Set against the backdrop of green hills, small waterfalls and clean air, a young man is watching his buffaloes graze.
“Are you conducting any kind of survey?” he asks when I approach him.
I say, “No,” and add that I’m here to report on incidents of malnourishment.
We are in Mokhada taluka located in Maharashtra’s Palghar district where 5,221 children have been identified as severely underweight – the second highest in the state, according to this report.
We are only 157 kilometres from the capital city Mumbai but the lush landscape here is a world apart.
Rohidas belongs to the Ka Thakur community, listed as Scheduled Tribe in Maharashtra. In Palghar district, 38 per cent of the population is tribal. The young buffalo herder is unable to tell me his age, but looks to be in his late 20s. An umbrella is slung on his shoulder, a towel is draped around his neck and he has a wooden stick in hand. He is looking over his two grazing animals as they feed on the grass. “It’s only on rainy days when they get to eat a bellyful,” he says. “In summers they have to wander a lot [to find food].”





