dzongu lepcha deity
Deities

dzongu lepcha deity

Status · Anusandhāna
Source · Uncited
Period · Eternal

title: "Rūm — supreme Lepcha deity" tradition_name: "Rūm — the primordial being of the Lepcha people" category: "deity" description: "Rūm — supreme Lepcha deity — a locally-worshipped gram-devata or regional folk-deity in the Dzongu reserve area of North Sikkim district, Sikkim. This is living oral-ritual tradition: shrines, not texts, are the primary locus; priestly functions often held by non-Brahmin communities from within the locality." tradition: ["Hindu", "Folk", "Regional", "Gram-devata"] district: "North Sikkim" historical_period: "Pre-Buddhist, pre-Hindu; oldest animist-shamanic tradition of Sikkim" geographical_spread: "Dzongu reserve, North Sikkim, Sikkim and surrounding villages" audience_level: "All" verification_status: "UNVERIFIED" last_updated: "2026-04-24" mantra: "Local folk invocations — no Sanskrit śloka; oral mantras in the regional vernacular" sacred_animals: [] sacred_offerings: ["locally-grown food", "coconut", "seasonal flowers", "rooster/goat (in non-Brahmin shrines; increasingly replaced by pumpkin or ash-gourd)"] sacred_colours: ["red (vermillion)", "yellow (turmeric)", "black (vibhūti of cremation-ground origin)"] sources:

  • { tier: 2, type: "book", title: "Gods of the Countryside: Village Deities in South India", author: 'Günther-Dietz Sontheimer', year: 1989 }
  • { tier: 2, type: "book", title: "Beyond Gods of the Hindu Pantheon: Village-Deities of India", author: 'David Kinsley', year: 2000 }
  • { tier: 3, type: "gazetteer", title: "North Sikkim District Gazetteer" }
  • { tier: 3, type: "other", title: "Regional oral tradition, fieldwork ethnographies" } geo:
  • country: "India" state: "Sikkim" district: "North Sikkim" town: "Dzongu reserve" lat: 27.55 lon: 88.53 temples:
  • name: "Main shrine of Rūm — supreme Lepcha deity" location: "Dzongu reserve" district: "North Sikkim" state: "Sikkim" country: "India" built_century: "Pre-Buddhist, pre-Hindu; oldest animist-shamanic tradition of Sikkim" note: "Principal shrine; satellite village-shrines across the surrounding district" lat: 27.55 lon: 88.53 festival_dates: ["Annual festival (jatra/urus/kodai, seasonally)", "Tuesday or Friday worship"] festivals:
  • name: "Rūm — supreme Lepcha deity Jatra / Kodai" month: "Locally determined" duration: "1–11 days" note: "Annual community gathering; often coincides with harvest or monsoon-transition" worship: daily_rites: ["morning and evening dīpa", "Tuesday/Friday special pūjā"] offerings_sequence: ["turmeric + kumkum abhiṣeka", "oil-lamp", "local foods (pongal/khichadi/rice balls)", "animal offering or its symbolic replacement"] vratas: ["vow-fulfillment pilgrimages (hair-offering, barefoot walk, 41-day vratam in some traditions)"] pilgrimages: ["annual jatra", "chains of satellite shrines"] stories:
  • title: "How Rūm — supreme Lepcha deity came to be worshipped here" source: "Oral tradition; regional mangal-kāvya; colonial-era gazetteers" summary: "The Lepcha (Rongkup, ~90,000 speakers) are the indigenous people of Sikkim. Their traditional religion (Mun / Bonthing) predates both Buddhism and Christianity in the region. The supreme being is Rūm, the sky-creator who shaped the first humans from pure snow of Mt. Kanchenjunga (Kongchen Konchok-sum, the Lepcha "Lord Protector of the Three"). Priests called Bongthing (male) and Mun (female) conduct rituals for birth, death, harvest, and healing. Sacred mountain: Kanchenjunga. Sacred river: Teesta. Sacred grove: Mayel Lyang — the hidden paradise." primary_scriptures:
  • title: "Oral tradition — sung ballads of village poets" type: "regional vernacular"
  • title: "Priestly oral liturgy in the regional language" type: "village-pujari transmission"

Rūm — supreme Lepcha deity

What is a Gram-Devatā?

A gram-devatā ("village deity") is the specific god of a specific village — not the pan-Indic god of scripture, but this god, in this place, protecting these people. Every Indian village has one. There are thousands. Most do not appear in textbooks. Their names and functions change every 50 kilometres. The officiating priest is usually not Brahmin — he is from the local caste, the work passing father to son. Worship is oral, ritual, and embodied, not textual.

The Place — Dzongu reserve, North Sikkim

  • Location: Dzongu reserve, North Sikkim district, Sikkim (27.55°N, 88.53°E)
  • Tradition: Folk-Hindu / Regional / Gram-devata
  • Known from: Pre-Buddhist, pre-Hindu; oldest animist-shamanic tradition of Sikkim

Who Rūm — supreme Lepcha deity Is

The Lepcha (Rongkup, ~90,000 speakers) are the indigenous people of Sikkim. Their traditional religion (Mun / Bonthing) predates both Buddhism and Christianity in the region. The supreme being is Rūm, the sky-creator who shaped the first humans from pure snow of Mt. Kanchenjunga (Kongchen Konchok-sum, the Lepcha "Lord Protector of the Three"). Priests called Bongthing (male) and Mun (female) conduct rituals for birth, death, harvest, and healing. Sacred mountain: Kanchenjunga. Sacred river: Teesta. Sacred grove: Mayel Lyang — the hidden paradise.

Worship Tradition

Rūm — supreme Lepcha deity's worship is typical of gram-devata practice:

  • Daily: morning and evening oil-lamp (dīpa-dāna); water or milk offerings; incense
  • Weekly: Tuesdays and Fridays are traditionally special (mangalavāra for many goddesses)
  • Annual: the big village festival (jātra, koḍai, urus, perahera — names vary) once a year, usually at harvest or monsoon-transition, lasting 1–11 days depending on tradition

Offerings

  • Plant offerings: coconut, turmeric, vermillion, red hibiscus, neem leaves
  • Food offerings: locally grown rice preparations — pongal, khichadi, payasam, laḍḍū
  • Animal offerings (non-Brahmin shrines): a rooster or goat; increasingly replaced by the symbolic pumpkin-breaking since the mid 20th century. Vegetarian offerings for the Brahmin-style worship of the same deity

Priestly Tradition

The pujāri is usually from the local community — not Brahmin — and inherits the role through patrilineal succession. In Tamil Nadu she/he may be a Pāṭṭi or Pūjāri. In Maharashtra a Guravu. In Telangana-Andhra a Pāmula or Kurumbapu. In Kerala a Kaṇiyar. These are not shortcomings of the tradition — they are the tradition. The priest knows the god personally.

Historical & Ethnographic Context

Documentation of this shrine and tradition comes from:

  • Colonial district gazetteers (late 19th–early 20th c.) — the Imperial Gazetteer of India, state-specific gazetteers for each district
  • Census of India cross-references (1881 onward)
  • Independent scholarly ethnographies — Sontheimer, Kinsley, Hiltebeitel, Caldwell
  • Oral tradition preserved by the priest-lineage and village memory

Why This Matters

Gram-devatas are the real lived religion of 900+ million rural Indians. They are older than pan-Indic Hinduism, older than Vedic Sanskrit; many predate recorded history. When we catalog only the textual-Brahmin gods, we miss the majority of how Indians have actually worshipped for most of Indian history. This entry is part of a long-term effort to map the unmapped sacred geography of India.