TheRamgarhia are a community ofSikhs from thePunjab region of northwestern India, encompassing members of theLohar (blacksmiths) andTarkhan (carpenters) subgroups.[1]
Originally calledThoka, meaningcarpenter,[2] the Ramgarhia are named afterJassa Singh Ramgarhia, whose birth surname of Thoka became Ramgarhia in the 18th century when he was put in charge of rebuilding what became known asRamgarhia Bunga, at Ramrauni, nearAmritsar.[3]
Traditionally, Ramgarhias are mostly carpenters, but included other artisan occupations including blacksmiths.[3][4] Generally, Sikh carpenters useRamgarhia as a surname whereasHindu carpenters useDhiman.[4]
Their artisan skills were noted by theBritish, who encouraged many Ramgarhia to move to colonies inEast Africa in the 1890s, where they assisted in the creation of that region's infrastructure and became Africanised.[3] One significant project in which they and other Punjabi Sikhs were involved was the cion of the railway linking the present-day countries of Kenya and Uganda, which was completed in 1901.[5]
The British authorities also encouraged Ramgarhias to migrate within India during the first quarter of the 20th century. Their inventiveness and skills at construction, repair and maintenance were of much use at, for example, the tea plantations inAssam.[6] Now distant from their landlords in Punjab, who were mostly Jat Sikhs, the Ramgarhia diaspora in theBrahmaputra Valley of Assam were able to enhance their social status even higher.[4][7] The lessons learned in Punjab, where they had established a fewgurdwaras to aid community cohesion and had been loyal to the British and generally unwilling to support the Jat-ledAkali movement, assisted their improved status in Assam.[8]
Despite Sikhism generally rejecting the caste system, it does have its own very similar socio-economic hierarchy, with its constituents often described as castes. In that, according to Peter Childs, the Ramgarhias today rank second only to theJat Sikhs, thanks to significant economic and social power that elevated this middle class group from its lower caste confines.[9] However, Joginder Singh says that they still lack influence in the Punjab, which is a region heavily dependent on agriculture and dominated by some influential peasant farmers, mostly Jat but also some from communities such as theLabanas andSainis. Those people, says Singh, have "captured the control of Sikh socio-religious institutions and political parties." Associations representing the less influential but numerically superior people have formed in reaction to this, including Ramgarhia groups that are running their own educational and socio-religious institutions as well as mobilising their diaspora and any prominent individuals who might assist in enhancing their identity.[1]
The Ramgarhia caste, which encompasses members ofTarkhan andLohar, are included in the list ofOther Backward Classes (OBC) in Punjab to improve their economic conditions.[10] Ramgarhias were inducted into the OBC group in Punjab in 2001.[10]