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Teli List of Paragraphs 1. _Strength and distribution of the caste._ 2. _Origin and traditions._ 3. _Endogamous subcastes._ 4. _Exogamous divisions._ 5. _Marriage customs._ 6. _Widow-remarriage._ 7. _Religion. Caste deities._ 8. _Driving out evil._ 9. _Customs at birth and death._ 10. _Social status._ 11. _Social customs and caste penalties._ 12. _The Rathor Telis._ 13. _Gujarati Telis of Nimar._ 14. _The Teli an unlucky caste._ 15. _Occupation. Oil-pressing._ 16. _Trade and agriculture._ 17. _Teli beneficence._ 1. Strength and distribution of the caste _Teli._ [664]--The occupational caste of oil-pressers and sellers. The Telis numbered nearly 900,000 persons in 1911, being the fifth caste in the Province in point of population. They are numerous in the Chhattisgarh and Nagpur Divisions, nearly 400,000 belonging to the former and 200,000 to the latter tract; while in Berar and the north of the Province they are sparsely represented. The reason for such a distribution of the caste is somewhat obscure. Vegetable oil is more largely used for food in the south and east than in the north, but while this custom might explain the preponderance of Telis in Nagpur and Chhattisgarh it gives no reason to account for their small numbers in Berar. In Chhattisgarh again nearly all the Telis are cultivators, and it may be supposed that, like the Chamars, they have found opportunity here to get possession of the land owing to its not being already taken up by the cultivating castes proper; but in the Nagpur Division, with the exception of part of Wardha, the Telis have had no such opening and are not large landholders. Their distribution thus remains a somewhat curious problem. But all over the Province the Telis have generally abandoned their hereditary trade of pressing oil, and have taken to trade and agriculture, the number of those returned as oil-pressers being only about seven per cent of the total strength of the caste. The name comes from the Sanskrit _tailika_ or _taila_, oil, and this word, is derived from the _tilli_ or sesamum plant. 2. Origin and traditions The caste have few traditions of origin. Their usual story is that during Siva's absence the goddess Parvati felt nervous because she had no doorkeeper to her palace, and therefore she made the god Ganesh from the sweat of her body and set him to guard the
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