A sacred hillock on the outskirts of Anjan village is dotted with both saffron and white flags. The white flags belong to the Sarna followers of nature-worshipping Adivasi communities – in this case Oraon Adivasis, while the saffron flags belong to Hindus who built a Hanuman temple in 1985, at the top of the hill in Gumla district of Jharkhand. They claim that it is the birthplace of the Hindu god.
Two large banners on the bamboo gate name two committees. The Gumla Van Prabandhan Mandal run jointly by the forest department and the people of Anjan (united as Sanyukt Gram Van Prabandhan Samiti), handle the management of the pilgrimage spot since 2016. Anjan Dham Mandir Vikas Samiti of Hindus established in 2019, manages the temple here.
Just inside the welcoming gate we are faced with two staircases, each leading to a different place of worship. One takes you straight to the Hanuman temple at the top of the hill. Another leads you to two caves, in which Adivasi pahans have been performing pujas for centuries before the Hindu temple came into existence.
Donation boxes for two different gods, serving two different groups, are placed near their individual places of worship – one near the cave and one inside the temple. A third one belongs to the Bajarang Dal and sits in the courtyard. The funds from this box are used for the Tuesday bhandara, a feast for the devout saints. And there is yet another box at the foothills, closer to the village, collections from which help the Adivasis buy materials and offerings for the puja.
“This is a fully Adivasi area. There were no pundits in Anjan before.” The 42-year-old former village head, Ranjay Oraon is addressing my curiosity about the strange worship arrangements at this religious spot. “It is only recently that pundits from Banaras have come to this area. Oraon Adivasis here have been worshipping the nature goddess Anjani for years, but we never knew that Anjani was related to Hanuman,” he says.
“The pundits came and popularised idea that Anjani was in fact Hanuman’s mother,” Ranjay says. “Anjan was then declared the sacred birthplace of Hanuman. And before one could understand anything a Hanuman temple came up right on top of the hill and the place was declared Anjan Dham.”










