
Indigenous women are drawing ‘dream maps' to protect forests in India
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.
Women are leading the way. Muduli and others from 10 villages, with help from a local nongovernmental 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 per cent.
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 $2 million (€1.8mn) 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.
'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 $180 billion (€160bn).
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 per cent 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 nonprofit 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 per cent 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.
'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.'

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


Euronews
an hour ago
- Euronews
7 stunning photos at the intersection of climate, science and health
'A picture is worth 1,000 words, and that means they can really change perceptions of different things in society,' says Elizabeth Wathuti, a young Kenyan climate activist and one of the judges of this year's Wellcome Photography Prize. On Thursday, the competition from Wellcome Trust - a UK-based charitable foundation focused on health research - revealed its top 25 photos, ahead of the winners being announced next month. The pictures are deeply evocative, capturing thousands of words' worth of emotion and information about pressing global issues. The health impacts of climate change emerge as a major theme, as well as the resilience and creativity with which people are responding. After the awards ceremony on 16 July, all 25 photos will be free to view at an exhibition at the Francis Crick Institute in London, running from 17 July until 18 October 2025. We have written many thousands of words about air pollution, climate migration, microplastics, water crises, and eco-innovations at Euronews Green over the years. But the seven photos below render these subjects in stunning and unfamiliar detail. This aerial picture is of the former village of Geamăna in the Lupșa area in Transylvania, Romania. In 1977, the Romanian president, Nicolae Ceaușescu, ordered the evacuation of the village's 1,000 inhabitants to clear the way for the creation of a large lake for the storage of toxic waste from the nearby Roșia Poieni copper mines. Residents were promised they would be remunerated and relocated nearby, but were in fact moved hundreds of miles away and did not receive adequate support. Romanian photographer Alexandru Radu Poposecu created this image to highlight how the beauty of the lake, known as the 'Geamăna environmental disaster', is at odds with its toxicity. The lake continues to grow by about 100cm a year, and affects the quality of the local groundwater. This image captures a group of local people collecting water from a riverbed in Purulia, a district in West Bengal, India. Due to climate change, the monsoon season in the Indian subcontinent is becoming more irregular, causing rivers to dry out. During the dry season, many villages in this area regularly run out of drinking water, and only minimal amounts can be collected from the riverbed. Indian photographer Sandipani Chattopadhyay seeks to draw attention to the stark reality of the water crisis and the growing threat to human existence. Nuraine and her mother live in the city of Dhaka in Bangladesh. Nuraine wanted to have the experience of eating a picnic outside in nature, but due to rapid urbanisation, there are very few parks or green spaces left. So her mother decided to recreate a 'nature experience' on the roof of their apartment building. One of the main reasons people are moving into cities is because of the increase in extreme weather events and natural disasters, particularly affecting Bangladesh. Every day, 2,000 climate migrants take up permanent residence in Dhaka, and they now comprise close to half of the total population. This is causing infrastructure challenges for the city. Mithail Afrige Chowdhury, a local photographer, draws our attention to this tender scene and contrasts it with the reality of urban expansion visible around them. Following the 'Striking Solo Photography' shortlisted pictures above, this remarkable photo has prevailed in 'The Marvels of Scientific and Medical Imaging' category. It is the first successful non-invasive image of its kind, which shows the presence of plastic particles – visible in turquoise – deep inside a live mouse. Patrick and Ogunlade, UK-based biomedical researchers, developed a photoacoustic imaging method using lasers and the resulting sound waves they generate when interacting with a sample, to visualise these microplastics. The accumulation of microplastics in the human body is a growing global health concern. But current methods of imaging microplastics are invasive, hindering research into how they affect our wellbeing. So this picture represents one of the first steps towards developing techniques and devices to take images of human tissues, which can then be used for clinical investigations into the health impacts of microplastics. Another contender in the Biomedical Imaging category is this unusual shot of Brixton Road in south London. It doesn't bear an obvious resemblance to the bustling high street, but tells a deeper story about life and death for residents there. Fine-particle pollution kills seven million people a year worldwide and is linked to numerous health issues, including asthma and dementia. This image shows magnified pollution particles from Brixton Road, visualising an otherwise 'invisible killer'. It was a team effort. UK-based artist Marina Vitaglione collaborated with scientists Paul Johnson, Laura Buchanan, Stephanie Wright and Joseph Levermore from Imperial College London's Environmental Research Group to collect air-pollution samples throughout the city. Vitaglione then photographed these samples, enlarged through a microscope, and produced a cyanotype print from the digital negatives of the close-up image. This 19th-century camera-less photographic process involves coating paper with photosensitive chemicals and exposing it to sunlight. The resulting cyan-blue tones ironically echo the clear skies that pollution threatens. Two of the five shortlisted photographers in the third category, 'A Storytelling Series', are also fundamentally telling climate stories. Located in Liguria, Italy, Nemo's Garden is the world's first underwater greenhouse system. It was created to research farming solutions for areas where growing plants may be challenging in the future. Giacomo d'Orlando's photographs set out to reveal how the biospheres work. The images also highlight some of the discoveries that are being made about the plants. One of which is that they contain higher levels of antioxidants than the same plants grown on land, which could be useful in the development of new medicines. By sharing this groundbreaking project, d'Orlando invites us to consider how an underwater vegetable garden might help us face the new challenges brought by climate change. Slovenian documentary photographer Ciril Jazbec's 'A dream to cure water' series transports the viewer to Peru, home to the majority of the world's tropical glaciers. But 40 per cent of their surface area has disappeared since the 1970s because of climate change. He explores the health impacts of rapidly melting glaciers in the Cordillera Blanca mountain range, where this is threatening water supplies and contaminating rivers with the heavy metals that accumulate over centuries within glaciers. As glaciers are a crucial water source for mountain farming communities, this poses a serious threat to the health of local people and their livestock. Jazbec took these images of the ways in which local people are combining ancestral knowledge with scientific monitoring equipment in an effort to protect the water and sustain their livelihoods. 'Understanding how to share and transmit ethically produced images is of the deepest importance,' says Daniella Zalcman, photographer and founder of Women Photograph, and another Wellcome Photography Prize 2025 judge. 'Not only are people trusting us with their stories of their vulnerable and traumatic experiences, we're communicating those experiences for the collective human record.'


France 24
2 days ago
- France 24
Air India says plane 'well-maintained' before crash
Indian authorities are yet to detail what caused the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner to hurtle to the ground in the western city of Ahmedabad, where at least 38 people were also left dead. As investigators attempt to retrieve data from the plane's black boxes -- the cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder -- the airline said that no problems were detected with the jet before the disaster. "The plane was well-maintained, with its last major check in June 2023," Air India said in a statement. "Its right engine was overhauled in March 2025, and the left engine was inspected in April 2025. Both the aircraft and engines were regularly monitored, showing no issues before the flight," the airline said. The London-bound jet burst into a fireball when it smashed into a residential area of Ahmedabad moments after takeoff. Initial checks since the crash on Air India's Dreamliners "did not reveal any major safety concerns", the country's civil aviation regulator said Tuesday. Air India said there were 169 Indian passengers, 53 British, seven Portuguese and a Canadian on board the flight, as well as 12 crew members. The airline on Thursday said the pilots were accomplished flyers. "The flight was led by Captain Sumeet Sabharwal, a highly experienced pilot and trainer with over 10,000 hours flying widebody aircraft," it said. "First Officer Clive Kunder, had over 3,400 hours of flying experience." While investigators try to piece together what went wrong, families of dozens of victims are still waiting for their loved ones to be identified. As of Thursday, 210 victims have been identified through DNA testing, state health minister Rushikesh Patel said.


France 24
5 days ago
- France 24
🌟The Bright Side: Tribes from India visit UK museum to bring home ancestors' remains
Tribes from the Indian state of Nagaland have held talks at a museum in Britain to secure the return of ancestral remains taken during the colonial era and put on display for decades. Skulls and other body parts were often brought from Asia, Africa and elsewhere to Britain and to other former colonial powers, as "trophies", to be traded, displayed or studied. There are growing calls worldwide for such remains, as well as stolen art, to be returned to their communities as part of a centuries-old movement demanding reparations for colonialism and slavery. Just last month, skulls of 19 African Americans were returned to New Orleans from Germany to where they were sent for examination by phrenology – the now discredited belief that the shape and size of a head shows mental ability and character, especially when applied to different ethnic groups. Historians say some of the remains were taken by colonial officers from burial sites and battlefields in Nagaland, where for centuries headhunting was common practice. Others were looted in acts of violence. The Pitt Rivers Museum, which displays collections from Oxford University, holds the world's largest Naga collection, including thousands of artefacts, 41 human remains, primarily skulls, and 178 objects that contain or may contain human hair. It removed all remains from public display in 2020, including ancestors of Dolly Kikon, an anthropologist from Nagaland's Lotha-Naga tribe, who teaches at the University of California and who travelled to Oxford last week. "For the first time, there is a Naga delegation (at the museum) to connect and to reclaim our history, our culture and our belongings," Kikon, 49, told Reuters. Museum director Laura Van Broekhoven said the timing of the return of the remains was still uncertain due to the bureaucracy involved. The museum is also in talks with other groups to facilitate more items being returned. The 23 Naga representatives, including elders of several tribes, repeated calls by British lawmakers and campaigners for the government to legislate to protect ancestral remains. Some European countries, such as the Netherlands, have national policies for the repatriation of human remains. Opponents of reparations argue that contemporary states and institutions should not be held responsible for their past. Advocates say action is needed to address the legacies, such as systemic and structural racism. "One way to confront the colonial legacy is for indigenous people to be able to tell our own stories," Kikon said.