Games, new friends — kids at Chhattisgarh camp for evicted tribal Christians find reason to smile
In Pictures

Games, new friends — kids at Chhattisgarh camp for evicted tribal Christians find reason to smile

Over '400 tribal Christians were forced to leave their homes in violence' in Narayanpur, Kondegaon & Kanker districts. ThePrint's Praveen Jain brings glimpses of the kids at makeshift camp.

   
A mother and child enjoy a light moment inside the stadium-camp in Narayanpur | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint

A mother and child enjoy a light moment inside the stadium-camp in Narayanpur | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint

Narayanpur, Chhattisgarh: A five-year-old blows on a piece of polythene with full force. To win the game she needs to take it higher than her friend. Beside her, two children, both from different villages, are busy playing tug-of-war using a scarf, while close by two other kids burst into giggles as they enact a wedding scene, in which a two-year-old plays a bride and a three-year-old the groom.

All this in the backdrop of an intense volleyball game, being played by a group of older children.

Most of these children, who belong to different villages, were strangers to each other just months back, when their families were evicted from their homes from across 15 villages in several districts in Chattisgarh, for going to church and practising Christianity, according to the police. They now share space at a makeshift camp set up inside an indoor stadium in Narayanpur.

According to district authorities, 400 people, mostly women and children, were forced to leave their homes in separate incidents of violence, reported from the Narayanpur, Kondegaon and Kanker districts of Chhattisgarh in the past two months.

While the situation has understandably left the elders tense, for the children — who are too young to understand the gravity of the situation — the camp is a “happy place”, where they have made new friends and are not being asked to study or participate in household chores.

“To see them smile takes away our stress as well,” Soni Kawde, an Adivasi woman from Borawan village in Narayanpur district, now living at the camp, told ThePrint.

She added: “They are very happy to have found new friends. They play all day. Also, they are too young to understand what has happened.”

ThePrint’s national photo editor Praveen Jain captures some light moments at the Narayanpur camp, where according to the authorities, over 200 church-going Adivasi men, women and children have been living since having to leave their homes.

Children run around inside the stadium | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
Having left behind their books at home, games are all that occupy these children at the camp now | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
According to ThePrint’s estimate, there are about 45 children living at the camp| Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint

A game of tug-of-war in progress | Photo: Praveen Jain |ThePrint
A girl plays with a discarded packet of drinking water | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
As a group of kids enact a scene from a wedding, the toddler who plays the bride covers her face | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
Anita Yadav, a young girl at the camp who aspires to join the armed police | Photo: Praveen Jain| ThePrint
Confidences are exchanged by a volleyball net inside the stadium | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
Despite the company of other children and the games, some long to be back home | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
The shared grief of leaving behind homes and the life together at the camp births new friendships | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
Most of the kids at the camp have found ways to look beyond the grim to find reasons to smile | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
A game of basketball in progress | Photo: Praeen Jain | ThePrint
A toddler is led away by family members | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
Meal-time at the camp | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
A group of older children engage in a game of volleyball | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
The gym inside the stadium | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint
The children are all smiles as they pose for the camera | Photo: Praveen Jain | ThePrint

Also read: Adivasi identity, ST status, politics — what’s fuelling anti-Christian attacks in Chhattisgarh