Monday, August 1, 2011

[Desi Tarka] LIFESTYLE OF NOMADIC IN INDIA DINESH VORA

 
LIFESTYLE OF NOMADIC IN INDIA
DINESH VORA

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A roof overhead is new for Punkti, a shepherd's daughter in Rajasthan.
Family men still live under the stars, staying close to their animals.
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Drumbeats draw a crowd as acrobats from the Nat nomadic group
perform outside Jodhpur in Rajasthan.
Open space keeps shrinking for itinerant herders. In the Kutch
region of Gujarat,
construction of a coal-fired power plant forces Sangbhai
and his buffalo to detour down paved roads and past boundary
walls to find what grazing land remains.
file://nomadsdineshvora/
During the dry season herding activity slackens, and the Rabari
alter their routines.
In Rajasthan, women turn to grueling wage labor,
earning two dollars a day for digging a reservoir.
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Men hunker down to shear sheep. Once the rains return,
they'll set out with their flocks,
depending on landowners for access to water and pasture.
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Pleased with his day, a Rabari herdsman leads his animals to the spot
where they'll bed for the night.
He'll sleep with them outdoors on a simple cot called a charpai.
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A small boy practices with a slithery partner as his parents, members of the Vadi snake-handling community, watch and teach.
The Vadi, like many nomadic entertainers, increasingly depend on begging to survive.
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All Ali the magician and his two partners need for their escape act is a
patch of dirt, a cluster of fascinated children,
and parents who will throw a few rupees at the performers' feet.
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Sand slows the progress of a group traveling by cart and foot. At the rear men push and a camel peers, while in front a mother carries the youngest child.
Their destination is a village in Rajasthan where the men will perform one of the world's oldest arts: storytelling.
A banner depicting figures in the tale will be unfurled, a fiddle will scratch, and voices will sing and chant of kings and gods.
file://nomadsdineshvora/
The scavenged tarp on their cart—and home—may advertise modernity,
but the skills and lowly status of the Gadulia Lohar haven't changed for generations.
Once weapon-makers for royalty, the blacksmiths now make
and repair tools at roadside camps.
file://nomadsdineshvora/
A Rabari woman in Gujarat visits the grave of an ancestor.
A power plant dominates what was once open grazing land surrounding
the burial ground.

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