By Vikas Meshram* In Sajjangarh block of Rajasthan’s Banswara district, most of the population belongs to tribal communities. The people live scattered across hills and hamlets, with neither adequate irrigation nor stable livelihoods. Families here depend on rain-fed agriculture and daily-wage labor. When rains fail or crops are lost, entire families migrate to cities like Ahmedabad for construction work — sometimes for more than six months a year. The deepest toll falls on women’s health, children’s education, and the social fabric of the family. Climate change has only sharpened these hardships.
By Bharat Dogra For decades, the ravines of the Chambal Valley evoked images of fear and lawlessness, becoming almost synonymous with the reign of dacoit gangs. This reputation, however, began to change with a remarkable experiment in non-violent transformation led by Gandhian thinkers and grassroots activists. What unfolded between the 1960s and 1970s remains one of the most striking examples of negotiated peace and moral persuasion in modern India.