Baḍā Dev — Gond supreme deity
Deities

Baḍā Dev — Gond supreme deity

Baḍā Dev — the supreme deity of the Gond tribe

Status · Anusandhāna
Source · Tier 2
Tradition · Gondi
Period · Ancient tribal religion; modern revival from 1980s CE

Baḍā Dev — Gond supreme deity

Tradition: Gondi / Koyapunem / Gond

This entry honours the self-representation of Gondi tradition. India's sacred landscape includes hundreds of traditions beyond the Brahminical-Vedic canon — Jain, Buddhist, Sikh, Sufi Muslim, Zoroastrian, tribal Gondi/Bhil/Khasi, and many more. Each has its own cosmology, theology, ethical system, and sacred geography. Each deserves first-person recognition, not assimilation.

The Place — Dantewada / Bastar region, Dantewada

  • Location: Dantewada / Bastar region, Dantewada, Chhattisgarh (18.9103°N, 81.3547°E)
  • Tradition: Gondi / Koyapunem / Gond
  • Historical: Ancient tribal religion; modern revival from 1980s CE

The Story

The Gond are India's largest tribal community (~13 million), spread across Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Telangana. Their religion is Koyā Punem (the "Path of the Koitur/Gond"), with the supreme deity Baḍā Dev (the "Great God", also Pahandi Pari Kupar Lingo — the philosopher-hero who gave the Gonds their laws). Baḍā Dev is worshipped in the form of a sacred saj-tree (Terminalia elliptica) — every Gond village has a grove. The priest is the Bhumka (male) or Devārī (female). Offerings: rice-beer (mahua), millet, the first harvest. The Gond calendar has 12 festivals tied to agricultural cycles. The Baṛshāit and Goṇḍi Punem revival movements (1980s onward) have reclaimed this tradition from Hinduization.

Worship Tradition

Worship in the Gondi tradition follows its own ritual grammar — this is not a variant of Brahminical-Hindu worship. Key elements:

  • Primary offering: see description
  • Sacred colours: red (for the tree), white (rice-beer)
  • Mantra/Invocation: Pari Kupar Lingo / Gondi oral invocations

Festival Calendar

  • Madai (Phālguna (March), 5 days)
  • Keslapur Jatara (Pausha (January), 3 days)

Why This Entry Matters

India is home to:

  • 4.5 million Jains — the oldest living śramaṇic (non-Vedic) tradition, with its own canon of scripture and ethics
  • ~8 million Buddhists — including Dalit Buddhists (~6 million) and Himalayan Buddhist populations
  • ~25 million Sikhs — the third-largest religion born in India
  • 50,000 Zoroastrians — the oldest continuously-practiced monotheistic tradition, who fled here in 8th c. CE
  • ~200 million Muslims — many communities woven into a centuries-old Indo-Islamic syncretic culture (Sufi shrines visited by Hindus, Urs festivals with Hindu devotees)
  • ~104 million tribal/Adivasi people — Gond, Bhil, Santhal, Munda, Oraon, Ho, Khasi, Garo, Lepcha, Meitei, Naga clans, Mizo, Karbi, Adi, Apatani, Mishmi, Nocte, Konyak — each with their own theology

Catalogging only the pan-Indic Brahminical pantheon would miss most of India.

Sources

This entry draws on: the tradition's own textual and oral sources, scholarly ethnographies (Kosambi, Radhakrishnan, P. V. Kane for classical; Sontheimer, Kinsley, Caldwell, Fuchs, Dubey for vernacular), district gazetteers, and the lived community of practitioners.

Wisdom Graph: Divine Associations

📖 Stories

  • The sacred narrative of Baḍā Dev — Gond supreme deity
    The **Gond** are India's largest tribal community (~13 million), spread across Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Telangana. Their religion is **Koyā Punem** (the
    Community tradition and scholarly sources

🪔 Worship Procedures

Daily rites
tradition-specific (see body)
Puja sequence
  1. tradition-specific
Vratas (vows / fasts)
tradition-specific observances

🛕 Principal Temples

  • Main shrine of Baḍā Dev — Gond supreme deityAncient tribal religion; modern revival from 1980s CE
    📍 Dantewada / Bastar region, Dantewada, Chhattisgarh, India
    Festivals: Madai · Keslapur Jatara
    Madai (winter festival), Keslapur Jathara, Akhāṛī

🎊 Festivals

  • Madai
    Phālguna (March) · 5 days
  • Keslapur Jatara
    Pausha (January) · 3 days

📜 Primary Scriptural Sources

  • Primary texts of Gondi traditionscriptural / liturgical