Video | Bridging the gap between Adivasi communities and administration: The Baiga “people of the forest” in Central India: Videovolunteers.org – Chhattisgarh


Published on Sep 24, 2014 | Read the full story >>

The Baiga people are one of the many tribes in Central India. Community Correspondent Dina works closely with this reclusive tribe and in this interview she details how she & her camera bridged the gap between adivasis & administration to bring water for 35 children in an anganwadi.

Traditionally referring to themselves as people of the forest, Baigas prefer to practice shifting cultivation. The steep paths to their villages are often a deterrent to development initiatives reaching their communities. For example, while Amatola village in Kawardha, Chhattisgarh has an anganwadi, the hand pump at the anganwadi has been broken for more than a decade. Anganwadi centers across India serve as a facility where local children under the age of 6 come to study in the day. It also serves as a place where infants and neonatal mothers come in for vaccinations and checkups. For the villagers of Amatola, no access to water belies the functionality of the anganwadi altogether.

Dina has worked closely with the Baiga people of Kawardha, Chhattisgarh, for several years on issues of forest rights and access to amenities. In mid-2013, while filming in Amania village on food security, Dina happened to visit the neighbouring Amatola. On discussing with the people about her work as a Community Correspondent, the villagers told her about their anganwadi. With no handpump available for their daily consumption of water, the employees & children trudged a few kilometers daily to scrounge water from a small puddle.

Says Dina, “I followed the children up the hill, to see where they get water. It’s just a hole in some rocks, from which animals also drink. And in monsoon, the hill is slippery & dangerous. I myself had a bad fall when filming the Impact video & was in severe pain for weeks. You can see in the issue video, how small (sic) the children are. It’s just not right, that they have to go so far for water.” […]

“Being a Community Correspondent really augments the work I do. I’ve learnt to focus on the finer details, like noting down phone numbers of officials in my diary or showing community members the footage I filmed. Also, Mr. Shukla is so impressed with IndiaUnheard, he wants to help in every way possible. It’s important to erase this fear people have of administration – we have to learn to work together. It ensures greater clarity for what I am attempting to achieve, and the confidence gained, and work achieved by both sides are honestly the greatest rewards I could get for creating change.”

Read more – http://bit.ly/1CfOx1x

Interview compiled by Radhika.

Source: ▶ Bridging the gap between Adivasi communities and administration – YouTube
Address : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ddKmV4PxPQ
Date Visited: Fri Oct 24 2014 12:21:43 GMT+0200 (CEST)

[Bold typeface added above for emphasis]

More

Related posts