Ho

[aka हो जगर, ହୋ ଜଗର, hōō jagara]

Classification: Austroasiatic

·

at risk

resource

Mage Porob (2019 documentary)

Abstract (Summary) The Mage Porob festival of the Ho people pushes all -- young and old -- from their village homes to gather for a community dance. No one stops dancing until the sun sets. This film goes deeper asking what is the Ho way of life beyond Mage Porob? Keywords: Ho, Warang citi, Munda, Odisha, India, indigenous, language, endangered Plot Summary The Ho people remember their ancestors and deities as the dehuri (elder and priest) offer the prayers and best flowers, fruits, leaves and meat. But a festival is not a festival without a community dance. All conflicts come to an end when Mage Porob drags the villagers to the dancing field. Even a mother with a baby taps her feet to the rhythms of dama and dumeng while holding the next dancer with one hand and the baby with the other. The entire village becomes an assembly line. The once-successful music arranger who is now partly disabled still keeps the drummers in sync with his coordinated hand gestures. The dancing field is that place where young members of the community get to meet and approach their future partners. The Sarapancha, an elected local political leader, also joins the dance group for a short while. The real world problem pauses as buckets of water are sprinkled to settle the dust right before the dance starts. The Ho way of life goes much beyond Mage Porob. The people, their language and culture have seen so much change around since the community started moving out of the Chota Nagpur Plateau of present-day Jharkhand and Odisha. All that change and the nature that every Ho calls home has shaped their animist cultural and religious practices. The film is touched by the free-flow conversations between the villagers that cite folklore, songs and the meticulous jamming of dama (kettle drum) and dumeng, two signature percussion instruments that are seen in every single Ho cultural gathering. (Reichel) While the entire film was shot in the Keshpada village, some of the annotative additions along with subtitling were done in collaboration with the Veer Birsa Munda Ho Students Union Odisha (Birbasa) in Bhubaneswar. This film was a production under the OpenSpeaks project at the O Foundation with support from National Geographic, and was released under a CC-BY-SA 4.0 License. More information: https://theofdn.org/film/mage-porob/ http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/t2cb-bg17 Attribute as below: Panigrahi, Subhashish. Mage Porob (2019 Documentary). O Foundation, 2019. doi:10.17613/T2CB-BG17.

O Foundation

Keshpada, Mayurbhanj district, Odisha, India

Jan. 1, 2019

Comments