
Tribal women dream green
AT a small stream in India's eastern state of Odisha, indigenous villagers catch eels and fish for a dinner celebrating an annual harvest festival.
The bounty of communal farming, foraging and fishing marks the start of a new season.
But the fish and other resources have been dwindling.
'Nowadays, the rains come late, affecting our farming, leading to a decrease in production,' said Sunita Muduli, a Paraja tribeswoman from Putpondi village.
She stood on freshly tilled fields that would be sown again with millet before the increasingly unpredictable monsoon rains. The indigenous Adivasis have lived in these villages for millennia.
They continue traditional practices of farming millet and rice and foraging leaves and fruit from the forest to make plates, the local brew and more.
With those practices under pressure from a changing climate, they are making their most significant effort yet to speak up for their community's needs, advocating for Indian authorities to protect and restore their lands as the nation of more than 1.4 billion people tries to adapt to a warming world.
Budri Munduli, a Gadaba Indigenous woman, tending to her paddy fields near her homestead in Hatipakhna village, Koraput district. — AP
Women are leading the way.
Muduli and others from 10 villages, with help from a local non-governmental organisation, have surveyed and mapped out resources that are dwindling and what needs restoring.
Comparing state government data from the 1960s with their results, they found that common areas in many of their villages had shrunk by up to 25%.
The women have created what are known as dream maps, showing their villages in their ideal states.
The most prominent of their bright colours is green.
Muduli and others plan to submit their maps and surveys to local government officials, the first step in requesting village development funds to preserve or restore their common areas.
The women estimate that US$2mil might be needed – an ambitious ask when India's poorer regions often struggle to secure and implement government projects.
Still, the women believe they have a 50-50 chance of success.
'We want to make sure these resources are available for our children,' Muduli said.
This is the first time that many of the women are formally leading an outward-facing community effort.
They say it's giving them more confidence in speaking up about community needs.
(Right) Members of the Paroja Indigenous community discussing the maps they have made in Hatipakna village, Koraput district. — AP
'Our forest contains an abundance of diverse resources. Unfortunately, rainfall has reduced, temperatures have risen and our forest cover has dwindled.
'However, once we acquire the rights we deserve, our priority will be to revitalise and flourish our forest,' said Saita Dhangada Majhi of Pangan Pani village.
They seek rights over their common lands that will require outsiders, including authorities, to seek villagers' permission to make any changes to them.
India is among the world's most vulnerable countries to climate impacts.
According to the 2025 Climate Risk Index, the country between 1993 and 2022 was subject to 400 extreme events – including floods, heat waves and cyclones – causing 80,000 deaths and economic losses nearing US$180bil.
Odisha is one of India's poorest states and among the most vulnerable to climate impacts.
A study by researchers from Odisha's Fakir Mohan University published in 2023 found that food production there had decreased by 40% in the last 50 years due to climate change.
Most Indian farmers rely on rain-fed agriculture, with about half of all farmed land dependent on downpours.
As the monsoons become more unpredictable, livelihoods are affected.
India's indigenous people feel those impacts the most as their traditions depend greatly on forests and natural produce, said Bidyut Bidyut Mohanty of the Odisha-based non-profit Society for Promotion of Rural Education and Development.
The organisation helped the Odisha villages with the dream mapping process.
Climate change is affecting 'their very existence', Mohanty said, asserting that they have not contributed to the problem but are paying the price.
The forest commons are 'not only considered the lungs but are also a hidden kitchen for indigenous communities,' he said.
The women's survey found that resources available a decade earlier had either dwindled or disappeared.
In Muduli's village, the number of fruits such as mango, guava, java plum and Indian gooseberry had dropped drastically.
Resources used to make traditional instruments and other items had become more rare.
Climate experts said the Odisha project can be a model to be replicated across India and other nations.
United Nations reports have said 80% of the world's biodiversity lies in regions controlled by indigenous peoples.
Women from marginalised and vulnerable communities are affected the most by climate change, and the indigenous women of Odisha are an inspiration, said Neha Saigal, a gender and climate expert at Bengaluru-based Asar Social Impact Advisors who is familiar with the mapping project.
'They are actually leading from the front,' she said.
Their work could be critical in deciding where India's efforts on climate change should be focused, Saigal added, noting that the country is working on a national adaptation plan.
It is not clear whether the dream maps will become part of that plan.
The women behind them say their project has given them formal understanding of what they and their communities have long known intuitively. They want to pass that on for generations to come.
'The forest is our life,' said Purnima Sisa of Badakichab village.
'We have taken birth in this forest, and one day we will die in the forest. It is our life and livelihood.' — AP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Free Malaysia Today
2 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Iran demands US guarantee it will lift sanctions in nuclear talks
Iran has repeatedly denied seeking nuclear weapons. (AFP pic) TEHRAN : Iran pressed the US today for guarantees that it will drop sanctions as a condition for a nuclear deal, after the White House reportedly sent a proposal it deemed 'acceptable'. With Iran and the US engaged in talks over Tehran's nuclear programme since April, Washington's proposal for a deal came after a leaked UN report said Iran had stepped up production of highly enriched uranium. Iran's top diplomat and lead nuclear negotiator was due to meet the head of the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Cairo today, a day after the report was leaked. Iran has rejected the report, warning it would retaliate if European powers that have threatened to re-impose nuclear sanctions 'exploit' the report. The US and western countries have accused Iran of seeking nuclear weapons, a charge Tehran has repeatedly denied, insisting it needs uranium for civilian power production. Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said on Saturday that he had received 'elements' of a US proposal for a nuclear deal following five rounds of talks mediated by Oman. Today, foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei told a news conference in Tehran: 'We want to guarantee that the sanctions are effectively lifted… 'So far, the American side has not wanted to clarify this issue,' he added. His remarks come a day after a report by the UN agency showed Iran has stepped up production of uranium enriched up to 60% – close to the roughly 90% level needed for atomic weapons. The US envoy in the nuclear talks said last month that the administration of president Donald Trump would oppose any enrichment. 'An enrichment programme can never exist in the state of Iran ever again. That's our red line. No enrichment,' Steve Witkoff told Breitbart News. Iran has vowed to keep enriching uranium 'with or without a deal' on its nuclear programme. The US has sent Iran a proposal for a nuclear deal that the White House called 'acceptable' and in its 'best interest' to accept, US media reported yesterday. The New York Times, citing officials familiar with the diplomatic exchanges, said the proposal calls on Iran to stop all enrichment and suggests creating a regional grouping to produce nuclear power. Iran has held five rounds of talks with the US in search of a new agreement to replace the deal with major powers that Trump abandoned during his first term in 2018.


Borneo Post
2 hours ago
- Borneo Post
Sabah's ethnic literature has potential to flourish within, beyond Malaysia
Dr Henry Bating (front left) during the field research with FIB UNAIR students. KOTA KINABALU (June 2): Sabah's ethnic literature has the potential to flourish both within and outside of Malaysia due to its recognition and support from Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP), as well as its relevance to communities and ethnicities within the BIMP-EAGA zone. Senior lecturer at Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS), Dr Henry Bating, said that the development of Sabah's ethnic literature — including that of Sarawak, the Chinese (Mahua), Indian (Kayvean/Tamil), Siamese descendants, and the Orang Asli — has directly received support from DBP through, among other initiatives, the annual multi-ethnic literature seminars. 'Meanwhile, the connection of Sabah's ethnic literature with communities in the BIMP-EAGA zone allows it to thrive beyond Malaysia's borders,' he said while delivering a guest lecture at the Faculty of Cultural Sciences (FIB), Universitas Airlangga (UNAIR) in Surabaya, Indonesia on May 27. Henry, who also chairs the Kadazandusun Language Unit at the Centre for the Promotion of Knowledge and Language (PPIB) at UMS, views Sabah's ethnic literature — due to its cross-border community ties — as a valuable resource to broaden students' understanding of the associated cultures and communities. 'Cultural and community knowledge can help students master listening, speaking, reading and writing skills, including singing, as part of the Kadazandusun language elective course offered at PPIB UMS,' he added. The guest lecture and field research were part of an ongoing collaboration between FIB UNAIR and PPIB UMS that began a year ago. Two senior lecturers from PPIB participated in the guest lecture program. Henry presented a lecture titled 'Sabah Ethnic Literature and Multiculturalism in Malaysian and Indonesian Literature', while Dr Shakiratul Hanany Abdul Rahman delivered a lecture on 'Malay Drama in the Teaching of English in Malaysian Secondary Schools'. As part of the development of Sabah's ethnic literature, the Momogun Writers Association of Malaysia (Momogunsia) once organized a regional literature seminar involving presenters from the University of the Philippines (UP), Universiti Brunei Darussalam (UBD) and the Central Kalimantan Cultural Board on October 22, 2016, at SMK Matunggong. This cross-border seminar was financially and logistically supported by DBP and the Office of the Kota Marudu Member of Parliament, which was then represented by Datuk Seri Dr. Maximus J. Ongkili.

Malay Mail
9 hours ago
- Malay Mail
Snakes on a plane: Indian customs nab passenger with 44 venomous vipers from Thailand
MUMBAI, June 2 — A passenger smuggling dozens of venomous vipers was stopped after flying into the financial capital Mumbai from Thailand, Indian customs officials said. The snakes, which included 44 Indonesian pit vipers, had the snakes 'concealed in checked-in baggage', Mumbai Customs said in a statement late Sunday. 'An Indian national arriving from Thailand was arrested,' it added. The passenger, details of whom were not released, also had three Spider-tailed horned vipers -- which are venomous, but usually only target small prey such as birds — as well as five Asian leaf turtles. Mumbai Customs issued photographs of the seized snakes, including blue and yellow reptiles squirming in a bucket. The snakes are a relatively unusual seizure in Mumbai, with customs officers more regularly posting pictures of hauls of smuggled gold, cash, cannabis or pills of suspected cocaine swallowed by passengers. However, in February, customs officials at Mumbai airport also stopped a smuggler with five Siamang gibbons, a small ape native to the forests of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. Those small creatures, listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, were 'ingeniously concealed' in a plastic crate placed inside the passenger's trolley bag, customs officers said. In November, customs officers seized a passenger carrying a wriggling live cargo of 12 turtles, and a month before, four hornbill birds, all on planes arriving from Thailand. In September, two passengers were arrested with five juvenile caimans, a reptile in the alligator family. — AFP