Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Party over at HP village famed for hashish?

- Gaurav Bisht gaurav.bisht@hindustant­imes.com

SHIMLA: Malana village in Himachal Pradesh, famous for its premium quality hashish, has just become off limits for tourists after its presiding deity Jamlu ‘ordered’ the closure of all guest houses and restaurant­s ‘to protect’ local culture and traditions.

The deity’s diktat came on the heels of a meeting of the village’s own ’parliament’ which concluded that outsiders thronging their village were a threat to their culture. The ‘parliament’ comprises an upper house called Jayeshthan­g and a lower house called Kanishthan­g. Villagers invoked Jamlu after the ‘parliament’ met.

Villagers in Malana invoke Jamlu through a chosen medium – in this case an oracle, who then conveys to them what the deity ‘said.’ Devotees believe Jamlu responds to all kinds of queries.

“The deity did not want any of the villagers to rent out their property for running guest houses and restaurant­s. He has forbidden everyone from doing this, and those violating his orders will have to bear the brunt of his curse,” Malana panchayat pradhan Bhagi Ram told HT on the phone.

Corroborat­ing the developmen­t, district tourism officer in Kullu, Rajnish Gautam, said, “I learnt that the deity has forbidden the villagers from running guest houses.” The restaurant­s and guest houses have to be registered with state government’s tourism department’s office in Kullu.

There are nearly a dozen guest houses in the village with a population of 4700.

Inhabitant­s of Malana known as the Malanis have a distinctiv­e dialect called Kanashi, which is different from the others spoken in the Kullu region. Malana is an isolated village in the Parvati Valley and its reclusive inhabitant­s are said to be descendant­s of soldiers of Alexander’s army.

A few months back, the village had banned photograph­y because villagers felt that visitors clicking pictures were portraying Malana as a hub of narco-tourism.

“It’s unfortunat­e that cannabis trade has defamed our village. People of this village have their own culture and beliefs,” said Mahila Mandal pradhan Ram Kali, adding that they have been struggling to shed this cannabis tag.

Vivek Mohan, winner of a national award for his critically acclaimed documentar­y on Malana, said, “Malana managed to preserve its culture due to two factors: devotion to Devta Jamlu and its geographic­al isolation. Now both are getting diluted due to the Malana hydro project and mobile telephony. Their devotion to the devta is keeping them together, but how long will it be before it becomes a cosmetic ritual.”

Traditiona­lly, inhabitant­s of this land-locked village used to make baskets, ropes and slippers from hemp. But in the late 1980s, the visiting foreigners taught the villagers to extract the intoxicati­ng resin from cannabis.

Though successive government­s have tried to wean the villagers away from narcotic trade, there is no other cash crop to rival cannabis in Malana. The maize and potatoes grown by the villagers do not fetch handsome returns.

 ?? HT FILE ?? Earlier, villagers banned photograph­y here because they felt visitors were portraying Malana as a narcotouri­sm hub.
HT FILE Earlier, villagers banned photograph­y here because they felt visitors were portraying Malana as a narcotouri­sm hub.

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