Every stitch is a syllable. A crimson chain stitch is the blood of a martyr. A silver mirror is the puku — the eye of the story, the point of entry for the divine. A line of white dots across a black field? That is the trail of teardrops from the Puku Katha of the .
The greatest threat is not technology, but . For decades, settled society labeled the Banjaras as “thieves” and “gypsies.” Missionaries and schools told Lambani children that their stories were “backward” — full of ghosts, magic, and immoral women. Many parents stopped telling the Puku Kathalu to protect their children from ridicule. Lambadi Puku Kathalu
She calls it a Puku Katha . In the Lambani language — a dialect of Marwari infused with Kannada, Telugu, and the syntax of survival — Puku roughly translates to “a hole” or “an entrance.” But in the oral tradition of India’s most storied nomadic community, it means something else entirely: Every stitch is a syllable
This is the power of the Puku Katha . It does not resolve; it . It provides a model for surviving betrayal, drought, and the slow violence of settled society. Part II: The Stitch as Script To understand the Puku Kathalu , you must understand Lambani embroidery — the famous sandur work. Western art historians call it “mirror work.” Lambani women call it “likhari” — writing. A line of white dots across a black field
That pause is crucial. The puku is not just in the story; it is the story’s . It is the hunger for what comes next. On the road, that hunger kept children walking. It kept despair at bay. It turned the brutal arithmetic of nomadic survival — hunger, bandits, child loss, disease — into an epic. Part IV: The Threat of the Concrete Today, fewer than 30% of Lambani children speak the language fluently. The Tandas (Lambani hamlets) are now semi-permanent, many with concrete roofs and government ration shops. The bullock cart has been replaced by the mobile phone. And the Puku Kathalu ? They are shrinking.