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Children In Tripura Love These Two Games Played With Pebbles- Have You Heard Of Them?

Translated from Kokborok by Hamari Jamatia

Before innovation and technology brought home toy trains and dolls, little children used to play games using material found in their vicinity. Be it “catch-catch” or “kabaddi,”  children would gather together and spend their noons and evenings in group activities that required very little resources.

In Tripura, two games that are still commonly played using pebbles or broken brick chips are called Khori and Cheska. Let’s know more about these games from Sita and Priskila.

1. Khori

This game is played between two players while sitting on the ground. To play this game you need five pieces of broken brick chips or pebbles. It has roughly nine stages of playing.

Khori is played with five broken brick chips or pebble
Part of the game involves crossing the index and middle finger and making an arch on the floor with the help of the thumb
Feska requires at least 30 small chips or pebbles. It can also be played using 30 tamarind seeds

2.Feska

This game requires small chips or pebbles the size of peas. Sometimes, this game is played with a bunch of tamarind seeds as they are small in size. To play this game, the players need to have at least 30 chips. Basically, the players have to spread the chips on the floor and flick one chip against another chip like a carrom board game. The condition here is that, before flicking and hitting the other chip, the player has to cross one of her fingers between the two chips without touching either of them. Many people fail at this stage as the gap between two chips is sometimes too narrow to draw a finger between them. Secondly, even when the gap is large enough and a player can cross one finger between two chips, when she flicks one chip at another, the chips should not touch any other chips lying on the floor, a difficult feat to achieve.

Who will play first is decided by both players throwing the chips in the air and catching them. The player who catches the most chips gets to play first. The player spreads the thirty chips on the floor. She then asks the opponent which two chips she should play with first. The opponent tries to find the two chips that would be the most difficult. If she manages to hit them, she gets to repeat the game with other chips. Otherwise, the other player takes over. Whoever wins the most chips wins the game.

These games, or some version of it, are played in many parts of the country. What was it called in your state/ region? Were the rules the same?

This article is created as a part of the Adivasi Awaaz project, with the support of Misereor and Prayog Samaj Sevi Sanstha.

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