Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Shankar Ramchandra Bhise (born into the Marathi CKP family; [1] 1894–1971), popularly known as "Acharya Bhise" or "Bhise Guruji", was a social worker, educationalist, and novelist devoted to the education and development of the Adivasi community.
Adivasi is the collective term for the tribes of the Indian subcontinent, [3] who are claimed to be the indigenous people of India. [18] [19] It refers to "any of various ethnic groups considered to be the original inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent". [3] However, Tribe and Adivasi have different meanings.
Following is a list of notable Adivasi people organised by profession, field, or focus. Academics. Lako Bodra, Warang Kshiti script creator, writer and activist;
Adhuri Ek Kahani: 16 February 2008 14 November 2005 Ya Sukhano Ya: 15 November 2008 22 May 2006 Avaghachi Sansar: 24 April 2010 20 November 2006 Vahinisaheb: 9 May 2009 12 February 2007 Asambhav: 29 August 2009 17 November 2008 Kulvadhu: 12 June 2010 27 July 2009 Kunku: 4 February 2012 14 June 2010 Maziya Priyala Preet Kalena: 30 July 2011 17 ...
Adivaani aims to document and disseminate knowledge systems, tangible and intangible cultural facets of Adivasis in English and bi-lingual, creating a database of the authentic Adivasi voice, as recounted by them, using diverse multimedia channels, which can be accessible to indigenous people themselves.
Dhodia are an Adivasi people who have been placed in the Indian communities recognition, under Schedule Tribes. [citation needed] The majority of the Dhodia tribes are located in the southern part of Gujarat (Navsari, Surat and Valsad districts), Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Rajasthan.
The Adivasi Will Not Dance: Stories is a collection of short stories by Hansda Sowvendra Shekhar.It is his second book and was nominated for The Hindu Literary Prize in 2016 [1] and included by Frontline (magazine) in August 2022 in a list of 25 books “that light up the path to understanding post-Independence Indian literature.” [2] As of April 2021, this book has been translated into ...
Astitva (transl. Existence / Identity) is a 2000 Indian film made simultaneously in Marathi and Hindi languages, written and directed by Mahesh Manjrekar.The film tells the story of Aditi Pandit, a happily married woman whose husband Srikant Pandit becomes suspicious when she unexpectedly receives a fortune willed to her by her former music teacher, Malhar Kamat.