“Look at our homes. We have all been promised flats under both the Indira Awas Yojana as well as the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana. Yet we continue to live in mud and thatch huts that we ourselves had to build. In the monsoons, all these homes get flooded,” says Hargo Dohre Sabre, a villager. There are no employment or education opportunities in the village, forcing people to migrate to urban centres around the country. Earlier this year, Dang saw an intense protest by tribal communities who came together to demonstrate against the Par Tapi Narmada river linkage project. The protests forced the government to shelve the plan. But with state elections around the corner, locals are suspicious that the move was just temporary. Chinoo Pawar, an elderly Adivasi in Wadiahwan, claims that it doesn’t matter what religion they put on the Census and which party they support as long as they are allowed to access their rights and their way of life. “All we really care about is jal, jangal, jameen. That means employment, forest preservation, and land rights. That’s what makes us Adivasi,” he adds.