Phullen


Phullen is a sub Town in Aizawl district, in the Indian state of Mizoram.

As per constitution of India and Panchayati Raj Act, Phullen is administrated by who are elected representative of the village. It is located 125 km towards east from the district headquarters Aizawl, which is also the State capital of Mizoram. Phullen is a headquarters of , which is bounded by towards west, Ngopa Block towards East, toward south, and Aizawl district sharing boundary with manipur state in north.

History

Phullen was founded by Mizo Chief Vanphunga Sailo, the son of Pawihbawiha Sailo in 1901. After Vanphunga Sailo, his eldest son Awksarala Sailo became the Chief. He ruled Phullen until his death.
Khandaih was considered the biggest village in Mizoram when the British first acquired the land. The village was given importance and was often visited by British officials. The first permanent mission school was established in 1903. It was visited by the Dy Commissioner J Hezlett, ICS in 1912 where Chief Vanphunga welcomed him. The Dy Commissioner told the chief, "Vanphung, ask for anything and I shall give it to you." Vanphunga replied without any prior thought, "As I have several sons, I ask that the rolling range from where River Tuivawl intercepts with River Tuivai to the point where River Tuivawl flows along all the way to River Tuivai be gifted to me so that my sons could branch out in these places." The Dy Commissioner granted this request.
For this reason the reigning chief of Khawlek, a Rahsi named Hrangchhunga moved to Dwarbawn. At age 56, Vanphunga passed away at the village of his concubine, in 1922 due to ‘Dawrnget’ disease. Even though Vanphunga was known for persecuting Christians, he died after converting. Dawrnget disease is what we presently understand as ‘pile problem’. It is said that Sailo chiefs ate too much of meat and many died at a young age. Successor Awksarala shifted to a higher and a more comfortable hill in 1926. This hill was called Phullen Hill. So, Khandaih was renamed to Phullen.

Demographics

Phullen has a population of 1911 of which 954 are males while 957 are females as per Population Census 2011. The population of children with age 0-6 is 288, or 15.07%. The average sex ratio is 1003, which is higher than Mizoram, as it has a state average of 976. The child sex ratio is 1102, which is also higher than Mizoram, with an average of 970.
Phullen has a higher literacy rate than the Mizoram average. In 2011, the literacy rate was 96.24% compared to 91.33% of Mizoram. The male literacy rate stands at 96.45% while the female literacy rate was 96.03%.

Culture

The population of Phullen is made up of different ethnic groups. The culture of the Mizo tribes and its social structure has changed since the arrival of Christianity in Mizoram. Peoples of Phullen celebrate Christmas festival, New Year, Chapchar Kut and other Christian celebrations replacing many tribal customs and practices.
Christianity plays an important role in their cultural, religious and socio-political structure. One such cultural element was Hnatlang, which literally means social work, united labour or community labour. Tribal members who were absent from such social work were penalised—a form of strong peer pressure. Jhum cultivation and raids on neighboring tribes required Hnatlang, the spirit of united labour and equal sharing of the end result.

Administrative structure

Phullen is headed by the Village Council President. Almost all issues regarding the village administration are under this authority. The President and Village Council Members exercised all matters of village administration with regards to law and order and development projects. Some aid groups such like Young Mizo Association and play an important role in social issues, which may reduce the burdens of the village council members.
Phullen is the block headquarters of Phullen Block, headed by the Block Development Officer. 12 villages and 12 village councils make up the Phullen Block.

Landmarks

The main transportation mode of the village is daily private Maxi Cab service between Phullen to Aizawl, and Aizawl to Phullen. There are around 8 maxi cab services between Phullen and the state capital city Aizawl.

Media

Newspaper