Daily Lifestyle, Food Culture, and Economic Practices of the Badaga People gives a clear picture of how their values, tradition, and nature-based living integrate into daily life.
Houses are built in clusters called Hattis.
Architecture:
Sloped roofs for rain protection
Walls made of clay, stone, and wood
A single common fireplace (Oor Koodu) where ancestral fire is preserved
The village is communal – food, labor, rituals, and decisions are all shared.
The Badagas are traditionally vegetarian due to spiritual beliefs.
| Food Item | Description & Significance |
|---|---|
| Ragi mudde | Main staple – provides strength and warmth |
| Avare (beans) | Rich protein crop native to the hills |
| Butter, buttermilk | Sacred and consumed daily |
| Millets | Traditional grains – climate-resistant and pure |
| Vegetables & Greens | Grown organically in home fields |
Non-vegetarian food was historically not a part of ritual life, although some modern Badagas do consume meat occasionally, mostly outside rituals.
Many Badagas own small tea plantations.
Tea became economically important during British times.
Badagas are one of the major tea-producing tribes in India.
| Category | Role in Economy |
|---|---|
| Agriculture | Main livelihood – crops include potato, carrot, garlic, cabbage |
| Tea Plantations | Primary cash crop |
| Floristry | Growing marigold, jasmine for temple markets |
| Herbal medicine | Many households practice home herbal remedies |
Self-sufficiency is central – most food and resources come from their own land.
Men: Farming, ploughing, decision-making in Hatti council
Women: Sowing seeds, managing households, collecting forest produce
Elders: Custodians of tradition, resolve disputes, lead rituals
Unlike many caste-based societies, women have a respected voice in Badaga culture.
| Value | Significance |
|---|---|
| Simplicity | Material possessions are minimal |
| Purity | Physical and mental purity before rituals |
| Sharing | No one is allowed to go hungry in the Hatti |
| Community-minded | “Individual life is secondary to community life” |
Each morning begins with offering to ancestors and nature.
No elaborate puja – a simple act of placing rice, flowers, or water near the ancestral stone.
Spirituality is woven into daily life, not confined to temples.
Badaga lifestyle is a balance of agriculture, ancestral worship, nature harmony, and community living.
Food is natural and climate-adapted
Work is shared
Land is sacred
Life is lived with purpose, not consumption