Their calloused hands deftly weave ropes that tether domesticated animals like cows and buffaloes. They live in leaf-thatched houses on the edges of forests. Their knowledge of Indigenous plants in the Jharkhand and Odisha forest belts, where they live, surpasses any others. The Birhor community is a marginal upajati who speak the Birhor language, which is low in the hierarchy of Austro-Asian languages and will soon be extinct if not for the laborious efforts of language crusader Bikram Jora, a linguist with a doctorate from Delhi University.
Heritage
Tongues To Tunes: How Activists In Jharkhand Are Saving Tribal Languages Through Community Broadcasting
From community radio to children's books, meet the champions leading a quiet revolution to keep their languages alive

The Asurs were once iron smelters and now practice agriculture
Photo: Subham Dutta
The Asurs were once iron smelters and now practice agriculture
Photo: Subham Dutta

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