortunes of Primitive Tribes, 1944, Pg. 186
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