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thumb|Rabari, a caste of Camel Herders- Tashrih al-aqvam (1825) thumb|Rabari women wearing brightly colored ghagras (skirts), odhnis (veils), and bangles.
thumb|Rabari, a caste of Camel Herders- Tashrih al-aqvam (1825) thumb|Rabari women wearing brightly colored ghagras (skirts), odhnis (veils), and bangles.
The Rabari people (also known as Rebari, Raika, Desai and Dewasi people) are a caste group from Rajasthan, Kutch region of Gujarat, Maharashtra, Haryana, Punjab of India and the Sindh province of Pakistan. They were traditionally camel herders but have now taken to rearing sheep and cattle. ==Origin== thumb|Rabari from Baroda state, 1911 Rabari claim Baluchistan as the place of their origin. According to Sigrid Westphal-Helbusch, significant migrations of Rabaris took place between 12th to 14th century, when they moved from Marwar to Sindh and Kutch. The migrations of Rabaris in fact follow similar paths as those of Rajputs and Charans, two other migrant group in this region, indicating intertwined histories. Westphal-Helbusch ascribes the goddess worship traditions of Rabaris to the Charan influence. thumb|Vintage Rabari Bag with heavy embroidery that is unique to Rabaris of Western India. Such bags are used for gifting at wedding ceremonies.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).