Kolis Tribe //top\\ ⟶ «PLUS»
Mumbai / Gujarat Coastline – Before Mumbai became a skyline of glass and steel, it was a horizon of saltwater and sails. The guardians of that old world are the Kolis —a tribe of fishers, fighters, and folklorists who have called the Arabian Sea their ancestral home for over 5,000 years.
It is a firework display of heat and sourness. (prawn rice cooked in a spicy, red gravy) and Bombil Fry (Bombay duck, a lizardfish fried to crispy perfection) are the crown jewels. The tribe uses kokum (a sour fruit) to cut through the richness of the coconut milk and bedgi chillies to provide a smoke-like heat that lingers on the lips long after the meal is done. The Fight for the Shore Today, the Koli tribe faces an existential threat: development . kolis tribe
For centuries, their identity was forged by two things: the and the catch . The Koli calendar doesn't revolve around months, but around the wind. "When the sea turns angry, we turn quiet," says 67-year-old Makkhan Koli from Vasai, mending a torn net under the shade of a banyan tree. "When the sea offers fish, we celebrate." Warrior Fishers What sets the Kolis apart from other fishing communities is their martial history. The British Raj classified them as a "Criminal Tribe" (a tag they have fiercely fought to shed), but local lore remembers them as the naval militia of the Maratha Empire. Mumbai / Gujarat Coastline – Before Mumbai became
