Skip to main content

Mystery beyond the ladder story of Daramdin-2

Another fascinating input to my finding led me to some unknown discussions about the origin of the earthen tower story. We believed the story was related to Lepchas, but close to the Lepchas are the Limboo and Newar communities, who share the earthen story to have belonged to them. The Limboo community believed they were the earliest settlers in this region, and it was their story. At the same time, the Newar populace claimed they were the potters who built the earthen tower, told a local from Daramdin

Close to the vicinity of the Daramdin bazaar, there lays a cave made from the chink of a huge stone. Small openings take us to a chamber where the locals believe it to be a meditation room. Many locals said they had become aware of this cave since childhood and played around it. The so-called cave has a cube-shaped stone scored in such a fashion that it seems symbolic of some ritual activities. The walls on its left are closely associated with some inscriptions of the Limboo language (most probably), and this develops curiosity. 

Surely it strikes. Is it related to the earthen tower story? Just below the ridge lies a place called Kumalay Tar, named after the settlements of the kumalays (potters). They were the Newar potters from Nepal. Though the kumalays are no longer there, the name of that place remains to add more mystery to the story.


An unknown symbol was found in a cave at Daramdin.

My first reaction was when I saw the very historical (!) site that recorded the presence of pot pieces; it was nothing more than a sheer stance that looked more like a common village field found in most parts of hilly regions. There was nothing extraordinary I was looking for besides its rich fable. Next to this field is a burial place, and I was told most of the bodies buried under the burials belonged to the Newar community. What was more interesting was the rare instance that Hindu Newars by no means lay to rest their families underground, as far as my little knowledge is concerned. Some pottery pieces are displayed at the Museum of Sonam Tshering Lepcha, a Lepcha artifact collector at Kalimpong

In one of his interviews published in the weekly Weekend Review from Gangtok in 2002, he assumed this to be 3,600 years old. Having crossed over seven decades of his life span, this grandpa holds some rare artifacts of Lepcha's prime periods. Among his prized processions are a few fragments of pots he collected from Daramdin in 1975. Also found in his museum is the mock-up of the pottery ladder.



Earthern ladder model at Lepcha Museum, Kalimpong

According to the article ‘The lake-and–ladder story‘ published in A Stranger's Note & Other Essays, it had been mentioned about the naming of the place Daramdin which goes as Da (lake) ram (obliterate) din (remove); the Lepcha turned the lake into the present land and constructed a ladder on it. It had been mentioned after the visit of Sonam Tshering Lepcha at Daramdin that the scientists from Sikkim and India had brought large quantities of pot pieces that were quite different from the ones collected by Sonam Tshering Lepcha himself. Later on, it became apparent that the pots collected by those people were from the graveyard!

In the text from Puratatva, a bulletin of the Indian Archeological Society, in its piece of writing on “Prehistoric Exploration in Sikkim,” the team of Prehistory Branch of Archeological Survey of India, Nagpur during their two-month-long exploration in Sikkim in 1980 had reported of finding a couple of dozens of Neolithic Tools in regions of Dzongu, Mangan, Singhik, Dikchu and nearby areas including the Pakyong. The report said the pottery was significantly absent in the sites explored. They further wrote, "In such landscape, one does not expect proper earth to manufacture pottery. Neither could a kiln be possibly made here. Before the coming of aluminum or brass utensils, people used to have their vessels made of wood. They even boiled their food in these wooden vessels by plastering the necessary parts with mud.”

This ladder incident is mentioned in a collection of folk tales of Lepcha published in 1981, which included some new pages of information never heard before. It is said that it took twelve years for the Lepcha people to construct a tower that was of an affordable height. Finally, when the tower fell off due to a mix-up of proper pronunciation, it was believed that the huge tower fell on the opposite hills of the Daramdin, forming three valleys of hills towards the now Darjeeling jurisdiction. The three valleys got their name from it, and those hills were Maney Bhanzyang, Kaizalay Bhanzyang, and Reling Bhanzyang!



The field at Daramdin where the other pieces were found

I would like to conclude my fascinating story of the ladder incident of Daramdin with the tale that I found fascinating about the naming of the Daramdin. The book I have been following is A.K. Fonning's Lepcha-My Vanishing Tribe. I find this book very informative and love how it was written. The book says that it was the Nembangu clan of the Lepcha tribe that had supposedly constructed the earthen tower and the particular spot was earlier known as “Kado-Rom-Dyen” meaning “we smashed it down”. In bygone days, the first two alphabets of the first word from Kado-Rom-Dyen got lost, and thus, we found the new and the most famous names in Sikkim folk lore…it was Do-Rom-Dyen.

My skeptical mind is still seeking a more generous explanation of specific queries. It is not possible that those kumalay had different settlements in this part of the land, and the pieces recovered were the distorted pot pieces left by them. It makes me think there should be some carbon-14 dating of the materials that are assumed to belong to the graveyard pots, too. Is it not that over the years, we have been collecting those graveyard pot pieces and maintaining them to be of the mythic Daramdin Earthen Tower?

It is hard to decide whether the incident happened in this part of Sikkim. Still, the fact remains that whether or not the story had any authenticity, the ladder story of Daramdin shall always stay close to the Lepcha people and to Sikkim. To some extent, old Lepcha folks had that wild imagination and romanticism that they borrowed the story (if) from another source to boast to their kids. If the story seemed borrowed, what about the fragments still found in the fields of Daramdin?

Comments

  1. Shital, doesn't this Lepcha folk tale remind you of the story of the Tower of Babel (Genesis 11:1-9)?
    Interesting post!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ya it does sound similarity, i had the part -1 story of it but there was some problem posting out here.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Fascinating write-up. Very well written.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

JANHA BAGCHA TEESTA RANGIT

This was a national song of Sikkim sung in the Nepali language during the monarchy system. During the merger with India, the song got banned and later re-released. Two words on the 8th para, which earlier said 'Rajah rah Rani,' were replaced with "Janmah bhumi."     This song was dedicated to the King and Queen of Sikkim. The song lyrics were penned by Sanu Lama, and the music was composed by Dushyant Lama.  The song was first sung on the birth anniversary of Chogyal Palden Thondup Namgyal on April 4, 1970, at Gangtok by Aruna Lama, Dawa Lama, and Manikamal Chettri.    JANHA BAGCHA TEESTA RANGIT,  JAHAN KANCHENDZONGA SEER   YEHI HO HAMRO DHANA KO DESH,  TAPAWAN HO PYARO SIKKIM     INTERLUDE     PHULCHAN YEHA AANGANAI MAA,  CHAAP , GURAS, SUNAKHARI   SWARGASARI SUNDAR DESH KO  HAMRO PYARO PYARO JANMAHBHUMI     JANHA BAGCHA……     BATASHLE BOKCHAA YAHA,  TATHAGAT KO AAMAR WAANI ...

India’s illegal occupation of independent Sikkim has to be reversed

Extracted from Pakistan Defence India’s “Chief Executive” in Gangtok wrote: “Sikkim’s merger was necessary for Indian national interest. And we worked to that end. Maybe if the Chogyal had been smarter and played his cards better, it wouldn’t have turned out the way it did.” It is also said that the real battle was not between the Chogyal and Kazi Lendup Dorji but between their wives. On one side was Queen Hope Cook, the American wife of the Chogyal and on the other was the Belgian wife of the Kazi, Elisa-Maria Standford. “This was a proxy war between the American and the Belgian,” says former chief minister BB Gurung. But there was a third woman involved: Indira Gandhi in New Delhi. Chogyal Palden met the 24-year-old New Yorker Hope Cook in Darjeeling in 1963 and married her. For Cook, this was a dream come true: to become the queen of an independent kingdom in Shangrila. She started taking the message of Sikkimese independence to the youth, and the allegations started flying thic...

From archeologist to self made Sikkim historian

Satyajit Ray with former King and Queen of Sikkim BY SHITAL PRADHAN I never wanted to be a teacher, and at the same time, I never had any options. I had always been interested in history since school, but destiny had other careers for me. When I completed high school, I compromised my dream of becoming an archaeologist and opted for Pure Science streams simply to please my father. In my early schooling days, we were taught to plant dreams, and I dreamed of becoming an archaeologist. Tutankhamun, Stonehenge, Crop Circles, Incas, Mayas, ancient civilizations, and many others were the only things I fantasized about. I regularly visited forest areas in my hometown and searched for things, believing that I was an archeologist and was destined to discover it. Funny ways of life. One day, I found a fossil; it was a petrified fossil with an impression of a Gramineae leaf.  Since 2003, I have been trying to get more information about it without success. I completed my Pure Science...