Dhenki

Dhenki or Dhinki is an old style rice mill or husk lever[1] found in Bangladesh and Indian states of Assam, West Bengal and Odisha.[2][3][4] It is usually made of hard wood. It has a fulcrum supporting a weight. Due to the force of the weight upon the rice in the pods, the rice and the golden brown husks separate. Dhenki used to be operated by women to produce rice from paddy and grind rice to powder.

The dhenki is similar to this Japanese tool used for a similar purpose

Dhenki is traditionally made of wood and some iron. Carpenters build most parts of it where a blacksmith would attach an iron ring to the tip of the lever. The Assamese farming society uses it to retrieve rice from raw paddy grain, to make dry rice flakes, rice powder later to process it to make various delicious dry food items called pithas. Dhenki is still in use some part of rural Odisha. Dhenki is also used in parts of rural Bengal.

In the Satyajit Ray's Bengali movie Ashani Sanket, the actresses were seen operating dhenki for a short period of time. Odia author Fakir Mohan Senapati has mentioned of dhenki in his literary works.[5]

Dhenki (Side view)
Dhenki of Assam:The Tail to Head view when standing
gollark: Because there's no* way parents can manipulate/coerce children!
gollark: As you can see, I can cause mild degradation of images AT WILL.
gollark: Because the parent can probably coerce them into apious work.
gollark: Parents are sometimes bad and not good.
gollark: Due to what I assume are inevitable bee incursions, FFTing an image, taking the real part, and IFFTing it gives the image semirotatedish.

References

  1. Anagarika Dharmapala (2003). The Maha Bodhi. Maha-Bodhi Society.
  2. Mihir K. Jena; N. Patnaik (2002). Forest tribes of Orissa: lifestyle and social conditions of selected Orissan tribes. D.K. Printworld. ISBN 978-81-246-0415-1.
  3. N. Patnaik (2000). Sacred Complex in Orissa: Study of Three Major Aspects of the Sacred Complex. Gyan Publishing House. ISBN 978-81-212-0680-8.
  4. Journal of the Bihar and Orissa Research Society. The Society. 1923.
  5. J. V. Boulton; Oḍiśā Sāhitya Ekāḍemī (1993). Phakirmohana Senapati: his life and prose-fiction. Orissa Sahitya Akademi.

See also

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