Aspect | Detail | Place/District |
Childbirth Practices | | |
Mother’s Housing | Typically in a separate room, usually on the lower storey, for protection from cold and wind. | (General) |
‘Gobad’ | The mother may be lodged in a cattle manor. | Tribal areas |
Midwives | Professional midwives are uncommon; experienced village women of any caste assist. | (General) |
Umbilical Cord Cutting | Cut by the midwife while holding a silver rupee coin or a silver ornament. | (General) |
Post-Delivery | Both the infant and the mother undergo a purifying bath. | (General) |
‘Sootak’ | The initial period following birth, lasting twenty days (or ten days in some cases), during which the family observes certain taboos. | (General) |
Post-Birth Rituals | | |
‘Ghutti’ | The infant’s first feeding, usually administered by the father, a Brahmin, or a Lama; believed to ensure the child imbibes positive qualities. | (General) |
Naming Ceremony | The family priest ascertains the first letter of the child’s name from their horoscope. | (General) |
Naming Conventions (Lower Castes) | Boys are often named after their birth day or month (e.g., ‘Manglu’ from Mangal/Tuesday, ‘Budhias’ from Budh/Wednesday). | (General, lower castes) |
Common Suffixes | Ram, Lal, Das, Chand, Singh. | (General) |
Surname Adoption | Lower castes adopt high-caste surnames to uplift social standing, but retain original caste for government benefits. | (General) |
First Hair Cutting (‘Jatloo’) | Takes place in the third, fifth, or seventh year after birth; holds great religious significance. | (General) |
Hair Offering | Customarily offered at a goddess shrine, a Shiva temple, the ‘Kulja’ shrine, or a holy river for blessings. | (General) |
Hair Preservation | Sometimes, clippings are preserved with cow dung, milk, and two coins for later offering. | (General) |
Pregnancy Customs/Taboos | | |
Husband’s Actions | Refrains from killing animals with his own hands (though he may consume meat). | (General) |
Woman’s Restrictions | Advised to avoid places on fire, streams, forests, or unfrequented areas; must avoid seeing a deceased person’s face. | (General) |
Ritual Omissions | Knots usually tied during religious ceremonies are omitted if the woman is pregnant. | (General) |
Ornament Melting | Her old ornaments are not melted to form new ones. | (General) |
Eclipse Prohibition | Prohibited from observing solar or lunar eclipses. | (General) |
Gender Preference | | |
Girl Child Birth | Generally not celebrated with the same exuberance as that of a boy. | (General) |
Respect for Girls | Accorded high respect; special ‘pooja’ offered during Navratras; gifts presented during festivals and fairs. | (General) |
Son’s Birth | A momentous occasion. | Himachali villages |
Announcement | Announced by distributing ‘Yura’ (sugar lumps or parched grains) among friends and relatives. | (General) |
Celebrations | Lamps are lit, and women from the neighborhood sing ‘Sohar Badhaiyan’ (songs of joy). | (General) |
Mother’s Treatment | Treated with great reverence; all visiting women are offered sweets and money. | (General) |
Father’s Congratulations | Relatives and friends offer ‘turf leaves’ with one rupee; father keeps leaves and returns double the amount (‘Budhap’). | (General) |
‘Shukud’ | Wealthy families bring palanquins of gods into their homes and host feasts with rich food and liquor for villagers; may involve goat sacrifice. | Kinnaur |