**INDIA'S NOMADS**
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nomads
  A roof overhead is new for Punkti,  a shepherd's daughter in Rajasthan. 
 Family men still live under the  stars, staying close to their animals.
  
  
  Drumbeats draw a crowd as acrobats  from the Nat nomadic group perform outside Jodhpur in Rajasthan.  
  
  
  Open space keeps shrinking for  itinerant herders. In the Kutch region of Gujarat, 
 construction of a coal-fired power  plant forces Sangbhai and his buffalo to detour down paved roads and past  boundary walls to find what grazing land remains.
  
  
  During the dry season herding  activity slackens, and the Rabari alter their routines. 
 In Rajasthan, women turn to  grueling wage labor, earning two dollars a day for digging a  reservoir.
  
  
  Men hunker down to shear sheep.  Once the rains return, they'll set out with their flocks, 
 depending on landowners for access  to water and pasture.
  
  
  Pleased with his day, a Rabari  herdsman leads his animals to the spot where they'll bed for the night.  
 He'll sleep with them outdoors on  a simple cot called a charpoy.
  
  
  A small boy practices with a  slithery partner as his parents, members of the Vadi snake-handling community,  watch and teach. 
 The Vadi, like many nomadic  entertainers, increasingly depend on begging to survive.
  
  
  All Ali the magician and his two  partners need for their escape act is a patch of dirt, a cluster of fascinated  children, 
 and parents who will throw a few  rupees at the performers' feet.
  
  
  Sand slows the progress of a group  traveling by cart and foot. At the rear men push and a camel peers, while in  front a mother carries the youngest child. 
 Their destination is a village in  Rajasthan where the men will perform one of the world's oldest arts:  storytelling. 
 A banner depicting figures in the  tale will be unfurled, a fiddle will scratch, and voices will sing and chant of  kings and gods.
  
  
  The scavenged tarp on their  cartand homemay advertise modernity, 
 but the skills and lowly status of  the Gadulia Lohar haven't changed for generations. 
 Once weapon-makers for royalty,  the blacksmiths now make and repair tools at roadside  camps.
  
  
  A Rabari woman in Gujarat visits  the grave of an ancestor. 
 A power plant dominates what was  once open grazing land surrounding the burial ground.
  
  
   
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