in Bihar, 1890s
Etymology In Bihar, the word Musahar is said to derive from the
Bhojpuri mūs+ahar (literally
rat eater), on account of their traditional occupation as rat catchers.
Risley thinks that
Musahar is the name that their Hindu masters gave them because of their non-Aryan and unclean habit of eating field mice.
Nesfield preferred the word
Mushera, based on an old folktale which signifies flesh-seeker or hunter. According to him, the word ‘Mushera’ (another variant of the term Musahar) derives from masu (flesh) and hera (seeker), possibly a more comprehensive term than 'rat-catcher'.
Origins According to a local legend,
Lord Brahma created man and gave him the horse to ride. The first Musahar decided to dig holes in the belly of the horse to fix his feet as he rode. This offended Lord Brahma, who cursed him and his descendants to be rat-catchers.
Herbert Hope Risley, in his 1881 survey of castes and tribes of Bengal, speculated that the Musahars were an offshoot of the hunter-gatherer
Bhuiya from the
Chota Nagpur Plateau who migrated to the Gangetic plains approximately 6-7 generations prior to his survey, around 300–350 years before present. It is now believed that this theory is generally correct. Modern genetic studies have found Musahars cluster very closely with
Munda peoples like the
Santhals and the
Hos, and demonstrate similar haplogroup frequencies for both maternal and paternal lineages. Some Musahars have claimed that they once had their own language but it was lost when they migrated. This process has been observed in another tribal population, the
Baiga, who also once spoke a Munda language but shifted to an
Indo-European language in the distant past. However, unlike the Musahar, the Baiga remained isolated from
Brahminical society at large and so were seen as a tribe rather than a
caste. == Present circumstances ==