Female Hunting in India .
There were about one thousand state-rulers
prior to 1947.
The Ex-Rulers were involved in woman
hunting.
Gangs, squads of agents of flesh bargaining
existed in each State.
Their job was to add in the stock of Palace
Harem all beautiful girls of the Country.
These touts roamed around the Country in
search of good girls.
Those who presented the King with large
number of female cargo were rewarded.
They were gifted with land, higher job and
other perquisites for loyalty to the King.
Elderly Ladies in groups in many states
lured maximum number of girls.
They were in charge of allotting girls for
dancing, for musical instruments, for
singing, for domestic help for cooking as
per her suitability.
The dancing girls were all of equal height,
fine structure and grace. At every function,
dancing girls danced slowly with rhythm, with deliberate
slow steps, hardly moving, lifting the
bare arms above their heads, so as not to interrupt the talk and discussions.
They had golden skin, well round breasts,
they must not be seen dancing but it should be felt that they were flowing in
air. They showed expression and they made signs. They tell a story, with their
fingers they make some declaration.
For example, she is narrating the scene how
a tiger is shot at a hunting trip.
There is movement of fingers which
expresses love. Another which means thirst. And another which means a fruit
hanging on a tree.
She pictures a tiger’s head with gestures
of her hand. There is the forest and there
is a hunter. And here is the flowing stream where the tiger comes to drink. She
explains all this with her hands and with her fingers and with her eyes.
She tells a poem with gesture and signs and
action without word but it is accompanied by music, to highlight or accentuates
the scene. The uplift of fingers turns
hard and violent means that the tiger is shot and killed. And she cries at the
agony of the dying Tiger.
She constructs a scene of Tiger hunting
accurately before the King’s court. Like
that they chose other such narration as a theme of dancing.
The King, Queen guests and court-attendants
viewed the dance with spell bound serenity.
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