One of the features of every Indian village is the bangle seller, well, it used to be . The bangle seller visits every house in the village through out the year . Since he doing that for years he knows every story of every house. He can accurately tell about babies, kids, lovers , sons and daughters ready for marriage , couples who just got married, , the old people ready for dying, deaths, colorful stories, gossips … the list goes on! He plays important role in every village wedding not only by selling colorful wedding but by becoming himself as messenger between two families!
I met the last bangle seller in Kumta last year and decided to make his portrait. If I really meet any more bangle seller again I will correct my previous sentence . His name is Balegaara ( ) Kirashanppa . Balegaara means bangle man. Many in the Kumta town knows him especially the elders. Now the concept of bangle seller has gone due to modernization.
His original name is Kunju Nair and he cannot recall from which part of Kerala he is from. When his village was hit by plague Kunju nair the 3 year old boy and his mother were only survivors in his family. They left village and migrated to Kumta in Karnataka. His mother started working as a house cleaner and he did not study also. Life went on and he settled with family in Kumta and he says his son now is a headmaster in a school. Now he is alone probably due to his drinking habit but he says everyone at home abandoned him. He started selling bangles from past 40 years and still he is doing that to earn his daily bread.
Now he is aged around 85 and it is not easy for him to sell these days in the villages. He told this year might be his last year as a bangle seller. I asked ” will you stop selling bangles ” and he replied ” no, no, I just might die this year” !
Dinesh Maneer
Photographer. Writer .Trekker.Traveler.Businessman based out of Karnataka, India
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It’s a shame to see tradition dying out, Dinesh, So what do the people buy instead of the traditional bangles? In any case, it’s really interesting to get insights into another culture from a post like this. I really like the series of images, too.
tx Andrew, people are now going for more plastic rather than traditional bangles. There are plenty of varieties available at cheaper price and cheapest quality.And more than that in most of the houses the younger generation is flying to the cities and have started living there thus killing all such traditions