| Article Title |
From Feather to Food: Ritual, Scarcity, and Cultural Memory in the Rai Wachipa Traditions of the Darjeeling Hills |
| Author(s) | Anamika Subba. |
| Country | India |
| Abstract |
This paper explores the cultural significance of Wachipa, a traditional dish made from chicken feathers and rice among the Rai community of the Darjeeling hills. Serving as both sustenance and a record of their heritage, Wachipa reflects the community's resilience, ecological adaptation, and spiritual beliefs. Originally, it was consumed during periods of scarcity and religious festivals, demonstrating the Rai people's resourcefulness and symbolic use of unconventional ingredients. The study investigates how Wachipa functions as a symbol of memory, ritual identity, and social continuity, extending its role beyond mere food to act as a ritual object and a repository of cultural knowledge. By analysing its preparation and consumption, the paper contends that Wachipa exemplifies how indigenous communities encode identity through everyday practices, connecting necessity, creativity, and spiritual belief into a culinary metaphor for cultural preservation. |
| Area | History |
| Issue | Volume 3, Issue 2 (March - April 2026) |
| Published | 2026/03/19 |
| How to Cite | Subba, A. (2026). From Feather to Food: Ritual, Scarcity, and Cultural Memory in the Rai Wachipa Traditions of the Darjeeling Hills. International Journal of Social Science Research (IJSSR), 3(2), 233-241, DOI: https://doi.org/10.70558/IJSSR.2026.v3.i2.30921. |
| DOI | 10.70558/IJSSR.2026.v3.i2.30921 |
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