17. Criminal practices.
The criminal Bāgris still usually travel about in the disguise of Gosains and Bairāgis, and are very difficult of detection except to real religious mendicants. Their housebreaking implement or jemmy is known as Gyān, but in speaking of it they always add Dās, so that it sounds like the name of a Bairāgi.[31] They are usually very much afraid of the gyān being discovered on their persons, and are careful to bury it in the ground at each halting-place, while on the march it may be concealed in a pack-saddle. The means of identifying them, Mr. Kennedy remarks,[32] is by their family deo or god, which they carry about when wandering with their families. It consists of a brass or copper box containing grains of wheat and the seeds of a creeper, both soaked in ghī (melted butter). The box with a peacock’s feather and a bell is wrapped in two white and then in two red cloths, one of the white cloths having the print of a man’s hand dipped in goat’s blood upon it. The grains of wheat are used for taking the omens, a few being thrown up at sun-down and counted afterwards to see whether they are odd or even. When even, two grains are placed on the right hand of the omen-taker, and if this occurs three times running the auspices are considered to be favourable.[33] Mr. Gayer[34] notes that the Badhaks have usually from one to three brands from a hot iron on the inside of their left wrist. Those of them who are hunters brand the muscles of the left wrist in order to steady the hand when firing their matchlocks. The customs of wearing a peculiar necklace of small wooden beads and a kind of gold pin fixed to the front teeth, which Mr. Crooke[35] records as having been prevalent some years ago, have apparently been since abandoned, as they are not mentioned in more recent accounts. The Dehliwāl and Mālpura Baorias have, Mr. Kennedy states,[36] an interesting system of signs, which they mark on the walls of buildings at important corners, bridges and cross-roads and on the ground by the roadside with a stick, if no building is handy. The commonest is a loop, the straight line indicating the direction a gang or individual has taken:
The addition of a number of vertical strokes inside the loop signifies the number of males in a gang. If these strokes are enclosed by a circle it means that the gang is encamped in the vicinity; while a square inside a circle and line as below means that property has been secured by friends who have left in the direction pointed by the line. It is said that Baorias will follow one another up for fifty or even a hundred miles by means of these hieroglyphics. The signs are bold marks, sometimes even a foot or more in length, and are made where they will at once catch the eye. When the Mārwāri Baorias desire to indicate to others of their caste, who may follow in their footsteps, the route taken, a member of the gang, usually a woman, trails a stick in the dust as she walks along, leaving a spiral track on the ground. Another method of indicating the route taken is to place leaves under stones at intervals along the road.[37] The form of crime most in favour among the ordinary Baoris is housebreaking by night. Their common practice is to make a hole in the wall beside the door through which the hand passes to raise the latch; and only occasionally they dig a hole in the base of the wall to admit of the passage of a man, while another favoured alternative is to break in through a barred window, the bars being quickly and forcibly bent and drawn out.[38] One class of Mārwāri Bāgris are also expert coiners.
[1] Report on the Badhak or Bāgri Dacoits and the Measures adopted by the Government of India for their Suppression, printed in 1849.
[2] Sleeman, p. 10.
[3] Sleeman, p. 10.
[4] Sleeman, p. 57.
[5] Sleeman, p. 95.
[6] Sleeman, p. 231.
[7] Sleeman, p. 217.
[8] Sleeman, p. 20.
[9] Sleeman, p. 21.
[10] Sleeman, p. 81.
[11] Sleeman, p. 82.
[12] Sleeman, p. 152.
[13] Sleeman, p. 127. This passage is from a letter written by a magistrate, Mr. Ramsay.
[14] Sleeman, p. 129.
[15] Sleeman, p. 112.
[16] Sleeman, p. 124.
[17] Sleeman, p. 125.
[18] Sleeman, p. 147.
[19] Sleeman, p. 104.
[20] Sleeman, p. 110.
[21] Sleeman, p. 131.
[22] Sleeman, p. 205.
[23] Sleeman, p. 106.
[24] Malcolm’s Memoir of Central India, ii. p. 479.
[25] Crooke’s Tribes and Castes, art. Bāwaria.
[26] Sirsa Settlement Report.
[27] It would appear that the Gujarāt Vāghris are a distinct class from the criminal section of the tribe.
[28] Bombay Gazetteer, Gujarāt Hindus, p. 514.
[29] Art. Bawaria, quoting from North Indian Notes and Queries, i. 51.
[30] Bombay Gazetteer, Hindus of Gujarāt, p. 574.
[31] Gunthorpe’s Criminal Tribes.
[32] Criminal Classes in the Bombay Presidency, p. 151.
[33] Gunthorpe’s Criminal Tribes, art. Badhak.
[34] C. P. Police Lectures, art. Badhak.
[35] Art. Bāwaria, para. 12.
[36] Criminal Classes in the Bombay Presidency, p. 179.
[37] Kennedy, loc. cit. p. 208.
[38] Kennedy, loc. cit. p. 185.