© 2024 KPCW

KPCW
Spencer F. Eccles Broadcast Center
PO Box 1372 | 460 Swede Alley
Park City | UT | 84060
Office: (435) 649-9004 | Studio: (435) 655-8255

Music & Artist Inquiries: music@kpcw.org
News Tips & Press Releases: news@kpcw.org
Volunteer Opportunities
General Inquiries: info@kpcw.org
Listen Like a Local Park City & Heber City Summit & Wasatch counties, Utah
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

It's Bananas: India Hires 'Monkey Mimics' To Scare Away Real Ones

A monkey sits on a car and eats an orange snatched from a fruit vendor in New Delhi in 2012. The city has tried numerous schemes to bring its large and rambunctious monkey population under control. Now it is employing men to mimic the calls of the aggressive langur monkey.
Sajjad Hussain
/
AFP/Getty Images
A monkey sits on a car and eats an orange snatched from a fruit vendor in New Delhi in 2012. The city has tried numerous schemes to bring its large and rambunctious monkey population under control. Now it is employing men to mimic the calls of the aggressive langur monkey.

In the elegant neighborhoods of central New Delhi, monkeys perch on water tanks, prance on the balustrades of the manicured homes of government VIPs and sift through garbage bins.

The horde seems only momentarily disturbed by the ear-piercing screech of Mahendra Nath.

Having the company of a langur [monkey] was effective. You would do the job better together. It was like a partner. But now it's just men, aimlessly running around chasing monkeys.

His quick succession of "ah, ah, ah's" followed by a staccato of "oo, oo, oo's," punctuates the air, mimicking the gray-colored langur monkey that can scare off the nettlesome Rhesus monkeys that swing in the trees of this leafy glade.

Nath patrols a section of the city that houses India's president, the Parliament, Cabinet ministers and Supreme Court justices.

Nath's caterwauling is Delhi's latest scheme to curb the enthusiasm of its pesky primates that also prowl the halls of government ministries, terrorizing bureaucrats.

Dr. P.K. Sharma, the officer of health in the New Delhi Municipal Council, oversees the monkey menace and says the hairy creatures carry rabies, can be aggressive and pose a threat to public health.

Monkeys mob a devout Hindu man with a packet of biscuits in New Delhi on Jan. 30. Hindus believe that feeding monkeys brings them the blessings of the Hindu monkey god, Hanuman.
Saurabh Das / AP
/
AP
Monkeys mob a devout Hindu man with a packet of biscuits in New Delhi on Jan. 30. Hindus believe that feeding monkeys brings them the blessings of the Hindu monkey god, Hanuman.

A Source Of Chaos ... And A Hindu God

Sharma says religious beliefs complicate efforts to control the chaos the monkeys create. Many Indians consider primates the incarnation of the Hindu monkey god, Hanuman, and therefore feed them, which encourages monkeys to frequent public places and invade private homes.

Reporting monkey raids, Sharma says, residents complain that " 'they've just taken away my clothes,' or ... 'they have opened the fridge' ... and 'they've taken out the food.' "

The monkeys have also been known to intimidate fruit vendors and get intoxicated on stolen whiskey. Sharma says when they fail to find food, they can raise a rumpus.

"They usually entered into the offices. And they destroyed many things like ... the computers, the wires, the electricity wires," Sharma says. "But sometimes if the door is closed and if the monkey's inside, he will make havoc of the room because he feels that he's imprisoned."

The Delhi municipality tried capturing the monkeys and sending them to sanctuaries. But these rapid breeders rapidly filled up the shelters that wanted no more of them.

Culling has been ruled out.

Sharma says sterilization is tricky, too.

"It's very difficult to catch a monkey and then operate on him," he notes.

Mahendra Nath is one of 40 men in New Delhi who mimic the sounds of the aggressive langur monkey to scare away the smaller Rhesus monkeys that menace the city. The sling shot contains no actual shot — the aim is just to frighten away the monkeys.
Julie McCarthy / NPR
/
NPR
Mahendra Nath is one of 40 men in New Delhi who mimic the sounds of the aggressive langur monkey to scare away the smaller Rhesus monkeys that menace the city. The sling shot contains no actual shot — the aim is just to frighten away the monkeys.

Langur Monkeys Are Banned From The Job

Officials found success when bigger, more aggressive langur monkeys were deployed to frighten off the smaller Rhesus monkeys.

Tethered by handlers, langurs patrolled the streets for years, including the grounds of the U.S. Embassy. But animal rights activists deplored their use, and the practice was recently banned.

With the long-tailed langurs barred from duty, their impersonators were promoted.

Mahendra Nath, 26, is just one of the 40 men the city has hired to replicate the call of the langurs. Many of them, like Nath, are members of the Medari caste that has for generations tamed monkeys for human entertainment.

Monkeys help themselves to fruits handed out by devout Hindus on a foggy morning in New Delhi in 2012. Food is handed out to monkeys by devotees on Tuesdays, the day of the Hindu monkey god, Hanuman, as an act to rid themselves of sin. Those efforts are at odds with the city's attempt to keep the monkeys away from Delhi's human residents.
Saurabh Das / AP
/
AP
Monkeys help themselves to fruits handed out by devout Hindus on a foggy morning in New Delhi in 2012. Food is handed out to monkeys by devotees on Tuesdays, the day of the Hindu monkey god, Hanuman, as an act to rid themselves of sin. Those efforts are at odds with the city's attempt to keep the monkeys away from Delhi's human residents.

Fellow mimic Pramod Kumar laments that their caste has evolved from training langurs to copying their call.

"Having the company of a langur was effective. You would do the job better together. It was like a partner," he says. "But now it's just men, aimlessly running around chasing monkeys."

Kumar adds that langurs kept the monkeys away for three to four days.

Watching Nath dart between trees, screeching, he's at pains to scare the monkeys for more than five minutes, especially the cubs. He says they are the most mischievous and the least afraid.

"We have to cultivate fear in them. Because they just are not scared. They haven't seen a langur," he says. "So we have to chase them, just hound them."

Kumar, 32, recalled how Delhi's deputy mayor fell from his balcony to his death trying to fight off a monkey assault in 2007.

Kumar himself witnessed a female monkey viciously attack an entire fire brigade attempting to rescue her stranded cub. He says he's also been called to chase monkeys at the home of Sonia Gandhi, the country's best known politician after Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has his own posse of monkey-spookers.

A macaque with a baby on its back balances on power lines above a parking lot in downtown New Delhi in 2012. Thousands of monkeys live on the rooftops downtown, but authorities do not kill them because many Indians consider monkeys sacred.
Roberto Schmidt / AFP/Getty Images
/
AFP/Getty Images
A macaque with a baby on its back balances on power lines above a parking lot in downtown New Delhi in 2012. Thousands of monkeys live on the rooftops downtown, but authorities do not kill them because many Indians consider monkeys sacred.

Protecting The Prime Minister

Vinod Kumar Singh reports for evening duty at Modi's residence. He's philosophical about the stream of schemes authorities have hatched to keep the monkeys at bay.

"I may work at the prime minister's office, but I have no job security," says the 44-year-old former langur handler whose vocal styling sounds nothing like the bark of a long-tailed langur.

Mahendra Nath, however, appears positively inspired on the job and says his biggest hazard "is a sore throat."

He gargles night and day in order to perform.

Both Nath and Kumar pray at the temple of the monkey god on Saturdays even as they shoo monkeys away during the week.

"Faith and work are different," Nath says. His faith tells him to worship a monkey ... while his work, which pays less than $120 a month, says "it's just another animal."

You can follow NPR's Julie McCarthy on Twitter @JulieMcCarthyJM

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Julie McCarthy has spent most of career traveling the world for NPR. She's covered wars, prime ministers, presidents and paupers. But her favorite stories "are about the common man or woman doing uncommon things," she says.