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    A Passage A Day

    ลำดับตอนที่ #126 : The village with no locks or doors

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      31 พ.ค. 59

    Imagine a village where homes have no front doors, shops are always left unlocked and locals never feel unsafe.

    This is the story of Shani Shingnapur in India’s Maharashtra state, where villagers eschew security because of their undying faith in Lord Shani, the god of Saturn, who is considered the guardian of the village.

    Legend has it that about 300 years ago, after a bout of rain and flooding, a heavy black slab of rock was found washed up on the shores of the Panasnala River, which once flowed through the village. When locals touched the 1.5m boulder with a stick, blood started oozing out of it.

    Villagers do not feel unsafe having no doors on their homes (Credit: Credit: Swati Jain)

    Villagers do not feel unsafe having no doors on their homes (Credit: Swati Jain)

    Later that night, Shani appeared in the dreams of the village head, revealing that the slab was his own idol. The deity ordered that the slab should be kept in the village, where he would reside from here on. But Shani had one condition: the rock and its colossal powers must not be sheltered as he needed to be able to oversee the village without hindrance. Shani then blessed the leader and promised to protect the village from danger.

    After the villagers installed the huge slab on a roofless platform in the heart of town, they decided to discard all doors and locks. They didn't need them anymore, not with the Lord to watch over them.

    “40,000 visitors pour in each day to see the once-humble shrine” (Credit: Credit: Swati Jain)

    “40,000 visitors pour in each day to see the once-humble shrine” (Credit: Swati Jain)

    This tradition has continued for generations. Locals occasionally lean wooden panels against their front door frames to keep stray dogs out – but they have no permanent doors, and leave their jewellery and money unsecured, firmly believing that their holy guardian will protect them from any mishap. Even the public toilets in the village square just have a thin curtain at the entrance for privacy.

    New constructions have to honour these protocols, too. The police station – which only opened in September 2015 and has not yet received a single complaint from the villagers – has no front door; while the United Commercial Bank opened India’s first “lockless” branch in Shani Shingnapur in 2011, installing a glass entrance in the spirit of transparency and a barely visible remote-controlled electromagnetic lock in respect of the villagers’ beliefs.

    India’s first “lockless” bank branch was opened in Shani Shingnapur in 2011 (Credit: Credit: Swati Jain)

    India’s first “lockless” bank branch was opened in Shani Shingnapur in 2011 (Credit: Swati Jain)

    Locals are so nonchalant that they don’t even ask their neighbours to watch over their house while they are out of town. They believe that thieves will immediately be punished with blindness, and anyone dishonest will face seven-and-a-half years of bad luck. In fact, local lore says that when one villager installed wooden panes at the entrance of his house, he had a car accident the very next day.

    Because of this strange history, Shani Shingnapur attracts devotees from across India. At least 40,000 visitors pour in each day to see the once-humble shrine that has grown into a large temple with extensive property and donations.

    Lord Shani, the god of Saturn, promised to keep the village safe (Credit: Credit: Swati Jain)

    Lord Shani, the god of Saturn promised to keep the village safe (Credit: Swati Jain)

    Although Shani Shingnapur has officially remained free from thefts for centuries, a 2010 visitor reported that cash and valuables worth 35,000 rupees were stolen from his vehicle. Another theft of gold ornaments worth 70,000 rupees was reported in 2011. However the charges were dismissed as the villagers insisted that they took place outside the village.

    Sceptics argue that the low crime rate in the area is due to the village’s remote location rather than the miraculous powers of the lord.

    Shani Shingnapur locals do not distrust their neighbours (Credit: Credit: Swati Jain)

    Shani Shingnapur locals do not distrust their neighbours (Credit: Swati Jain)

    Whatever the truth, times are changing and some villagers are challenging this age-old custom, seeking permission from the gram-panchayat (local self-government organisation) to install doors and locks to ensure the safety of their family.

    But most villagers at Shani Shingnapur hope that the tradition will continue – that Shani continues to protect them from every evil eye for many centuries to come. 

    Shani Shingnapur has always had very low crime rates, despite ample opportunity for theft (Credit: Credit: Swati Jain)



    eschew (v.)

    to avoid something intentionally, or to give something up:

     

    slab (n.)

     a thick, flat piece of a solid substance, such as stone,wood, metal, food, etc., that is usually square orrectangular:

     

     

    boulder  (n.)

    a very large rock

     

    ooze (v.)

     to flow slowly out of something through a smallopening, or to slowly produce a thick sticky liquid:

     

     deity (n;)

    a god or goddess:

     

    hindrance. 

    Hinder (v.)

    2 to limit the ability of someone to do something, or tolimit the development of something:

     

    mishap. (n.)

    bad luck, or an unlucky event or accident:

     

    Protocols (n.)

    the system of rules and acceptable behaviour used at official ceremonies and occasions:

     

    Transparency (n.)

     the characteristic of being easy to see through:

    a photograph or picture printed onplastic that you can see on a screen by shining a lightthrough it

    (OPEN) [U] the quality of being done in an open way withoutsecrets:

     

     

     nonchalant (adj.)

     behaving in a calm manner, often in a way that suggestsyou are not interested or do not care:

     

    lore  (n.)

    traditional knowledge and stories about a subject:

     

    panes (n.)

     a flat piece of glass, used in a window or door:

     

    devotees  (n.)

    a person who strongly admires a particular person or isextremely interested in a subject:

     

    shrine  (n.)

    place for worship that is holy because of a connectionwith a holy person or object

    special place in which you remember and praisesomeone who has diedespecially someone famous:

     

    extensive  (adj.)

     covering a large area; having a great range:

     

    property (n.)

    an object or objects that belong to someone:

    building or area of land, or both together:

    law the legal right to own and use something

    a quality in a substance or material, especially one that means that it can be used in a particular way:

    ornaments  (n.)

    an object that is beautiful rather than useful:

     

    Scepticsb (n.)

    a person who doubts the truth or value of an idea orbelief:

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