Chuhra, also known as Bhanghi and Balmiki, is a Dalit caste in India and Pakistan.
Originally following the Balmiki sect of Hinduism, many Chuhras converted to Sikhism, Islam and Christianity during the colonial India.
The Bhangis claim descent from Valmiki (also known as Lal Beg or Balashah), a Brahmin who composed the Ramayana and who is worshipped as a Hindu patron saint by the Bhangis.
There are many other different theories of their origin. Some scholars link the institutionalization of "sweeping and scavenging" as a profession in India to the advent of Muslim rule. The need to dispose of waste from secluded defecation areas, particularly for women observing purdah due to a lack of sanitation infrastructure, led to the employment of war captives for cleaning latrines, bucket privies, and removing night-soil. These freed captives, shunned by society, formed a distinct caste known as the Bhangis, who continued manual scavenging. Emperor Akbar later renamed this caste Mehtar(prince or leader), as noted by sociologist Bindeshwar Pathak in his 1999 work, Road to Freedom: A Sociological Study on Abolition of Scavenging in India. Another theory suggests the name "Mehtar" comes from the Sanskrit word "Meh," meaning "saturated." This connection is seen as fitting due to the caste's historical work with "night soil." (Sharma 1995). Some link it to the consumption of "bhang" (hemp), while others apply this derivation only to those scavengers who also worked with bamboo. Crooke (1896) and Zilliot (1970) connect the term to Sanskrit "Bhang" and a perceived drunken habit, but Mishra (1936) rejects this theory. The 1960 Malkani Committee noted that even untouchable Hindu castes who converted to Islam continued scavenging. Writer Gita Ramaswamy argues the view of the relation with Islam aligns with Hindutva narratives that blame Muslim rule for social ills, thereby downplaying the pervasive role of caste in India.
Originally following the Balmiki sect of Hinduism, many Chuhras converted to Sikhism, Islam and Christianity during the colonial India. The faith practiced by the Lal Begi Chuhras came to syncretize elements of Hinduism, Islam and Christianity. The Arya Samaj drew the majority to mainstream Hinduism while conversions similarly happened to Islam, Christianity, and Sikhism in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
In 1932 in colonial India, the Balmiki Sabha was created to advocate for the rights of the Chuhras. The Balmiki Sabha was applauded by the Indian National Congress in the mid-1940s for heralding its political message among the Chuhras.
In what is now Pakistan, the conversions to Christianity and consequent invention of a new identity were largely responsible for the name Chuhra becoming archaic. It is often considered pejorative and applied to almost all of the Christians in the country, whom John O'Brien describes as "descended from one tribe-caste of oppressed and excluded people". The status of the Christian Chuhra as Dalit Christians continues to be "distinct feature of social discrimination" against them.
The 2011 Census of India for Uttar Pradesh showed the Balmiki population, which was classified as a Scheduled Caste, as 1,319,241.
The Balmikis represent 0.08 per cent in Andhra Pradesh and are mainly concentrated in Anantapur, Kurnool district and Kadapa district districts of Andhra Pradesh. They also built a temple of Valmiki in Anantapur, Andhra Pradesh.
In the UK, the Council of Valmiki Sabhas UK was established to represent the Balmiki.
Andhra Pradesh | 70,513 | 0.083% | In the Joint State of Andhara Pradesh during the 2011 census, the Valmiki caste had been counted as a Scheduled Tribe instead of a Scheduled Caste. |
![]() | 207,549 | 0.199% | Counted as Hari, Mehtar, Bhangi |
![]() | 82,624 | 7.82% | Counted as Mazhabi, Balmiki, Chura or Bhangi |
![]() | 19,016 | 0.074% | Counted as Bhangi, Mehtar, Balmiki, Lalbegi, Dharkar |
![]() | 577,281 | 3.43 % | Counted as Chuhra (Balmiki) |
![]() | 309 | 0.0% | Counted as Bhangi (Hadi) |
![]() | 439,444 | 0.72% | Counted as Bhangi, Mehtar, Olgana, Rukhi, Malkana, Halalkhor, Lalbegi, Balmiki, Korar, Zadmalli,Barwashia, Barwasia, Jamphoda, Zampada, Zampda, Rushi, Valmiki |
![]() | 1,079,682 | 4.25% | Counted as Balmiki, Chura, Bhangi, Mazhabi and Mazhabi Sikh |
![]() | 35,150 | 0.51% | Counted as Balmiki, Bhangi, Chuhra, Chura, Chuhre and Mazhabi |
![]() | 6918 | 0.0% | Counted as Chura, Bhangi, Balmiki, Mehtar |
![]() | 58,242 | 0.17% | Counted as Hari, Mehtar, Bhangi |
![]() | 5,281 | 0.0086% | Counted as Bhangi, Mehtar, Olgana, Rukhi, Malkana, Halalkhor, Lalbegi, Balmiki, Korar, Zadmalli |
![]() | 365,769 | 0.5% | Counted as Bhangi, Mehtar, Balmik, Lalbegi, Dharkar |
![]() | 217,166 | 0.19% | Counted as Bhangi, Mehtar, Olgana, Rukhi, Malkana, Halalkhor, Lalbegi, Balmiki, Korar, Zadmalli, Hela |
![]() | 21 | 0.0% | Counted as Mehtar, Bhangi |
![]() | 2,453 | 0.0% | Counted as Hari, Mehtar, Bhangi |
![]() | 3,500,874 | 12.61% | Counted as Mazhabi, Mazhabi Sikh, Balmiki, Chuhra, Bhangi |
![]() | 625,011 | 0.91% | Counted as Majhabi, Bhangi, Chura, Mehtar, Olgana, Rukhi, Malkana, Halalkhor, Lalbegi, Balmiki, Valmiki, Korar, Zadmalli |
![]() | 1,851 | 0.0% | Counted as Mehtor |
![]() | 118,421 | 1.17% | Counted as Mazhabi and Balmiki |
![]() | 1,319,241 | 0.66% | Counted as Balmiki |
![]() | 431,257 | 0.47% | Counted as Hari, Mehtar, Mehtor, Bhangi, Balmiki |
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