Bauriya Gypsy Girl Pushkar Rajasthan


Pushkar Rajasthan India This young girl Muni is from the Bauriya caste Like many members of the lower castes the Bauriya people can only get the lowest paying jobs in their towns hard construction work for a few cents a day They try to earn additional income by drawing hennas temporary tattoos on the hands of Indian tourists They sleep in the streets and hope to make enough money to buy the chapattis their family needs to survive the day During the Pushkar festival Muni too young to draw tattoos sits in the streets with her little sister little girl on her left from sunrise to sunset They apply henna stamps on girls their age but from wealthier families The children do not always pay her the 1 rupee fee Muni and her little sister will never get a chance to go to school Copyright Jean Philippe Soule


Size: 3581px × 5314px
Photo credit: © Jean-Philippe Soule / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: aborigenes, aboriginal, aborigines, anthropology, asian, bauriya, beautiful, beauty, caste, charming, community, cultural, culture, customs, desert, destination, diversity, documentaries, documentary, ecotourism, ecotours, ethnic, ethnicity, ethnography, ethnology, exotic, exploration, eyes, fashion, girl, gold, green, gypsies, gypsy, hindu, india, indian, indigenous, jogi, knowledge, lifestyle, merchant, minorities, minority, mores, murli, native, natives, people, poor, population, portrait, poverty, pushkar, rajasthan, reportages, rural, sari, sell, society, stare, staring, streets, stunning, survival, tourism, tourist, traditional, traditions, travel, tribal, tribe, tribes, watching, woman, world, young