He’s been a hunter, farmer, basket weaver, and the head of the local council. Mako Lingi is not notching up bragging points. That’s just the way this elder from Arunachal Pradesh’s Idu Mishmi tribe has lived his life.
Like most members of his generation, he too had to learn several skills in order to survive in the remotest parts of Arunachal Pradesh, the eastern-most state in India.
“We did not buy anything in the village. That was not even an option. We had to produce everything ourselves. We farmed, we hunted and we made things,” Lingi, now over 60, says. As he speaks, his hands are busy weaving a new basket.
The Idu Mishmi community is spread throughout Arunachal Pradesh, and sometimes hamlets only consist of two or three families. Lingi is from Ahunli – which has a population of just 11 people – located in the Dibang Valley near Anini Circle.











