Traditional drinks are often regarded as repositories of culture. In Centrepiece, Rini Barman explores some of the less romantic aspects of this practice and the many implications of the act of brewing rice beer.
The eight states that comprise India’s northeastern region are often grouped into a singular category—“the northeast”—homogenising their rich diversity, histories, and complex politics. It is also often stereotyped as a region of conflict clouding India’s periphery. Centrepiece: New Writing and Art from Northeast India (Zubaan, 2017) edited by Parismita Singh, foregrounds an important question amidst these erasures: What are the elements of the region that tend to disappear in the face of such stereotyping?
Published as part of a joint project titled ‘Cultures of Peace: Festival of the Northeast’, the anthology brings together a wealth of stories, imparting a fresh perspective of the region and its people, especially the lives of women—who run businesses, fight for peace, and assert their rights. It brings together 21 writers and artists to explore the idea of work and the various forms it takes—from street hawking and brewing, to mothering and dung collection—and how these women confront, love, reject, and laugh at their men in myriad ways.
Read an excerpt from Hands that Brew, a chapter where Rini Barman writes on the lives of women who brew apong (rice wine) across three tribal societies in Jorhat, Deori, Mishing, and Adivasi, and what it reveals about the complexity of female labour.
When I enter Upar Deori Gaon, it is only the cattle and birds under bamboo groves that are at leisure. Situated 12.5 kilometers to the north-west of Jorhat [in Assam], its landscape is surrounded by four frontiers. To its north lie the majestic Brahmaputra and Kareng Sapori and to its south, Elengmara and Sonarigaon. Deka Sattra Bhakot Sapori and Naamdeori Gaon border it on the east and west respectively.
The womenfolk here are constantly occupied with chores like feeding the pigs, sweeping the muddy courtyard, and various types of kitchen work. Accomplishing a day’s aggregate labour with sweat brings solace to their families, the monotony of which they cynically call “letha”. Words in Deori language, with its Tibeto-Burma origins, have also fused with Assamese, and as such, a lot of Deoris are fluent speakers of both languages. Letha is one of those nuanced words which has a range of meanings: work, embarrassment, encumbrance, responsibility, trouble and so on. No wonder, then, that it is used to denote the act of menstruation as well. To the average patriarch, all this—and more—is the baggage that comes with menses.
The act of brewing rice beer, too, comes with a wide range of implications—moral, economic, social, even sexual. In years gone by, pitchers of good rice beer have been the company of many Deori women after tedious work hours. The relaxing drink is locally called suzen and in the course of my conversations, I saw how carefully women present it to the males in the household.
The dominant belief is that traditional drinks ought to be preserved unadulterated and the onus of doing this lies with the women. Although urban mobility has changed the roles of women, a new Deori bride has to be taught the skill of brewing; it is not something she can choose “not to learn”. In lieu of the custom of bride price in tribal societies, it is imperative that labour be rewarded when weddings are fixed. Deori fathers, who typically head the house, believe that women not only keep the fire burning at home but are seldom thanked for the rigorous chores they do within the confines of the house.
While traditional drinks are eulogised as repositories of culture to visiting guests and outsiders, I have had the privilege of seeing some of the less romantic aspects of this practice. In this essay I would like to address the complexity of female labour in the making of rice beer across three tribal societies, Deori, Mishing and Adivasi, in Jorhat.
Female labour is extracted not necessarily by force or violence, but vis-à-vis the nostalgic retreat to one’s ancient past. Elderly women and grandmothers have perfected the art of preserving rice beer, in pots and in folk stories. For them, this creates an alternative knowledge system, in scattered sites of gossip, away from the systematic genealogy which their males have internalised, largely by coming to terms with the Assam intelligentsia.
To this effect, these women may not know their individual ages accurately, but when it comes to estimating ingredients for rice beer, they are inimitable geniuses. This fact has often been used to exploit women. The local beer is made from rice, and rice is also the staple food. This becomes the reason for many conflicts related to food security and labour. By definition, a ‘staple food’ is something essential to your survival—and rice is precisely that. At the same time, it is the main source for making beer. When male family members get addicted, larger quantities of rice need to be used for making alcohol, leaving less and less for consuming food. This becomes a vicious cycle.
About 3–4 kilometers from Upar Deori Gaon, in the dense interiors lies a Mishing village. By the time I reach Mishing Gaon, it’s close to dusk and I see many young women riding back from school on their bicycles. “The LP School nearby has a field that becomes a water pool on rainy days, you did well by walking to arrive here”, says Mrs. Biju Doley (44), a kind host who agreed to show me local beer preparations the following day. I rest with her children in their sang ghor, a raised stilted hut, and the delicious pork dinner keeps us all warm.
Early next morning, Biju introduces me to her female companions—mischief makers and excellent apong brewers. Apong being their signature local drink, it has acquired a larger-than-life status in their festivities and rituals. All of them are young mothers (aged around 18-20), carrying yelling infants on their shoulders and hips. They have accepted that domestic chores are their department and that even though men can learn how to brew, they do not do so.
There are two kinds of apong: Nogin and Po:ro. For the Nogin apong, starter cakes called E’pob are made by crushing rice with medicinal plants, each providing a unique health quotient (and sweetness) to the drink. Biju also tells me that some flowers are used, though she doesn’t know their names. Cooked rice is laid out on leaves of banana or bamboo and after it cools, crushed E’pob is added to the rice. Then the entire mixture is put inside a pitcher or a plastic drum, the latter more commonly visible these days. I am told that in summer it may take upto 5–6 days for a proper fermentation. After that the mixture is filtered and the waste is used as pig or poultry fodder.
Mili Pegu, a young woman of about 20, shows me her drums full of fermented rice beer ingredients. They are covered carefully with bih-dhekia (Cyclosorus dentatus) leaves that form the upper layer of the mix. One of the drums contains black-coloured rice; it is kept separately because this recipe is slightly more demanding and labour-intensive than Nogin apong. Also known as Sai Mod (Sa i= ashes/ Mod = liquor), Po:ro apong is best for the winter; Mili tells me that it does wonders in healing urinary tract infections.
She comments, “The ash needs to be collected with an expert hand after burning rice husk and dried rice straw. It tends to scatter easily; on windy days, it is very challenging. Thereafter, it is mixed with cooked rice and E’pob—say, a 6cm × 3cm cake for half kilo of rice, with variations as per choice. Filtration is done by using a conical bamboo basket generally lined on its surface with banana leaves.”
Merry women producing better beer is a part of myth-making. Forms of carnival laughter such as this, are made available to women only temporarily because the fruition of counter-knowledge in the process is perceived as the real threat.
Biju and Mili both agree that it was after their marriages that they learnt how to brew apong. As Mili’s sister-in-law joins us, they tell me in chorus that in their natal homes, they picked up the rudiments of the process by observing their mothers brewing. But, they hardly ever participated in the task, “jiwori kalot eman kora nohoi”.
These experiences further throw light on how knowledge and labour skills are passed down orally and transmitted by women in order to facilitate the larger network of patriarchy, which they imagine holds them together. They act as mediators for community subsistence; brewing beer acts as a cathartic outlet from their everyday tasks. But, it can also be argued that such outlets are “permissible” only because any complete subversion might be crushed. In that respect, merry women producing better beer is a part of myth-making. Forms of carnival laughter such as this, are made available to women only temporarily because the fruition of counter-knowledge in the process is perceived as the real threat.
When the women come together, there are small moments of transgression. Biju says, “In folk festivities, when the pressure is higher, we brew together to divide the labour.” Sisters from Majuli, Dergaon, and other places fetch the herbs for the one who is too bogged down by chores to do so. “Even at 44, I am sturdy enough to go and cut firewood, not to mention that the urban ladies who come for Ali-i-ligang [Harvest festival held on the first Wednesday of the month of Phalgun (spring)] order Sai Mod secretly. I have a fair share of fans from the city…” she laughs.
It is usually believed that merry minds can brew better apong. So Biju and her companions remain in good humour while picking herbs. Plant knowledge and awareness is shared en route to the forest; herb gathering effectively allows an outlet from other kinds of laborious work. This is an area where women have mastered their skills with lived realities providing them better modes of survival as opposed to textual/formal learning (where there is hardly any room for teaching domestic skills). Their voices seep through these little uncared-for areas like picking herbs, making it a subterranean exercise of power.
When the women come together, there are small moments of transgression.
Other rules include keeping sour or bitter fruits, greens and menstruating women at bay, all of which are believed to turn the drink sour. Women are supposed to refrain from eating sour or bitter fruits and even farting while brewing. Biju says, “Initially, menstruating women were supposed to rest hence they were kept from working, but gradually this fact became more stringent, with the rest factor taking a backseat. Now my husband is irritated when I menstruate for he has to help with chores. All these taboos are directly connected to the larger spectrum of gastronomic beliefs about purity and pollution.” It is worth noting that I got easy access to kitchen space, because I was “clean” and the women did ask me that question as I got closer.
“Apong khaute tika uluwa” or to be bare-assed while consuming apong is a popular idiom among the Mishings—it alludes to the capacity of liquor to reveal the naked truth, as it were. Repeatedly invoked in varied forms by Mishing women, the metaphor of nakedness provides a window to how liquor came to be ostracised in the attire of an imported colonial modernity. The private–public divide has also been influenced with the colonial encounter. For instance, in the Dobur Puja, where Mishings worship their ancestors for curing diseases, apong is brewed by men. Villagers believe that if women are allowed to brew in public, it will make the gods angry. Female labour participation is therefore restricted and this ritual substantiates the rift between the public and the private.
Their voices seep through these little uncared-for areas like picking herbs, making it a subterranean exercise of power.
Ratneswar Mili refers to a Mishing folk song in “Mishing Loka Xadya”, which stresses the importance of apong by alluding to the “taste” of wooing women. In fact, a large number of Mishing women told me that eloping with one’s lover while drunk is hardly surprising:
Bohut paani khaleyu
Apong khuwar spriha beleg
Bohut suwali dekha paleyu
Tumak suwar spriha beleg
I have drunk myself a river,
But getting drunk on apong tastes out of the world,
I may have wooed a thousand girls,
But wooing you tastes out of the world.
It is interesting to observe subversions by the women themselves in real life as opposed to the women being invoked in poetry and folk songs such as the one mentioned above. To an outsider, who is unfamiliar with the context of apong, these idioms and riddles act as a permanent conundrum. I recall one such situation, present in one of the first novels in Assamese about the Mishings—called Miri Jiyori—written by Rajani Kanta Bordoloi in 1892. This epic love story about Panei and Jonkey looks at the structure of civil society in those days. In chapter 13, Panei, the Miri damsel, has to flee from the clutches of a “proper Babu” (who is not the “rustic type”and “consumes English liquor”). He takes it for granted that because she consumes her ethnic rice beer (apong), she will give in to his amorous advances.
As Mili and Biju converse with each other, I ask them what kind of drinkers the men in their lives are. Mili says, “Women and men are both ridiculed (‘Which tribe do you belong to that you can’t even handle beer?’) if they can’t control themselves after having apong. So there is a natural tendency to stay sober, though this is not always the case. But, the Bagania women have a tough time, most of their men beat them up. I run into them in the nearby haat.”
This is an excerpt from ‘Centrepiece: New Writing and Art from Northeast India’ (2017) published by Zubaan. Excerpted with permission from the author and publisher.
At the time of publication of this article, Rini Barman was an independent writer and researcher working on issues of ethnicity, gender and folklife. Currently, she is a PhD candidate of anthropology at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. She tweets @barman_rini.
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