The afternoon sun filters through the canopy as I watch an elderly man's weathered hands transform green palash leaves into a sturdy plate—a centuries-old skill passed from hand to hand, heart to heart—knowledge that modern science is only now beginning to fully appreciate. “Zero waste,” Kartikey Singh, my naturalist from Samode Safari Lodge whispers with a hint of pride in his voice. “Everything returns to the earth.” There was a kind of quiet genius in it: no factories, no plastics, no waste. Just leaves, twigs, and a deep understanding of what the land could offer—and what it needed in return.
Celebrating People
Science And Sustainability With The Baiga Tribe Of Bandhavgarh
At the Mardari village in Bandhavgarh, although the Baiga tribals have forsaken tattoos in favour of modernisation, they continue to uphold traditions of science and sustainability
The Baiga are an ethnic group found in central India primarily in the state of Madhya Pradesh
Photo: By Simon Williams / Ekta Parishad - Ekta Parishad/Wikimedia Commons
The Baiga are an ethnic group found in central India primarily in the state of Madhya Pradesh
Photo: By Simon Williams / Ekta Parishad - Ekta Parishad/Wikimedia Commons

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