Shani Shingnapur: The Village Without Locks
Open|September 21, 2015
The truth about Shani Shingnapur, the village without doors and locks.
Omkar Khandekar
Shani Shingnapur: The Village Without Locks

“How much time does it take to loot this village?” I am stumped, unsure if the question is posed as rhetoric. Sayaram Bankar, a resident of Shani Shingnapur and a trustee with the temple that his birthplace is famous for, isn’t too inclined to wait for me as I gather my wits.

“It takes all of 10 minutes,” he declares grandly. Shani Shingnapur is a remote village located 50 km off Ahmednagar district in Maharashtra. It is home to nearly 3,500 people, young and old, and hosts a few hundred thousand tourists every week. For all these visitors, the appeal lies in the temple of Lord Shani, described in Hindu mythology as ‘the son of the sun’, and in the peculiarity of the village known for having no doors or locks to houses because there can be no robbery here. For the residents, this practice is the result of the faith they invest in their deity. Shani, they say, acts as the nucleus of the village, an absorbent of all evil.

Talk to locals and you will be told that robbery is impossible here. They are a hospitable lot, ever ready to allow for photographs and share anecdotes to back up their claims. Riveting as they are, these stories often borrow from second-hand experiences and folklore. But all of them end with the same bottom-line: ‘Dare you stray, Shani will make you pay.’

A house with a sliding door concealed behind a wall (left); the first police station of the village.

This story is from the September 21, 2015 edition of Open.

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This story is from the September 21, 2015 edition of Open.

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