




I hired a cab from Leh to reach Dah, a distance of around 90 kilometres. It takes three hours to reach there as you can drive only at a speed of around 25-30 kilometres per hour on mountain roads. The route follows the Indus down from Khalatse, past the villages of Domkhar, Skurbuchan and Achinathang, along a fairly good road. In a gorge split by the Indus, the sun’s heat is reflected off bare rocks and cliffs. The heat makes it possible for the natives to sow two crops every year, apart from apples and apricots.
People here believe vehemently in spirits and magic spells are commonly chanted. I saw an old woman burning dried juniper leaves inside her house as I entered it. Later in the day, while drinking gurgur chai (a local tea served with salt), I came across a room in the guesthouse, which has copies of theses on the Drokhpa community done by scholars who stayed in Dah. One paper said they burnt junipers to drive away evil spirits.
In his chronicles of Alexander’s stay in India, Greek historian Herodotus (4th century B.C.) mentions a war-like people on the frontier of India. Writing much later, Strabo (64 B.C. to A.D. 23) and Pliny (A.D. 23 to A.D. 79) repeat Herodotus’ story and name the war-like people Dards that later came to be known as Drokhpas.
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