Yet, the Konda Reddy are not a people in decay. They are a people in negotiation. In the hamlet of Bisonpally, a young Konda Reddy woman recently became the first in her tribe to graduate from university. Community-led efforts are mapping ancestral forest lands under the Forest Rights Act, demanding that their voice be heard before a bulldozer clears another patch for a road to nowhere. They are learning to speak the state's language of law and livelihood without forgetting the language of the cicada and the squirrel.
But the hill is shrinking.
In the dense, undulating forests of the Eastern Ghats, where the borders of Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, and Odisha blur into a single green expanse, live the Konda Reddy. Known also as the "Hill Reddis" or "Mamia Reddis," they are a Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group (PVTG)—a classification that speaks not to fragility of spirit, but to a precarious hold on survival in a rapidly modernizing India. konda reddy
To understand the Konda Reddy is to understand elevation. "Konda" means hill, and their identity is etched into the steep slopes and hidden plateaus of the Bison Hills. Unlike the plains-dwelling Reddis, the Konda Reddy have historically chosen isolation, living in penthas —small, scattered hamlets of circular bamboo huts with conical thatched roofs that blend seamlessly into the jungle canopy. Yet, the Konda Reddy are not a people in decay
Poverty is measurable: a high rate of chronic malnutrition, anemia among women, and a startling lack of access to primary health centers, often hours of walking away. Meanwhile, Naxalite-Maoist insurgencies have used the forest corridors as transit routes, bringing the Konda Reddy unwanted attention—caught between police suspicion and militant intimidation. In the dense, undulating forests of the Eastern