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Arrival of blue king
Down To Earth
|April 16, 2021
How do peaceful people get forced into battles they do not want to fight? In Oonga, a book adaptation of a 2013 film of the same name, writer-director DEVASHISH MAKHIJA undertakes a journey with a little Dongria Kondh boy, who is desperate to see a performance of the Ramayan, to expose the clash between adivasis and mining companies that threaten to destroy their villages, forests and hills. Excerpts

OONGA RUNS through the forest, the wind picking up from behind him as if to welcome him and speed him up. Every tree that he runs past starts to flap its leaves, until a thousand jungle tongues go ululululululululululululululu all at once. But when Oonga reaches a hot little clearing, the wind dies. And the jungle voices fall silent.
There must have been some trees here until recently because their gnarled roots remain, writhing in and out of the ground as if trying to burst free to go look for the trees they once belonged to. In the middle of this clearing a two-legged metal signboard stands silently. It reads ‘india aluminium inc’. As Oonga scurries past it, kicking up those familiar little clouds of dust, the signboard vibrates with a loweerie hum. This signboard knows something, something that the jungle wants to warn Oonga about. But Oonga is in a hurry. He hears nothing except for a small hypnotic voice inside him that keeps chanting “Rama” in time with the beat of his heart. And he sees nothing except for the horizon towards which he scurries, his little legs pumping furiously....
...The Dongria Kondhs believe that the earth knows things before they even happen. The jungle floor had trembled. It had spoken to the leaves through the hum in the roots of the trees. The hum had made the branches quiver. The quivering had made the leaves flap. The leaves had shivered as if caught in a restless breeze. But the air had been quiet. The air had gone still. The air had been trying to tell the villagers all that they needed to know. But the villagers’ ears had been clogged with fear. A heart that carries dread cannot beat in time with the pulsing of the earth.
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