5. Occupation.
Basket-making is the traditional occupation of the Kaikāris and is still followed by them. They do not however make baskets from bamboos, but from cotton-stalks, palm-leaves and grass. In the south they are principally employed as carriers of stone, lime, bricks and gravel. Like most wandering castes they have a bad character. In Berār the Rān Kaikāris are said to be the most criminal class.[9] They act under a chief who is elected for life, and wander about in the cold weather, usually carrying their property on donkeys. Their ostensible occupations are to make baskets and mend grinding mills. A notice of them in Lawrence’s Settlement Report of Bhandāra (1867) stated that they were then professional thieves, openly avowing their dependence on predatory occupations for subsistence, and being particularly dexterous at digging through the walls of houses and secret pilfering.
[1] This article is partly compiled from papers by Mr. G. Falconer Taylor, Forest Divisional Officer, and by Kanhyā Lāl, Clerk in the Gazetteer office.
[2] Berār Census Report (1881), p. 141.
[3] Hislop papers. Vocabulary.
[4] North Arcot Manual, p. 247.
[5] 1881, p. 141.
[6] Ibidem.
[7] Bombay Gazetteer (Campbell), vol. xii. p. 120.
[8] Bombay Gazetteer (Campbell), vol. xxi. p. 172.
[9] Berār Census Report (1881), p. 141.