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ADIVASI · SACRED SITES · ARAVALLI

Tribal Shrines of Aravalli

Sacred stones and spirit flags — the tribal shrines of Aravalli, where Bhil and Garasia Adivasi communities maintain a living animist tradition of sacred groves, ancestral stones and flag-draped hillside shrines.

AT A GLANCE Quick Facts
📍 DISTRICT Aravalli
🏷️ TYPE Tribal sacred sites
🗺️ REGION North Gujarat
🧭 CATEGORY Temple
☀️ BEST TIME Oct – Mar
🎟️ ENTRY Free
⏱️ DURATION 30–45 min
💡 IDEAL FOR Pilgrimage
ABOUT THE PLACE

Living Adivasi sacred traditions

Throughout Aravalli’s forest hills, the Bhil and Garasia Adivasi communities maintain a rich and living tradition of sacred sites that predate and exist alongside mainstream Hindu temples. These include the Devla or Dev — sacred stones and boulders considered inhabited by ancestral or nature spirits; hillside shrines marked with cloth flags (jhanda); and sacred groves (vav dev, oran) where particular trees or groves are inviolable — no timber, no cultivation.

There is also an elaborate system of clan totems and marriage shrines that structure Bhil social and religious life. For the respectful and curious visitor, these sites offer an encounter with a genuinely different relationship to the sacred — embodied, localized, rooted in landscape rather than enclosed in stone.

Always visit with a local guide and follow community protocols. These are not tourist monuments but living places of worship; permission is required, and a quiet, respectful presence is the only way to experience them well.

Illustration — Tribal shrine, Aravalli.

HISTORY

From a riverside experiment to the road to freedom

Illustration — Tribal sacred sites.

Ancient

The Bhil and Garasia peoples have honoured these stones, groves and hillsides since long before recorded history.

Forest kingdoms

The forested Aravalli ranges were long the domain of Bhil communities, who shaped a sacred geography of their own.

Living today

The Devla, oran and flag-shrines are still actively tended, garlanded and visited by their communities.

Alongside Hinduism

These animist traditions coexist with mainstream Hindu temples, forming a parallel and enduring sacred world.

WHY VISIT

Reasons to make the time

🌿

Sacred groves

Inviolable forest — oran where no timber or cultivation is permitted by ancient custom.

🎏

Spirit flags

Hillside shrines draped with cloth flags (jhanda) marking places of the spirits.

🪨

Ancestor stones

Living Devla — sacred stones and boulders inhabited by ancestral and nature spirits.

🧭

Discover

A different sacred — an embodied, localized relationship to the holy, rooted in landscape.

🤝

Respectful

Visit only with a local guide who can introduce you and explain community protocols.

📸

Document

With permission only — these are living shrines, not photo backdrops.

HIGHLIGHTS

What to look for inside

THE DEVLA

Ancestor stones

Bhil sacred rocks — boulders inhabited by ancestral spirits.

SACRED GROVES

Oran

Inviolable forest — groves where no timber or cultivation is allowed.

THINGS TO DO

How to spend an hour or two

01

Find a local guide

Essential. A guide from a nearby village can introduce you, explain protocols and ensure your visit is welcome.

02

Visit a Devla shrine

See the ancestor stones — sacred boulders the Bhil community considers inhabited by spirits.

03

See a sacred grove

Walk to an oran, a grove held inviolable by custom where no timber is cut and no land is cultivated.

04

Understand the flags

Learn how hillside spirit-shrines are marked with cloth flags (jhanda) and what they signify.

05

Talk with community

Hear the tradition first-hand from the people who maintain these living sacred sites.

06

Be respectful

Permission first — keep your voice low, follow your guide, and never photograph without asking.

Illustration — Tribal shrine, Aravalli.

ARCHITECTURE & SETTING

Sacred stones, groves and flags

The tribal shrines of Aravalli include Devla — ancestral sacred stones and boulders — together with sacred groves (oran) where no timber or cultivation is permitted, and hillside spirit-flag shrines draped with cloth jhanda.

Together these form a living animist sacred tradition maintained by the Bhil and Garasia communities — an illustrated emblem of a faith rooted in landscape. Visit only with a local guide and community permission.

Devla — ancestral sacred stones and boulders

Oran — sacred groves; inviolable by custom

Flag shrines (jhanda) on hillsides

A living Adivasi animist tradition

BEST TIME TO VISIT

When to go

WINTEROct – Feb★★★★★

Cool and clear — the ideal window. Comfortable all day and perfect for unhurried walks into the hills.

MONSOONJul – Sep★★★☆☆

Lush and green, but forest roads may flood. Travel cautiously and check conditions locally.

SUMMERMar – May★★☆☆☆

Hot in the Aravalli foothills — set out at first light and keep visits to the early mornings.

⏰ October to March is ideal for Aravalli — cool, dry days and clear light across the hills.

PLANNING ESSENTIALS

Timings & entry

🕗TIMINGSDaytime
  • Daytime hours only — these are open hillside sites
  • Cool season is best for walking
  • Morning is ideal for light and calm
  • Check access and conditions locally
🎟️ENTRYFree
  • Free access — no ticket required
  • Good roads reach the main bases
  • Combine with other Aravalli sites
  • October–March is the easiest season
HOW TO REACH

Getting there

✈️

By Air

Ahmedabad airport is about 130 km away — the nearest major gateway, with onward road travel into Aravalli.

🚆

By Rail

Himmatnagar and Modasa are the nearest useful railheads for reaching the district and its forest villages.

🚗

By Road

Reach via NH-48 and Modasa; Bhiloda makes a practical base for the forest villages and shrine areas.

NEARBY DISTANCES
Bhiloda — base · Forest villages — ask locally · Polo Forest area · Ahmedabad — 130 km
PHOTOGRAPHY GUIDE

Shooting the shrines

PERMISSION FIRST

Living sacred sites — photograph only with explicit community consent

📸

Ask first

Never photograph a shrine, stone or worshipper without explicit permission from your guide and the community.

🌅

Best light

Early mornings in the cool season give soft light across the hills and the flag-draped shrines.

🤫

Be discreet

Keep a low profile, no flash, no staging — these are places of worship, not backdrops.

🎒

Gear tip

A modest kit and a quiet manner serve far better here than long lenses or tripods.

TRAVEL TIPS

Know before you go

1Always go with a local guide — it is essential for access and for respecting protocols.
2Seek permission before entering any shrine, grove or sacred-stone site.
3Never photograph people or shrines without explicit consent.
4Keep your voice low and your presence quiet; these are active places of worship.
5Dress modestly and wear sturdy shoes for forest paths and hillsides.
6Carry water and set out in the cool morning hours, especially in summer.
7Donations are appropriate; an entry fee is not charged.
8Visit October to March for the most comfortable conditions.
NEARBY FOOD

Where to eat around the ashram

THALI

Gujarati Thali

Hearty home cooking — an unlimited spread of dal, sabzi, rotla and sweets.

FARSAN

Farsan

Gujarat's famous snacks — dhokla, fafda, khaman and more, fresh from local kitchens.

STREET

Street food

Local dhabas along the highways serve simple, satisfying roadside meals.

🍽️GOOD TO KNOW

Adivasi cuisine

Look out for forest produce and millets — the everyday food of Aravalli's tribal communities.

FREQUENTLY ASKED

Tribal Shrines of Aravalli FAQ

What are tribal shrines?

Sacred stones, groves and flag-shrines of the Bhil and Garasia communities — a living Adivasi animist tradition.

Can I visit?

Yes — with a local guide and community permission. These are living places of worship, not tourist monuments.

Where to find a guide?

Ask in Bhiloda or in the forest villages; local people can introduce you and explain the protocols.

Is photography allowed?

Only with explicit permission. Never photograph shrines, stones or worshippers without asking first.

Is there an entry fee?

None — but donations are appropriate and gratefully received by the community.

Is this safe?

Yes — respectful visitors are welcomed. Follow your guide and observe local customs throughout.

When is the best time to visit?

October to March, when the Aravalli foothills are cool, dry and comfortable for walking.

How do I get there?

Via NH-48 and Modasa, with Bhiloda as a base; Ahmedabad airport is about 130 km away.

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