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Baul-Fakir

Bauls and Fakirs, frequently referred to as the wandering minstrels and mystics of Bengal (previously undivided Bengal and now, West Bengal and Bangladesh), are known through their enchanting, often enigmatic songs. The districts of Nadia (and Kushtia in Bangladesh which was a part of the Nadia district in pre-partition Bengal), Bankura, Bardhaman, Birbhum, Dinajpur and Murshidabad in West Bengal are traditionally the principal centres of Baul-Fakir culture.

Though a distinction is often made between the terms Bauls and Fakirs, in that the Bauls have an exclusively Hindu identity while Fakirs, an Islamic one, in reality, theirs is a syncretic faith, a fusion of both Hindu and Islamic practices, and their common belief is that the body is the sole repository of all experience and means to knowledge. The songs they sing are an expression of their esoteric philosophy and mystical devotion. Because of the nature of their practices, and because of their refusal to conform to conventions of society, these minstrels who are neither Hindu nor Muslim have always been seen as threats to organised religion, by both Hindus and Muslims and relegated to the fringes of society.