logo
The forgotten Gonds: How the community in tamil nadu struggles for recognition and basic rights

The forgotten Gonds: How the community in tamil nadu struggles for recognition and basic rights

Time of India30-04-2025
Sameera is only 12 but already knows the cruelty of social discrimination. Bullied by classmates and ignored by teachers, she dropped out of high school last year. "They made me sit separately and laughed at me because I'm Gond," she says. "I still want to study, but not when I am treated like that."
Sameera lives in Gondi Nagar, a tarpaulin-covered splinter settlement in Coimbatore that claims to be Tamil Nadu's only Gond enclave. Home to 1,500 people, it is tucked away in Sundarapuram, just a few kilometres from a bustling city centre. Yet its residents, originally from Central India, live without recognition, basic rights, or a sense of belonging.
You Can Also Check:
Chennai AQI
|
Weather in Chennai
|
Bank Holidays in Chennai
|
Public Holidays in Chennai
They are classified as scheduled tribes in states such as Odisha and Uttarakhand — the 2016 Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950, includes them in Uttarakhand; Odisha recognises subgroups such as the Gond, Gondo, Rajgond, Maria Gond, and Dhur Gond. But in Tamil Nadu, while the govt has launched schemes to uplift tribal communities, the Gonds remain on the fringes.
They lack community certificates, access to govt scholarships, and the right to be counted as part of India's official tribal landscape. Many children never make it to high school, and most families still live in tents. In Gondi Nagar, there are no drains, toilets are few, open defecation is routine, and children fall sick often. Women walk long distances for water. There is no access to healthcare, and girls as young as 14 or 15 are married off — some already mothers before they turn 17.
Most Gonds earn a living selling jari booti (traditional herbal medicine). Some have turned to trading in auto spare parts, eking out a life through odd jobs. "Many women here are training as beauticians and work at salons," says 33-year-old Sangeeta, a school dropout. Families are large, with eight to ten children under one roof — or rather, under a tarpaulin stretched across four bamboo poles.
Gonds are one of India's oldest tribes, once rulers of Gondwana, a region spanning what is today eastern Madhya Pradesh. "Gond", meaning hill dweller, was a label given by Mughal administrators, according to eHRAF, a compendium of world cultures by Yale University. Though the Gonds now live scattered across Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and parts of Odisha and Maharashtra, the ones in Tamil Nadu are almost invisible. Their language, Gondi, is spoken only by a few; most speak Tamil or Marathi.
Over the past three decades, with help from religious group scholarships, the Gondi Nagar community has seen 30 of its members graduate — some now working in MNCs, others as entrepreneurs or social workers. Sanjeet Samuel and Yacoob were among the first and still live in the settlement. "There are 350 families here and more than 400 children," says Sanjeet. "But in the past 10 years, only the children of graduates have made it to high school. Without ST status, we cannot opt for reservation or turn to the Right To Education Act, so education remains out of reach. Parents want better but can't do anything because they have no money. So, most children here are dropouts. Without community certificates, govt jobs and scholarships are ruled out."
Yacoob says education gave him "social status". "Many want a similar change in their lives and in the lives of their children. Even for small things such as filling a form or visiting a hospital, the few of us who studied now help the rest in the community," he says. A corporation primary school was set up for the community, and 75 children have been enrolled, but only about 25 show up daily. Middle and high school children are referred to a corporation high school 2 km away from Gondi Nagar. Irregular attendance is a problem, says a teacher. "Many come to school late, unwashed, and leave by midday," says the teacher. "Parents are not interested in education."
Artist D Anand Abraham, a member of the community, was nine years old when he came to Tamil Nadu in the 1960s and moved across districts such as Salem, Namakkal, Dharmapuri, and Dindigul until they settled in Coimbatore in the 1980s. "We first lived in Podanur, but we were evicted and shifted to Sundarapuram. This area is well connected," says Abraham. A few houses were built under slum clearance board schemes, but as the population grew, many were forced to return to living in tents, cooking and sleeping on the roadside.
The Coimbatore district administration has now enlisted an anthropologist from the Tribal Research Centre, Ooty, to document the Gonds' culture and ancestry. "The study should conclude by May," says Collector Pavankumar G Giriyappanavar. "If they're recognised elsewhere, we can propose reservations here too and issue community certificates." The development plan, says Giriyappanavar, focuses on housing, education, and sanitation. "Land verification is underway to build more homes nearby, ensuring the community isn't relocated. We are planning weekly reviews with NGOs, police, and officials of various departments. Once recognised, the Gonds will be eligible for land rights and welfare benefits under the tribal welfare board."
To reduce school dropouts, a bridge course will train teachers from within the community to teach students in Marathi and Tamil. "This approach was introduced in Tirupur and has had positive outcomes. A temporary classroom will also be set up inside the settlement," says Giriyappanavar. "Sanitation will be improved with new toilets and regular cleanliness drives."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

My family is other animals
My family is other animals

Time of India

time3 days ago

  • Time of India

My family is other animals

Mahabharat swarg Critics of animal lovers dub them frivolous and 'sentimental'. Don't some carry Chihuahuas around in designer handbags, leave fortunes to cats, clone pets and pamper pariahs? In reality, not wearing human-centric blinkers, most animal lovers are pretty clear-headed. They see the big know research says Homo sapiens appeared on this 4.5bn-year-old planet just around 300,000 years ago. They accept kinship with Earth's myriad inhabitants, most plants and animals predating humans. They also respect ancient wisdom about life's inherent harmony and creaturely interdependence — incontrovertible scientific philosophy fetes 'vasudhaiva kutumbakam': the earth/world as one family — peoples, cultures, creatures. Scientific theory echoes this Upanishadic concept: if all life grew from a single-celled ancestor, all life-forms are related. While competitive struggle marks nature and society, Darwin felt sympathy for 'all sentient beings' was man's noblest impulse. Sympathy, in practice, means sharing. Yet every living space — from forests to cities — has been monopolised by humans, a singularly self-absorbed apex predator whose insatiability has no one example suffices to show how much humans depend on organisms deemed 'inferior'. Insect biodiversity dwindling worryingly courtesy anthropogenic natural habitat loss, entomologists warn human society would flounder if all bugs disappeared in an 'insect apocalypse'. No techno-fixes can replace the ecological role insects freely play as food sources, plant pollinators, seed transporters, pest controllers, nutrient recyclers and soil preservers. Deflating humans, biologist EO Wilson said these 'little things…run the world'.India's Constitution validates the shared ethics of ancient wisdom and modern ecology by directing citizens 'to protect and improve the natural environment including forests, lakes, rivers and wildlife, and to have compassion for living creatures'. To be loved may not be an animal right according to many, but to nurture all life is every Indian's fundamental duty. And nowhere is it written that India's stray dogs don't deserve compassion simply because the streets are their home, where cruelty awaits them more than those in court to 'forget the rules', an SC two-judge bench recently said 'no sentiments' should impede removal of Delhi-NCR's strays to 'shelters', seemingly referring to animal lovers' sensitivities. In India, everything from film releases to women's entry into temples can be stymied by the wounded 'sentiments' of some group or other. If animal lovers' voices are less audible, thank the misleading notion that animal welfare/rights is somehow inimical to public lovers have been labouring to remind people that strays are highly intelligent, useful community dogs providing natural pest control, neighborhood security and no-strings-attached companionship. They however know that calculating 'utility'-based 'worth', while ignoring an animal's capacity for joy and suffering, is self-serving anthropocentrism. Like you or I, a dog, donkey or dolphin didn't choose to be born. Yet each enhances the web of life. Dogs, frogs, owls or elephants, non-humans have intrinsic value as links in an evolutionary chain, which speciesists mistake for a prefabricated ladder with Man perched on animals lacked intrinsic value, conservation of whales, tigers or orangutans wouldn't be worth it. Animal lovers' detractors will doubtless say stray dogs aren't comparable to wildlife. Wild animals are majestic, mysterious and multifarious, kept separate from safari-going humans in whom they inspire awe, aesthetic fascination or scientific curiosity. Whereas strays are everywhere, their familiarity breeding more contempt than argument merely proves the humble dog lover's point. If strays aren't comparable to wildlife, they shouldn't be segregated like wildlife is. As many eminent people emphasise, human-dog conflict and risk of disease have humane solutions that don't require driving healthy, non-aggressive dogs off the streets. Crammed into so-called 'shelters', they'd be worse-off than any wild animal in poaching-hit, encroached-upon reserves, national parks and many govt-run orphanages, schools and hospitals provide subpar services, when prisons are overcrowded and understaffed, can anyone seriously believe low-priority dogs won't be hungry, ailing and neglected in underfunded municipal pounds? Is abandonment in an institutional black hole to be the fate of lakhs of affectionate, attachment-forming dogs — India's street-smart 'Indies' world-famous for being clever, vigilant, resilient, loyal and good-natured?An unforgettable episode inis worth recalling. Urged by Indra, Yudhishthir at Mount Sumeru is just a chariot-ride away from heaven. But he wants a dog that faithfully followed him in his difficult journey to go along too. No, says Indra, lowly canines cannot enter heaven. Unwavering, Yudhishthir refuses to attainif it means abandoning a living being. The dog, as we know, turns out to be Dharma in disguise: a test of virtue. But before this startling revelation, the dog in Yudhishthir's eyes is simply a 'devoted' pariah. A stray for whom he rejects heaven — and, ultimately, regains paradise.

Tricolour hoisted in 4 tribal hamlets in north Maharashtra for the first time since Independence
Tricolour hoisted in 4 tribal hamlets in north Maharashtra for the first time since Independence

The Hindu

time5 days ago

  • The Hindu

Tricolour hoisted in 4 tribal hamlets in north Maharashtra for the first time since Independence

Ganesh Pavara had a challenging task on the eve of Independence Day. Managing with a feeble mobile network in his North Maharashtra hamlet, where electricity is yet to reach, he downloaded a video explaining how to tie a flag to a pole, so that it unfurls without a hitch. On Friday (August 15, 2025), leading a group of about 30 children and locals, the 20-something Pavara ensured that his remote Udadya hamlet, nestled in the Satpura range in Nandurbar district, witnessed its maiden flag hoisting. The hamlet, around 500 km from Mumbai and about 50 km from the nearest tehsil, has a population of 400, but has no government school. Pavara teaches at an informal school run by the NGO YUNG Foundation. 'This region is endowed with natural beauty, fertile soil, and the Narmada River flows through it. But being a hilly belt, it is difficult to reach,' says Sandeep Deore, founder of the YUNG Foundation. The foundation, which has been implementing education interventions in the region for three years, decided that the national flag should be hoisted in the hamlets of Udadya, Khaparmaal, Sadri and Manjnipada on Independence Day this year. More than 250 children enrolled in the four schools run by the foundation were present at the flag-hoisting ceremonies on Friday (August 15, 2025), besides local villagers. There is no government school or a gram panchayat office in these hamlets, hence, a flag-hoisting never took place in the last seven decades. The idea was not only to achieve a "first" but also to educate the local people about their democratic rights, said Mr. Deore. "The tribals here live a very independent life, but all of them may not know things like the rights guaranteed by our Constitution," he said. They often get fleeced or exploited while working as labourers or in day-to-day transactions, Mr. Deore pointed out. Many settlements, including Sadri, don't have road connectivity. Bhuvaansingh Pavra, a resident of Sadri, said people have to either walk for several hours or depend on a boat that plies on the Narmada to visit other villages in the area. The school of YUNG Foundation operates on his land. The lack of education is the biggest problem, and the next generation should not suffer from it, he said. The electricity grid has not reached any of the hamlets, and a majority of households depend on solar panels. Locals here speak the Pawari dialect, quite different from standard Marathi or Hindi, making it difficult for outsiders to communicate with them. Mr. Deore said it was difficult initially to win the trust of the people, but once they were convinced about the genuineness of the cause, it was easy to secure their cooperation. The foundation depends on donations to pay its teachers and procure basic infrastructure for its schools. But it can not implement a mid-day meal scheme, like in government schools, as these are informal schools. The anganwadi workers appointed by the government often stay away from these remote hamlets. There are, however, exceptions like Aajmibai, an anganwadi worker at Khaparmaal, who stays in the village allotted to her and does her job diligently.

Tricolour hoisted in 4 tribal hamlets in north Maharashtra for the first time since Independence
Tricolour hoisted in 4 tribal hamlets in north Maharashtra for the first time since Independence

Hindustan Times

time5 days ago

  • Hindustan Times

Tricolour hoisted in 4 tribal hamlets in north Maharashtra for the first time since Independence

Nandurbar, Ganesh Pavara had a challenging task on the eve of Independence Day. Managing with a feeble mobile network in his North Maharashtra hamlet, where electricity is yet to reach, he downloaded a video explaining how to tie a flag to a pole, so that it unfurls without a hitch. Tricolour hoisted in 4 tribal hamlets in north Maharashtra for the first time since Independence On Friday, leading a group of about 30 children and locals, the 20-something Pavara ensured that his remote Udadya hamlet, nestled in the Satpura range in Nandurbar district, witnessed its maiden flag hoisting. The hamlet, around 500 km from Mumbai and about 50 km from the nearest tehsil, has a population of 400, but has no government school. Pavara teaches at an informal school run by the NGO YUNG Foundation. 'This region is endowed with natural beauty, fertile soil, and the Narmada River flows through it. But being a hilly belt, it is difficult to reach,' says Sandeep Deore, founder of the YUNG Foundation. The foundation, which has been implementing education interventions in the region for three years, decided that the national flag should be hoisted in the hamlets of Udadya, Khaparmaal, Sadri and Manjnipada on Independence Day this year. More than 250 children enrolled in the four schools run by the foundation were present at the flag-hoisting ceremonies on Friday, besides local villagers. There is no government school or a gram panchayat office in these hamlets, hence, a flag-hoisting never took place in the last seven decades. The idea was not only to achieve a "first" but also to educate the local people about their democratic rights, said Deore. "The tribals here live a very independent life, but all of them may not know things like the rights guaranteed by our Constitution," he said. They often get fleeced or exploited while working as labourers or in day-to-day transactions, Deore pointed out. Many settlements, including Sadri, don't have road connectivity. Bhuvaansingh Pavra, a resident of Sadri, said people have to either walk for several hours or depend on a boat that plies on the Narmada to visit other villages in the area. The school of YUNG Foundation operates on his land. The lack of education is the biggest problem, and the next generation should not suffer from it, he said. The electricity grid has not reached any of the hamlets, and a majority of households depend on solar panels. Locals here speak the Pawari dialect, quite different from standard Marathi or Hindi, making it difficult for outsiders to communicate with them. Deore said it was difficult initially to win the trust of the people, but once they were convinced about the genuineness of the cause, it was easy to secure their cooperation. The foundation depends on donations to pay its teachers and procure basic infrastructure for its schools. But it can not implement a mid-day meal scheme, like in government schools, as these are informal schools. The anganwadi workers appointed by the government often stay away from these remote hamlets. There are, however, exceptions like Aajmibai, an anganwadi worker at Khaparmaal, who stays in the village allotted to her and does her job diligently. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store