Dongria Kondh of Niyamgiri: Where forests, food and faith shape daily life
An intimate glimpse into the lives of the Dongria Kondh, one of India’s Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups, in Odisha’s Niyamgiri hills

A trader tips a handful of dried mango slices onto a tarpaulin sheet and examines them carefully. Around him, weighing scales swing into action, motorcycles edge through the crowd and voices rise and fall in a dozen simultaneous negotiations. The Monday santha (weekly market) at Kalyansingpur, a small town at the foothills of Odisha’s Niyamgiri range, is underway.
Women from Dongria Kondh tribe buying dried fish at the Monday shandy at Kalyan Singpur, a small town at the foothills of Odisha’s Niyamgiri range. Photo: K R Deepak | Photo Credit: KR DEEPAK By 10 am, sacks of dried mangoes are piled high across the market. Dongria Kondh families from villages across the hills wait patiently to sell produce gathered from forests and cultivated on distant slopes.
A traditional dagger secured in the hair bun of a woman from the Dongria Kondh Tribe in the Niyamgiri Hills of Odisha. The distinctive practice forms part of the tribe’s cultural identity, with the dagger serving both practical and protective purposes in their daily lives amid the rugged hill terrain. | Photo Credit: KR Deepak The women are easy to spot in the crowd.
Strands of colourful beads cover their necks and chests, multiple small metal earrings frame their faces and a small dagger rests discreetly within a tightly coiled hair bun. Many also carry hand-embroidered stoles, their geometric motifs echoing a long tradition of craftsmanship in the hills.Some have been travelling since dawn to reach the market.
For the next few hours, the market will determine the value of a season’s labour.Wild mangoes, native tur dal, ragi and black gram change hands in quick succession. Conversations drift between crop yields, rainfall and prices.
A little beyond the market, the forested slopes of Niyamgiri rise into the distance. For the Dongria Kondh, one of India's Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs), these hills are both home and livelihood. A woman from Dongria Kondh tribe buying dried fish at the Monday shandy at Kalyan Singpur, a small town at the foothills of Odisha’s Niyamgiri range.
| Photo Credit: KR Deepak Our journey to this region begins from Rayagada, about 40 kilometres from Kalyansingpur. As the road climbs towards Niyamgiri, the terrain changes almost imperceptibly. Fields give way to dense vegetation and the horizon fills with undulating ridges.
Villages appear intermittently along the slopes. Rows of modest concrete homes stand amid fruit trees and cultivated patches. Solar panels gleam from rooftops.
Mobile phones have found their way into the hills; daily life, however, remains strongly anchored in farming, forest produce and community ties. Dongria Kondh tribals head to the weekly Monday shandy at Kalyansingpur, at the foothills of the Niyamgiri Hills in Odisha, where the market remains a vital centre for trade and community interaction. | Photo Credit: KR Deepak The Dongria Kondh inhabit the Niyamgiri hills across Rayagada and Kalahandi districts in southwestern Odisha.
Known for their horticultural traditions and millet cultivation, they share a spiritual bond with Niyam Raja, a deity they believe resides in the hills.A landmark judgementTheir bond with the deity drew national attention more than a decade ago during the prolonged struggle against proposed bauxite mining in Niyamgiri. For years, the community opposed plans linked to Vedanta, arguing that mining would threaten forests, water sources and sacred sites.
Tribals of a primitive tribal group - Dongria Kondh stepping out of their homes in traditional wear for their village festival near Niyamgiri Hills of Odisha. | Photo Credit: KR Deepak In 2013, the Supreme Court delivered a landmark judgment, directing that gram sabhas would decide whether mining could proceed in areas considered sacred by tribal communities. The decision was hailed as a milestone for tribal rights under the Forest Rights Act.
The gram sabhas unanimously rejected the proposal, a verdict that continues to resonate across Niyamgiri.More than a decade later, the issue remains part of everyday conversation. A meal of native dal varieties and plantain fry served on leaf plate fashioned from stitched leaves at Phakeri village in Niyamgiri, Odisha.
| Photo Credit: KR DEEPAK “Our fields, streams and forests give us everything we need. We earn from what we grow and sell. Why would we exchange that for something that could damage the hills?”
asks Babula of Phakeri village. “Niyamgiri is much more than our home. It is what sustains us.”
Mango seasonIf the hills provide, the Monday santha is where their bounty finds a market.This time of year, dried wild mango dominates trade. The fruit arrives from villages such as Phakeri in Parsali Panchayat after being sliced and sun-dried.
Traders inspect the produce carefully before weighing it.“The harvest has been good this year and there is more produce in the market,” says J Bhaskar, a wholesaler. “Last year dried mango sold for around ₹85 a kilo.
This season it is closer to ₹
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