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Napit (barber) also known as paramaniks, is an
occupational Hindu caste traditionally engaged in hair cutting. In olden
times, the napit was a social institution. On the occasions of
births and marriages of Hindu families, a napit used to perform some ritual
jobs. Muslim families also engaged napits for the ceremonial shaving of
the heads of the new-born babies. Napits shave the heads of Hindu males
after obsequies. Traditionally, in rural markets, a napit has a fixed
shop where people visit to have haircuts, to cut their nails and to have
small surgeries. He is paid for these services either in cash or in kind.
In the past, payment was generally made in kind. The exchange system was
then called Jajmani. The village people paid him in crops at harvest time
in exchange of the services that they received from the napit throughout
the year.
The napits were well known for their cleverness, sense of humour,
and penchant for gossiping and story telling. Inter-family and
inter-village information was normally obtained through the napits.
The village people invariably engaged napits to carry the news
of births of male children. And, for the good news that they served,
they received gifts.
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A napit at work |
Some researchers hold the opinion that the first napit
of Bengal was the son of a ksatriya
father and a shudra
mother. Some others say that it was a person engaged by shiva
for cutting his wife's nails. Napits are divided into several
sub-castes, such as Anarpuria, Bamanbane, Barendra, Radhi, Mahmudabaz,
Saptagram, Satgharia, and Khotta. Unlike many other lower castes,
napits are not considered as untouchables. Even a brahman
can take water from the hand of a napit. Most napits are Vaishnavas.
They employ Brahmans as priests. Napits burn their dead bodies and perform
shraddha
in the orthodox fashion on the thirty-first day after the death. Their
rules regarding diet are the same as those followed by most respectable
Hindus. Vaishnava napits do not eat flesh, but as a rule, they
eat fish.
Barbers belong to different categories in cities. In
urban areas there are saloons for men and women and the workers in these
saloons are skilled hands, use modern equipment for hair cutting, and
come from all religions. They have higher incomes than their rural counterparts.
The urban barbers play no other role than hair cutting and hair dressing
and sometimes, messaging the head, neck and hands of customers. Hair dressing
and messaging are not in vogue in the rural areas. [Gofran Faroqi]
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