Published on: September 17, 2025
PROTEST IN KOLHAN: HO TRIBE DEFENDS TRADITIONAL MANKI-MUNDA SYSTEM
PROTEST IN KOLHAN: HO TRIBE DEFENDS TRADITIONAL MANKI-MUNDA SYSTEM
NEWS
- On September 9, 2025, members of the Ho tribe staged a protest in West Singhbhum, Jharkhand.
- They accused the Deputy Commissioner (DC) of interfering with their indigenous self-governance by removing village heads (Mundas).
- District administration clarified it was due to social media rumors, asserting the Manki-Munda system remains integral to governance.
HIGHLIGHTS
The Ho Tribe & Their Governance System
- The Ho tribe, part of the Kolhan region’s adivasis, follow a decentralised governance model.
- Munda: Village head, resolves socio-political disputes; role is hereditary.
- Manki: Head of a group (pir) of 8–15 villages, addresses unresolved cases.
- Originally, the system had no tax or revenue responsibilities; it functioned purely as a self-regulatory socio-political order.
Colonial Interference & Revolts
- After Battle of Plassey (1757), Battle of Buxar (1764), and Treaty of Allahabad (1765), East India Company gained diwani rights (tax collection).
- Permanent Settlement Act (1793) imposed land revenue on zamindars → led to land alienation of Ho tribes.
- Resulted in Ho revolt (1821–22) and Kol revolt (1831–32) against exploitation and land dispossession.
Wilkinson’s Rules (1833)
- British officer Thomas Wilkinson codified the system into 31 rules, integrating it into colonial administration.
- Established the Kolhan Government Estate (1837) to control Ho regions.
- Even post-1947, Wilkinson’s Rules remain applicable, keeping Kolhan partially outside mainstream civil procedure laws.
Present Significance
- In 2021, Jharkhand recognised Nyaya Panchs (traditional judicial bodies) for revenue and dispute resolution.
- However, hereditary succession of Mankis and Mundas, often lacking formal education, creates tension between customary law and modern administration.
- Current protests highlight Adivasi concerns over autonomy and identity in the face of state intervention.
