Tuesday June 16, 2009 at 11:12

Six-year-old Rekha Bae – like all children in the 600-strong nomadic Vadi tribe in western India – will have first been introduced to cobras at the age of two.

All Vadi children complete a ten-year initiation ritual that culminates in the boys becoming fully-fledged performing snake charmers.

‘We explain to the children how we only take a snake away from its natural habitat for a maximum of seven months.

‘Any more is disrespectful to the snake and especially after the charmer and snake have worked together so closely and so intimately.

‘Both are trusting their lives to the other one.’

—from “Indian village where children as young as two are taught to be snake charmers,” the Daily Mail
Six-year-old Rekha Bae – like all children in the 600-strong nomadic Vadi tribe in western India – will have first been introduced to cobras at the age of two.

All Vadi children complete a ten-year initiation ritual that culminates in the boys becoming fully-fledged performing snake charmers.

‘We explain to the children how we only take a snake away from its natural habitat for a maximum of seven months.

‘Any more is disrespectful to the snake and especially after the charmer and snake have worked together so closely and so intimately.

‘Both are trusting their lives to the other one.’

—from “Indian village where children as young as two are taught to be snake charmers,” the Daily Mail


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