By Balakmen Suting
In the Khasi language, diengsympat translates directly to a whip, rod, or switch used for striking, a phrase that carries far more weight in the Khasi household than its blunt translation suggests. Across most households in the Khasi and Jaintia Hills, this simple bamboo switch was less an instrument of cruelty than a quiet symbol of parental authority, one wielded, more often than not, out of love rather than anger.
I grew up with the diengsympat in my own home. My mother kept one, not to strike me at every turn, but to remind me through its mere presence that mischief had consequences. As a child prone to the ordinary wickedness of youth, I feared it. As an adult, I have come to see it differently: not as an emblem of violence, but as a marker of a “Preventive System” that Khasi parents once relied on to steer children away from habitual misdeeds before those habits could take root. It was, in its own paradoxical way, an icon of love.
A Tradition Rooted in the Family
To understand the diengsympat, one must understand the structure it grew out of. Khasi society is matrilineal, and the family home has traditionally been the seat of moral and social formation. Within it, mothers held recognised authority to correct a child’s behaviour, standing in as the tangible presence of parental and, as many Khasi elders would say, divine – authority. Discipline was not incidental; it was woven into the fabric of how a child was expected to pass through the four stages of life namely infancy, childhood, adolescence, and adulthood; each requiring guidance suited to the age.
In that context, the stick was one tool among several. Elders across the Khasi and Jaintia Hills also relied heavily on verbum i.e., words, admonition, storytelling, and the moral weight of community reputation to correct a child’s path. The diengsympat was reserved for more stubborn cases, and its use, ideally, was governed by restraint rather than temper.
A Practice the Law Has Overtaken
Today, that tradition sits uneasily against a modern legal and social framework that has moved decisively away from physical correction. Section 17 of the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009, imposes an absolute ban on corporal punishment and mental harassment of children in Indian schools, including those across the Khasi and Jaintia Hills, with disciplinary and even criminal consequences for violation. The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015, extends similar protection to children in care institutions, and provisions under the Indian Penal Code allow for prosecution where physical correction crosses into injury or cruelty. Notably, Indian law remains comparatively silent on corporal punishment within the home itself, a grey area that continues to animate debate among parents, educators, and child-rights advocates across Meghalaya today, even as courts have increasingly read such acts through the lens of a child’s dignity rather than a parent’s discretion.
This is, in many ways, a welcome shift. Khasi society, like the rest of the country, has had to reckon with the difference between discipline administered “out of genuine love for the good of an individual” and punishment inflicted in anger, a distinction that is easy to state and notoriously difficult to enforce in practice. What one generation remembers fondly as an “icon of love,” a child on the receiving end may recall chiefly as fear.
Nostalgia, Tempered by Reflection
I do not write this to argue for the return of the diengsympat to Khasi homes or classrooms. The law is right to have drawn a firm line, and families across the Khasi and Jaintia Hills are, on the whole, better for having moved toward gentler, more communicative forms of discipline. But I also do not think it does justice to our elders to remember the diengsympat only as an instrument of harm. For many of us who grew up in close-knit Khasi households, it was inseparable from the deeper, more enduring lesson our parents were trying to teach: that love sometimes wears an uncomfortable face.
As Meghalaya continues to modernise its approach to child-rearing and education, the challenge is not to erase this part of our cultural memory but to hold it honestly, acknowledging both its warmth and its harm, while ensuring that the correction our children receive today comes wrapped in dignity rather than dread. The diengsympat may be vanishing from Khasi homes, as it should. What must not vanish is the love that, however imperfectly, it was meant to express.
























