When Dilip Wagh left for work at 2 in the afternoon on June 22, he waved a habitual goodbye to his wife, Mangal and daughter Roshni. The next he saw them was two days later, wrapped in white sheets at a local hospital.
“When I returned home that evening, they weren’t there,” he said, sitting in his dimly lit hut in the remote Adivasi hamlet of Kadvyachimali in Maharashtra’s Palghar district.
Thinking they were missing, Dilip had begun looking for 30-year-old Mangal and three-year-old Roshni around the village. He asked his elder daughter, Nandini, 7, if she had seen them. “But she had no idea,” said Dilip, 35. “When they didn’t return that night, I got a bit worried.”
The next morning, Dilip began a frantic search that extended beyond his settlement. On foot, he visited a few nearby hamlets – but did not find them. “In the afternoon, I met Mangal’s aunt in a neighbouring hamlet to see if she knew anything,” said Dilip, sitting next to the empty vessels arranged along a muddy, damp wall. “But she didn’t have any idea either.”
Dilip, who belongs to the Katkari community, returned home that night – but Mangal and Roshni were still missing. Only Nandini was there. The next morning, on June 24, he resumed his search with renewed hope, expecting to find some leads about where they might be. And that afternoon, he did. It wasn’t the lead he was hoping for.
About four kilometres from Kadvyachimali, which is in the revenue village of Dehare in Jawhar taluka, a woman and a little girl had been found dead in the forest. Their photos had been circulated on WhatsApp. A boy Dilip bumped into on the outskirts of his village had those on his phone. “When he showed me those photos, I told him it is my wife and daughter,” recalled Dilip.








