From wandering in the forest as a young girl with little interest in studies, to becoming a journalist and shining a light on the lives of tribals through a social media platform, Jayanti Buruda has come a long way
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From wandering in the forest as a young girl with little interest in studies to becoming a journalist and shining a light on the lives of tribals through a social media platform, Jayanti Buruda has come a long way.
 Belonging to the Koya tribe, Buruda—ninth of 11 siblings—would help her mother gather wood, graze cows and pluck mahua flowers in the jungle surrounding her adivasi village, Serpalli, until she was forced to enrol in the only school in the village in Malkangiri district, Odisha. But her two teachers, who taught all the subjects, helped her develop an interest in academics and she went on to become the only girl to clear her 10th standard exam in a class of 10 students.
Buruda wanted to study further and despite the fact that her father was against it, moved to Malkangiri town, where after classes she started giving tuitions to children of labourers in the neighbourhood slum area. She realised that she enjoyed social work and also decided to volunteer for the Indian Red Cross Society.
It was while visiting offices as part of her social work that Buruda got her first taste of patriarchy. As a woman, she was ignored by men in higher positions who would not respond to her questions or requests.
(This story appears in the 22 March, 2024 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)