Project Description


Budhan-Stories began in response to the global Covid-19 pandemic to capture the experiences of India’s most marginal indigenous and nomadic communities through theatre, film and digital technology, creating an archive of memory against erasure. This project has since grown into an ambitious training programme for young leaders from marginalised communities, developing a practice of research-based filmmaking that addresses the asymmetries in the public sphere, and communities’ exclusion from knowledge production.

Budhan-Stories is a community-led project initiated by a collective of indigenous artists and filmmakers belonging to the Chhara DNT community and associated with Budhan Theatre and Nomad Movies. The project was co-designed by Dakxin Bajrange (award-winning filmmaker, playwright and director of Nomad Movies), Alice Tilche (anthropologist, curator and filmmaker), and Akshay Khanna (theatre practitioner, lawyer and medical anthropologist). Budhan-Stories has involved numerous partnerships over the years, most importantly with the Adivasi Academy and Bhasha Research and Publication Centre, with the Conflictorium-Museum of Conflict, and with the many communities and artists that it engages. The project has been generously supported by funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council UK, the British Academy, and the School of Museum Studies at the University of Leicester.

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In May 2020, during the first wave of India’s Covid-19 pandemic, a collective of indigenous artists and filmmakers associated with Budhan Theatre and Nomad Movies, and belonging to the Chhara DNT community, began an extensive project of documentation of the lockdown and post-lockdown experiences of their communities through theatre, film and digital technology. They produced a series of video podcasts ( Season 1 and Season 2 ) in indigenous languages and circulated through social media platforms, addressing the experiences of pain and loss, telling the stories that did not find space in mainstream public spheres, and providing information and entertainment in a time of crisis, through a blend of performances, poetry, songs, and documentary forms.

Since then, the project piloted an Indigenous Creative Leadership Programme aimed at training young leaders from marginalised communities in filmmaking – a vision with the potential for training thousands of filmmakers, fundamentally changing public spheres and the understanding of our historical moment.  Season 3 showcases the work and vision of young upcoming artists and activists, and includes fiction and non-fiction work based on robust research.

 In 2023-2024 Budhan-Stories will consolidate and expand this training programme by working with communities in India’s borderlands – the sea, the desert and the mountains – to further develop its training programme and produce research-based films. These are sites of ecological disruption that are becoming increasingly unliveable with rising sea beds, uncharacteristic rainfall patterns, increased heat and desertification, - where traditional patterns of migration, livelihood, nutrition and shelter are being challenged, and where communities are having to adapt fast to new conditions of life. We are also looking to launch a Nomad Film Festival to feature indigenous films from India and beyond, so watch this space!

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India’s DNT communities

India counts one of the largest indigenous populations in the world, also known as Adivasis (original inhabitants). More than 80 million people are officially classified as Scheduled Tribes (STs) and around 110 million people as DeNotified Tribes (DNTs) –- communities that were ‘notified’ as born criminals during British colonial rule under the 1871 Criminal Tribes Act. 

Despite de-notification following India’s independence, the brand of criminality and the lack of citizenship rights and entitlements, continues to shape these groups’ interaction with the state. For DNT groups in particular, the brand of criminality continues to drive their interaction with the state and negatively affects their ability to access basic state provisions –from schools to food and health services. This drives the systemic discrimination when dealing with doctors, schools and the police, and contributes to their structural precariousness in the labour market, as a large part of the community finds work as manual labourers, agricultural and construction workers, performers, sex workers and street entertainers at the margins of India’s informal economy. Their economic poverty is further compounded by the stigma associated with their identity. The representation of these communities in mainstream public spheres is, in fact, marked in very particular tropes (the noble savage, the fetishised snake charmer, the thug, the thief) that reinforce the conditions of their exclusion economically, politically and socially. 

India has been affected heavily, as well as unequally, by the pandemic, which has brought specific challenges to its most vulnerable populations. During the first wave, DNT and Adivasi communities mostly suffered from the disastrous effects of India’s unannounced lockdown when, with four hours’ notice, millions of people who live on the breadline were left to fend for themselves. During India’s devastating second wave, when the country faced a shortfall of oxygen, vaccines, medicines and wood to burn the dead, the virus was left to spread to remote rural areas and urban slums, where people died without diagnosis or care. Yet, the suffering of India’s poor has also been rapidly obliterated from collective public memory. With most reporting focussed on national centres, there has been hardly any way of knowing what happened at India’s margins other than from the images that people themselves produced and circulated through social media.

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Photography by Shiwangni