Jacinta Kerketta: Becoming the voice of indigenous communities
While Jacinta Kerketta's poetry is about the lives and losses of indigenous communities in Jharkhand, her writing is about the conflict over land, the impact of risk management programmes on those living inside forests, and grassroots democracy among indigenous populations
Jacinta Kerketta’s poetry reverberates with the lives and losses that the indigenous communities in India are grappling with at a daily level.
Born in the Oraon Adivasi community of West Singhbhum district of Jharkhand, the 39-year-old is also an independent journalist. “In the past one year, I have travelled through Jharkhand and Odisha and have continuously written about issues related to conflict over land, the impact of risk management programmes on those living inside forests, and grassroot democracy among indigenous populations,” says Kerketta, who has a master’s degree in mass communication from St Xavier’s College in Ranchi. “I have also tried to highlight the different questions and perspectives of these indigenous populations through my poetry, and have published my poems at national and international levels.”
For her journalistic work, Kerketta is inspired by how to stop the establishment of only a single aspect where coverage of any event or story is concerned, and how to make people aware of other aspects of which they might be unaware, so that they are able to understand grassroot problems from a new perspective.
Kerketta also works in tribal villages to teach youngsters about tribal history, culture, the lives of women, and their struggles. “They watch films, read poetry, meet new people and share their feelings so that they feel more confident. In some villages, this has reduced the tendency of tribal girls to migrate and drop out of schools at an early age.”
“During my college days in the 1970s, UGC had made a film on the guru-shishya parampara, in which some professors say that sometimes we are fortunate that our students have done much better than what we have done. Jacinta has done so much more than what I have done or what we were thinking,” says Meghnath, who was Kerketta’s professor in college, where he was teaching cinema. A documentary filmmaker and social worker for the last 50 years, he has been living and working with indigenous communities in Jharkhand for 40 years. His films have won multiple awards, including the 59th and 65th National Film Awards.
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“Recently, when Jacinta’s younger sister had a baby, she was sitting in the delivery room and wrote about the hospital system, about things that have improved and what is still lacking. I shared it with a doctor friend at the Vellore Christian Medical College. He was so impressed that he read it out at an official gathering there, and wants to take up the issues Jacinta had written about. On the other hand, I was in Raipur last month, where I was showing my films to students, where a girl read out a poem by Jacinta. This shows her poetry and writings are becoming a part of our daily lives and activities here. I am an atheist and I don’t have any prayers to recite. But now I open her books in the morning, and read one or two of her poems, and they are like a prayer to me,” he says.
Last Updated :
December 09, 22 11:41:37 AM IST