A dimension within Indigenous Heritage & Language
Embracing the unique language, heritage, and traditions of tribal lifestyles.
150 voices speak to this
Positive
Overall Community Sentiment
Our culture is the special identity of our being tribal. This includes our attire, food habits, worship, and lifestyle.
— ANIL KUMAR · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh
We, the tribal people, are identified by our culture.
— अमर जीत · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh
Our tribe can primarily be identified by its spoken language, lifestyle, and attire.
— SHIVRAM YADAV · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh
When we say Adivasi, people identify us as Adivasi by observing our attire, customs, dance, music, and conversations.
— Priti majhi
Our culture is our identity
— Laba Kumar sabar · Bada Baridi, Rayagada, Odisha
The main factors that define our tribe are: the culture, traditions, customs, and folklore, including songs, dances, and musical instruments here.
— Sunil oraon · Ranchi, Jharkhand
Our traditional attire, language, dialect, culture, and customs are our identity which preserve our existence.
— Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh
These are how our tribe dresses, talks, plays, dances, sings, and celebrates festivals. We are different from other communities.
— Priti majhi
People identify our tribe by observing our Khadia language, our attire, our conversations, and our festivals.
— Priti majhi
These are the ways of wearing, talking, playing, dancing, singing, and celebrating festivals in our tribe.
— Priti majhi
Our spoken languages, lifestyle, and attire are the identity of our community.
— Devisingh Solanki · Alirajpur, Madhya Pradesh
We identify ourselves through our words; we are known as Adivasis by our dance, songs, and language.
— Priti majhi
By observing our tribe's language, dances, songs, and worship festivals, one can understand that we are distinct from other communities.
— Priti majhi
In our culture, our way of life, natural environment, social customs, festivals, attire, dance, and music
— Bharati Khandapatra · Mayurbhanj, Odisha
The identity of tribal people is through their songs, dances, folktales, traditional knowledge, language, and culture.
— SUKDEV HEMBRAM
Our culture, language, and origin are our identity.
— Devisingh Solanki · Alirajpur, Madhya Pradesh
We are known through our conversations. We are identified as Adivasis through our dance, songs, and language.
— Priti majhi
Our culture, traditions, customs, food habits, worship, lifestyle, and lineage define our identity.
— Devisingh Solanki · Alirajpur, Madhya Pradesh
They say that by seeing our tribal dances, songs, conversations, games, and festivals, we are different from other communities.
— Priti majhi
Our community's language, dialect, cuisine, lifestyle, customs, attire, traditions, and culture are all distinct from others, and this is our identity.
— Rupesh Maravi · Balaghat, Madhya Pradesh
Through our traditional dance and songs, our culture.
— Gitanjali Bhoi · Karamdihi, Sundargarh, Odisha
We are tribal people, our traditions are distinct, our culture is distinct. We all want to preserve them.
— Parikshit Majhi
Our customs, attire, traditions, spoken language, lifestyle, food habits, and culture are very different from other societies, which is an identity of the tribal community.
— Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh
Seeing all our tribal dances, songs, conversations, games, and festivals, it signifies that we are distinct from other communities.
— Priti majhi
There are many things that define our tribe, such as tribal identity, a deep connection with nature, a collective lifestyle, traditional knowledge, and our connection to folk culture.
— Hemant singh Negi · Noida, Gautam Buddha Nagar, Uttar Pradesh
Our culture, our dance and song
— Laba Kumar sabar · Bada Baridi, Rayagada, Odisha
The main identity of our tribe is our conservative tradition and attire, along with our rituals, spoken language, and prevalent practices related to nature that have been passed down from our ancestors. These are not found in other societies, so this is our identity.
— Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh
Our tribal people have a different kind of dance and song, and all those dance songs are a way for us to preserve our culture.
— Laxmi Bagh · Subdega, Sundargarh, Odisha
Our tribe is mainly nature-worshipping. Our culture, customs, attire, tradition, and spoken language have a distinct identity that is different from others.
— Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh
Our attire, our food, our cooking, our customs, our worship, our traditions, all of this distinguishes us from other tribes.
— Ulapi Sahu · Balangir, Odisha
Tradition and culture are an identity.
— SUKDEV HEMBRAM
By observing our Kharia language, our attire, our conversations, and our festivals, one can identify our community.
— Priti majhi
By looking at our tribal stories, dances, songs, and festivals, you can tell that we are different from other communities.
— Priti majhi
We want to preserve our language, dance, and songs.
— Gitanjali Bhoi · Sundargarh, Odisha
We are tribals, and our food, drink, attire, dance, and music are different from other tribes.
— Bharati Khandapatra · Mayurbhanj, Odisha
Our tribe has many distinct characteristics: be it worship, tradition, or dress and food habits. People don't identify us merely by name; when they come to know us, they partake in our food, and when they understand us, they adopt our attire. This is what makes our tribe unique, and our traditions are distinct.
— Ulapi Sahu · Balangir, Odisha
The factors that define our culture, including our traditions, cultural practices, birth, death, and marriage rituals, are distinct from other tribes, as is our spoken language.
— Sukhdas Mandavi · Mohla, Mohla-Manpur-Ambagarh Chowki, Chhattisgarh
We are different from others because of our language, caste system, customs, songs, and dances.
— Upendra Kumar Mahananda
When people call us Adivasis, they do so by observing our clothing, customs, and traditional dances and songs.
— Priti majhi
A tribe is identified by its language and cultural tradition.
— SUKDEV HEMBRAM
AI-synthesised pieces woven from many community voices on this theme. They may contain errors or interpretation — they're a reflection of the stories, not a record of fact.

In a rapidly changing world, holding onto cultural traditions is essential for identity, community strength, and collective happiness.

In our community, we find our deepest identity and pride in our traditional ways, from our mud houses to our reverence for all creation.

Amidst modern stresses, our community finds strength and identity in safeguarding traditional knowledge and cultural practices through the wisdom of elders.

In Dindori's tribal communities, people are actively preserving their unique lifestyle, diet, customs, and traditions by sharing their heritage and raising awareness.