Why in the news?
- The Ho community in Jharkhand is protesting over the government’s intervention into the tribes Manki-Munda System.
Manki-Munda System
- What is it?:
- It is a Traditional Governance of Ho tribe (Kolhan, Jharkhand).
- Munda → hereditary village head; resolves local disputes.
- Manki → head of 8–15 villages (pidh); appellate authority.
- Pre-colonial: purely social & political, no tax/revenue role.
- It is a Traditional Governance of Ho tribe (Kolhan, Jharkhand).
- Colonial Transformation
- British Expansion:
- Post-Battle of Buxar (1764) and Treaty of Allahabad (1765), Company gained tax collection rights.
- Permanent Settlement Act (1793): Introduced zamindars, high revenue demand → led to land alienation, tribal dispossession, and revolts (Ho revolt 1821–22, Kol revolt 1831).
- Wilkinson’s Rules (1833):
- Drafted by Capt. Thomas Wilkinson; codified 31 rules for Ho governance.
- Recognised Manki-Munda system under colonial law, integrating it into the Kolhan Government Estate (1837).
- Outcome:
- Preservation of tribal leadership but co-opted as agents of the British.
- Influx of dikkus (outsiders) due to railways and land pattas.
- Introduced private property & raiyat (tenant) system, replacing communal ownership.
- British Expansion:
- Post-Independence Developments
- Kolhan Government Estate dissolved (1947), but Wilkinson’s Rules continued.
- Courts upheld them as customary practice (e.g., Mora Ho vs State of Bihar, 2000).
- Attempts to reform: Nyay Manch draft law (2021) stalled → no updated framework.
- Currently: Wilkinson’s Rules still operational in Kolhan.