Thursday, April 30, 2026
Women India
Advertisement
  • Home
  • About us
  • News
    • Lifestyle
      • Home & Decor
      • Travel & Leisure
      • Fashion & Style
      • Beauty & Skincare
      • Food & Recipes
    • Health & Wellness
      • Mental Health
      • Nutrition
      • Physical Fitness
      • Women’s Health
      • Yoga & Meditation
    • Career & Business
      • Career Advice
      • Investment
      • Leadership & Mentorship
      • Work-Life Balance
      • Women Entrepreneurs
      • Inspiration & Stories
    • Inspiration & Stories
      • Women Achievers
      • Change Makers
      • Grassroots Heroines
      • Interviews & Profiles
      • Celebrity Stories
    • Culture & Society
      • Women in Indian Culture
      • Social Change
      • Festivals & Traditions
      • Regional Spotlights
      • Religion & Spirituality
    • Events & Community
      • Women-Centric Events
      • Webinars & Workshops
      • Community Voices
      • Local Groups & Forums
      • Awards & Recognitions
  • Magazine
  • Women’s Rights
    Women officers to help PM unfurl flag on I-Day

    Women officers to help PM unfurl flag on I-Day

    App Helps Identify Autistic Children in India.

    App Helps Identify Autistic Children in India

    Salmon Arm’s Mamas for Mamas took home the bulk of the money donated at Shuswap Women Who Wine’s latest Community Giving Event held at R.J. Haney Heritage Village and Museum on Saturday, June 18, 2023

    Salmon Arm’s Mamas for Mamas the toast of latest Shuswap Women Who Wine event

    Tech can help remove biases against women at the hiring level, while hybrid work gives women the highest flexibility, say tech leaders Sindhu Gangadharan and Irina Ghose.

    Tech & hybrid the tools to plug leak in women talent pipeline, says women panel at BT Tech Today Congress

    Chandrika Majhi holds her baby son outside her house in Gadadi, India.

    Women’s rights at stake as India’s population surpasses China’s

    India can move forward only by raising the levels of respect for women: PM Modi

    India can move forward only by raising the levels of respect for women: PM Modi

    Meet Nilima Motapatri, one of India’s richest women, not from IIT, IIM, her business is…

    Meet Nilima Motapatri, one of India’s richest women, not from IIT, IIM, her business is…

    Mothers are the primary influencers of children since the time they are born. Having a working mother can mould the psyche of children and make them more attuned to gender balance.

    7 ways working mothers influence children that will change your view about ‘letting’ women work

    Five Women Officers (WOs) being commissioned into the Regiment of Artillery are being provided exactly the same opportunities and challenges as their male counterparts

    First Batch of Women Officers Commissioned into the Regiment of Artillery of the Indian Army

  • Entrepreneurs
    Jyoti Ratre, 55, Becomes Oldest Indian Woman to Conquer Mount Everest: Who is she?

    Jyoti Ratre, 55, Becomes Oldest Indian Woman to Conquer Mount Everest: Who is she?

    Meet Amita Goyal Mumbai based Business women Entrepreneur & founder of Glasba Services , read her Success Story here

    Meet Amita Goyal Mumbai based Business women Entrepreneur & founder of Glasba Services , read her Success Story here

    From Isha Ambani to Namita Thapar: Lavish homes of India's women entrepreneurs

    From Isha Ambani to Namita Thapar: Lavish homes of India’s women entrepreneurs

    Trailblazing Entrepreneur Recognized for Her Achievements

    Trailblazing Entrepreneur Recognized for Her Achievements

    Goldman Sachs' education programme helped 2,400 Indian women entrepreneurs generate 28,000 cr revenue

    Goldman Sachs’ education programme helped 2,400 Indian women entrepreneurs generate 28,000 cr revenue

    Entrepreneur Zafreen Khan and her journey to success

    Entrepreneur Zafreen Khan and her journey to success

    Saral Creating An Ecosystem To Empower Women

    Saral Creating An Ecosystem To Empower Women

    How scrap paper helped Delhi’s Poonam Gupta set up a business empire in Scotland

    How scrap paper helped Delhi’s Poonam Gupta set up a business empire in Scotland

    The Future of Female Entrepreneurs in Beauty Shines Bright—shark Tank India Has Proof

    The Future of Female Entrepreneurs in Beauty Shines Bright—shark Tank India Has Proof

  • Women and Girls
    Bangladeshi Women, Girls, Minorities Face Rising Violence

    Bangladeshi Women, Girls, Minorities Face Rising Violence

    Empowering girls through STEM education

    Empowering girls through STEM education

    The women of Kanal Tola village are forced to live in this hut which has no door and no amenities.

    Banished for Bleeding: Tribal Indian Women Get Better Period Huts

    Largest Unit of Indian Women Peacekeepers in Sudan Conflict Zone

    Largest Unit of Indian Women Peacekeepers in Sudan Conflict Zone

    AI’s Captain Zoya Becomes The 1st Indian To Enter the SFO Aviation Museum

    AI’s Captain Zoya Becomes The 1st Indian To Enter the SFO Aviation Museum

    The stamp issued in 1998 in honour of Savitribai Phule

    On Savitribai Phule Jayanti, Know Why Every Literate Indian Woman is Indebted to Her

    UNDP Launches Ambitious Plan to Speed Up Progress on Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment

    UNDP Launches Ambitious Plan to Speed Up Progress on Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment

    Achieving Gender Equality in India: What Works, and What Doesn’t

    Achieving Gender Equality in India: What Works, and What Doesn’t

    Making Science An Inclusive Space For Women And Girls

    Making Science An Inclusive Space For Women And Girls

  • Exhibitions
  • Contact Us
  • Team
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About us
  • News
    • Lifestyle
      • Home & Decor
      • Travel & Leisure
      • Fashion & Style
      • Beauty & Skincare
      • Food & Recipes
    • Health & Wellness
      • Mental Health
      • Nutrition
      • Physical Fitness
      • Women’s Health
      • Yoga & Meditation
    • Career & Business
      • Career Advice
      • Investment
      • Leadership & Mentorship
      • Work-Life Balance
      • Women Entrepreneurs
      • Inspiration & Stories
    • Inspiration & Stories
      • Women Achievers
      • Change Makers
      • Grassroots Heroines
      • Interviews & Profiles
      • Celebrity Stories
    • Culture & Society
      • Women in Indian Culture
      • Social Change
      • Festivals & Traditions
      • Regional Spotlights
      • Religion & Spirituality
    • Events & Community
      • Women-Centric Events
      • Webinars & Workshops
      • Community Voices
      • Local Groups & Forums
      • Awards & Recognitions
  • Magazine
  • Women’s Rights
    Women officers to help PM unfurl flag on I-Day

    Women officers to help PM unfurl flag on I-Day

    App Helps Identify Autistic Children in India.

    App Helps Identify Autistic Children in India

    Salmon Arm’s Mamas for Mamas took home the bulk of the money donated at Shuswap Women Who Wine’s latest Community Giving Event held at R.J. Haney Heritage Village and Museum on Saturday, June 18, 2023

    Salmon Arm’s Mamas for Mamas the toast of latest Shuswap Women Who Wine event

    Tech can help remove biases against women at the hiring level, while hybrid work gives women the highest flexibility, say tech leaders Sindhu Gangadharan and Irina Ghose.

    Tech & hybrid the tools to plug leak in women talent pipeline, says women panel at BT Tech Today Congress

    Chandrika Majhi holds her baby son outside her house in Gadadi, India.

    Women’s rights at stake as India’s population surpasses China’s

    India can move forward only by raising the levels of respect for women: PM Modi

    India can move forward only by raising the levels of respect for women: PM Modi

    Meet Nilima Motapatri, one of India’s richest women, not from IIT, IIM, her business is…

    Meet Nilima Motapatri, one of India’s richest women, not from IIT, IIM, her business is…

    Mothers are the primary influencers of children since the time they are born. Having a working mother can mould the psyche of children and make them more attuned to gender balance.

    7 ways working mothers influence children that will change your view about ‘letting’ women work

    Five Women Officers (WOs) being commissioned into the Regiment of Artillery are being provided exactly the same opportunities and challenges as their male counterparts

    First Batch of Women Officers Commissioned into the Regiment of Artillery of the Indian Army

  • Entrepreneurs
    Jyoti Ratre, 55, Becomes Oldest Indian Woman to Conquer Mount Everest: Who is she?

    Jyoti Ratre, 55, Becomes Oldest Indian Woman to Conquer Mount Everest: Who is she?

    Meet Amita Goyal Mumbai based Business women Entrepreneur & founder of Glasba Services , read her Success Story here

    Meet Amita Goyal Mumbai based Business women Entrepreneur & founder of Glasba Services , read her Success Story here

    From Isha Ambani to Namita Thapar: Lavish homes of India's women entrepreneurs

    From Isha Ambani to Namita Thapar: Lavish homes of India’s women entrepreneurs

    Trailblazing Entrepreneur Recognized for Her Achievements

    Trailblazing Entrepreneur Recognized for Her Achievements

    Goldman Sachs' education programme helped 2,400 Indian women entrepreneurs generate 28,000 cr revenue

    Goldman Sachs’ education programme helped 2,400 Indian women entrepreneurs generate 28,000 cr revenue

    Entrepreneur Zafreen Khan and her journey to success

    Entrepreneur Zafreen Khan and her journey to success

    Saral Creating An Ecosystem To Empower Women

    Saral Creating An Ecosystem To Empower Women

    How scrap paper helped Delhi’s Poonam Gupta set up a business empire in Scotland

    How scrap paper helped Delhi’s Poonam Gupta set up a business empire in Scotland

    The Future of Female Entrepreneurs in Beauty Shines Bright—shark Tank India Has Proof

    The Future of Female Entrepreneurs in Beauty Shines Bright—shark Tank India Has Proof

  • Women and Girls
    Bangladeshi Women, Girls, Minorities Face Rising Violence

    Bangladeshi Women, Girls, Minorities Face Rising Violence

    Empowering girls through STEM education

    Empowering girls through STEM education

    The women of Kanal Tola village are forced to live in this hut which has no door and no amenities.

    Banished for Bleeding: Tribal Indian Women Get Better Period Huts

    Largest Unit of Indian Women Peacekeepers in Sudan Conflict Zone

    Largest Unit of Indian Women Peacekeepers in Sudan Conflict Zone

    AI’s Captain Zoya Becomes The 1st Indian To Enter the SFO Aviation Museum

    AI’s Captain Zoya Becomes The 1st Indian To Enter the SFO Aviation Museum

    The stamp issued in 1998 in honour of Savitribai Phule

    On Savitribai Phule Jayanti, Know Why Every Literate Indian Woman is Indebted to Her

    UNDP Launches Ambitious Plan to Speed Up Progress on Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment

    UNDP Launches Ambitious Plan to Speed Up Progress on Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment

    Achieving Gender Equality in India: What Works, and What Doesn’t

    Achieving Gender Equality in India: What Works, and What Doesn’t

    Making Science An Inclusive Space For Women And Girls

    Making Science An Inclusive Space For Women And Girls

  • Exhibitions
  • Contact Us
  • Team
No Result
View All Result
Women India
No Result
View All Result
Home Arts & Entertainment

Ms. Muse: Cherokee Chief Wilma Mankiller’s Lost Poems

Anagha Salvi by Anagha Salvi
September 2, 2022
in Arts & Entertainment, Featured, Feminist History, Mental Health, National, Native Women, Poetry, Women in Politics, Women Writers, Women's History
Ms. Muse: Cherokee Chief Wilma Mankiller’s Lost Poems
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Post Views: 210


Ms. Muse is a discovery place for riotous, righteous and resonant feminist poetry that nourishes and gives voice to a rising tide of female resistance—brought to you by Ms. digital columnist Chivas Sandage.


Her name means leader or warrior who guards the village. Before she became the first woman elected principal chief of the Cherokee Nation and the first woman to be chief of a major tribe, Wilma Mankiller published a poem about “the edges of / something called freedom.”

In another poem about listening to the seasons, wolves and a raven, she asks if there are others who can still hear. She writes about remembering “that the sound of a million / colored televisions / has drowned out almost all / echoes of our being.” Longing for freedom—juxtaposed with a dystopian perspective of the modern world and the consequences of living in it—emerge as core subjects in the posthumously published Mankiller Poems: The Lost Poetry of Wilma Mankiller, just out from Pulley Press.

These two poems, part of a group of 10, were published in a 1982 college magazine when Mankiller was in her late 30s. But until now, the world has not known that this great chief, community developer, activist and author also wrote poetry throughout her life. With the support of Charlie Soap, Mankiller’s husband for over 30 years, editors Frances McCue and Greg Shaw found the magazine and nine other poems tucked randomly into boxes of paperwork stored in Mankiller’s old barn in August 2021. They wanted to publish her lost poems to show “how an activist reflected on her life through art and that art itself is activism.”

ms-muse-cherokee-chief-wilma-mankiller-feminist-poetry

When Mankiller’s poems appeared in that slim journal, she was a grant writer, community organizer and a single mother of two teenagers. While she felt deeply connected to her Cherokee culture and ancestry, she had chosen to not be a traditional housewife. She knew strong Cherokee women, but without a female role model to look to, she worked to make her own way, refusing to let her identity be chosen for her, and in the process became a leader of her people and an icon for countless women and girls.

In Mankiller’s poem, “Reality {Again},” the narrator says, “…I care about Cuba, / South Africa, Jemez Pueblo, Navajo, / Bosnia, and Jay, Oklahoma / Some would say / not womanly things to care about.”

Already, she was challenging the definition of what it means to be a woman. But she also knew how to inspire consensus. Notice how she chose the word “care” instead of “think,” the former being uncontroversial for a woman to do in most cultures, and the latter being infamously problematic for half of humanity.  

Born in 1945, she lived the first decade of her life in Oklahoma on Mankiller Flats, an allotment given to her paternal grandfather in 1907 as part of a government program of forced assimilation. Wanting to explore and express her individuality in a large family, Wilma Mankiller began writing poetry around the age of 10.

While her surname signifies a traditional Cherokee military rank, it also inspired schoolyard bullying, which caused her to withdraw into herself. In doing so, she developed an inner strength that she’d later need to endure the challenges she faced as the first woman chief, when people talked about “why a woman was running” instead of the issues at stake.  

At 11, she moved with her family to San Francisco as part of a poorly managed government relocation program. She called the move “my own little Trail of Tears,” referring to the 1830-1850 genocidal forced removal of 60,000 Indigenous people, including her own ancestors. Despite the urban poverty and alienation that she and her family suffered in being separated from their home and community, she grew up in a city where Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix played in the park and the streets swelled with political protests.

San Francisco fed her growing interest in social work as a student and young activist writing poems. From 1969-1971, Indigenous Americans occupied Alcatraz in San Francisco Bay, an abandoned island and former home of the notorious federal prison. Citing the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie, they protested for Indigenous reclamation of the out-of-use federal land.

Mankiller visited the occupation frequently, which proved to be deeply formative. Reportedly, she was “crucial” to the effort of getting essential supplies to the protestors. She later told the New York Times, “What Alcatraz did for me was, it enabled me to see people who felt like I did but could articulate it much better. We can do something about the fact that treaties are no longer recognized, that there needs to be better education and health care.”

ms-muse-cherokee-chief-wilma-mankiller-feminist-poetry
Wilma Mankiller. (Ilka Hartmann)

After Alcatraz, Mankiller gained more experience with treaty law when she worked on the Pit River Tribe’s legal defense as they successfully reclaimed their ancestral lands from Pacific Gas and Electric. In her poem titled “Oktaha,” she wrote:

from Alcatraz to Pit River to Wounded Knee
from the rich red clay of his homeland
to the streets of San Francisco
hunger for the food of his soul
urges him on

This spiritual hunger is reflected in the poems’ remembering and longing for a time when her people lived in direct connection and communication with the natural world. In contrast, she writes of the city as an existential test for the soul. In “Leaving San Francisco,” morning reveals a city “stripped of the magic of night.” She describes that dystopia, remembering:

“the lost children
skinny junkies looking for a fix
wasted young warriors searching for
an alternative that doesn’t exist
hopeless elders in lobbies of ancient, 
damp hotels…”

To understand what “freedom” meant to Wilma Mankiller, consider how, in an early draft of “Beginnings of a Song,” she wrote about “looking for a sign / that freedom is not lost / to all mankind.” In another version (which appears in the book), she wrote “looking for a sign / That the old medicine is not lost / to all mankind.”

In her lost poems, the traditional ways of Mankiller’s people infuse life with “old medicine” and weave throughout the book, such as in “The Blues,” where the narrator hopes for dreams to “…rise / like the sweet smell of cedar / to touch the sleepless mind.”

The word “ancient” appears six times in the lost poems, including references to ancient secrets, a spring, nectar, and “the time of the ancients.” Repeatedly, the poems speak of an aching homesickness, as in “Comfort”:

and I did, once, long ago
drink the ancient nectar
of an autumn moon
used to live down by the river…

The narrator begins and ends the poem “locked” in modern life and feeling a distance from self.

Love letters to the natural world, the poems seek respite from modern life with its “daily routine.” The narrators in her poems are inspired by mystery, “the fruits of love,” and secrets, most notably “the secret of the Redbirds”—a riddle that is never answered in the poems. Mankiller also writes about the dark side of relationship with self. Consider the lines:

urging me to go on until I can
	find the lies of my own making and 
	battle them in moonlit meadows

In “Waiting for May,” the narrator remembers “just why we are here” when their “feet touch the dirt / of the Earth’s calm ways.” Once again, the world that man did not make proves to be old medicine.

At the age of 30, Mankiller escaped the city and moved back to her family’s allotment in Oklahoma, where she began working for the Cherokee Nation in community development. Within seven years, she became deputy chief despite the extraordinary challenge of being the first woman to run. The sexism and misogyny she faced sometimes escalated to slashed tires and death threats. But she’d already survived a tragic car accident that took a friend’s life and almost killed her. She said, “I’d lost the fear of death and the fear of the challenges in my life.” In 1985, she became principal chief.

In a just country, she would have been elected president.

Gloria Steinem

ms-muse-cherokee-chief-wilma-mankiller-feminist-poetry
Wilma Mankiller. (Courtesy of the Oklahoma Historical Society)

In Mankiller Poems, editor Mark Trahant’s commentary notes that Mankiller once spoke of how her people asked the first U.S. treaty negotiation team, “Where are your women?” Traditionally, Cherokee women were included in negotiations. Trahant writes, “How could you negotiate anything with only half of your people or half of a way of thinking? The logic is flawed: How can any society negotiate (or govern) with only half its people, half its logic, half of its humanity?”

Wilma Mankiller once said, “I can eliminate any stereotypes about what a chief looks like.” During the 10 years that she governed her sovereign nation of 170,000 (by the end of her tenure), she transformed Cherokee tribal government and improved health care, education and housing while establishing new revenue streams, jobs and financial self-governance.

She would later write, “By the time I left office in 1995 … there were fewer questions about whether or not women should be in leadership positions in the Cherokee Nation. If people opposed me, it was because they disagreed with my policies, not just because I am female.” With a laugh, she told the Washington Post that the young girls in her tribe “have never known a male chief” and think having a woman as chief “is the natural order of things.”

ms-muse-cherokee-chief-wilma-mankiller-feminist-poetry
Wilma Mankiller was featured in Ms.’s January 1988 issue as one of its Women of the Year.

In 1987, Ms. magazine named Mankiller one of its Women of the Year. She was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 1993 and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1998. In Valerie Red-Horse Mohl’s documentary film, Mankiller, Gloria Steinem said, “In a just country, she would have been elected president.”

Mankiller met Steinem when she joined the board of the Ms. Foundation for Women. The two women shared a close friendship as “chosen family” for 25 years. As a birthday gift one year, Mankiller wrote the poem, “I Want to Be Reincarnated as Gloria Steinem,” part sisterly love letter and part manifesto. After 66 years of being happily unmarried, Steinem told Mankiller that she wanted an “equal marriage,” like Wilma’s relationship with Charlie. In 2000, Steinem married human rights activist David Bale at the home of Mankiller and Soap at dawn.

Always a leader, always thinking of others, in 2010, one month before Wilma Mankiller died of pancreatic cancer, she wrote a news release to comfort her wide circle of friends, sharing that she was “mentally and spiritually prepared for this journey.” Gloria Steinem asked and received permission to someday be buried next to Wilma. After her death, Gloria Steinem said: “Ancient traditions call for setting signal fires to light the way home for a great one; fires were lit in 23 countries after Wilma’s death. The millions she touched will continue her work, but I will miss her every day of my life.”

ms-muse-cherokee-chief-wilma-mankiller-feminist-poetry
Wilma Mankiller, Charlie Soap and Gloria Steinem. (Courtesy of Kristina Kiehl)

Mankiller’s poem, “Smoke Signals,” speaks of “a time when messages / had to be sent long distances.” The narrator describes how the smoke “carried messages along the wind / sometimes even to the heavens…” However, the narrator dryly notes that today “no one can read them anymore.”

Twelve years after her death, Wilma Mankiller’s lost poems are smoke signals rising in the wind.

The poems teach the reader how to read them, “how to / accept the friendship of the wind / or love deeply and radically.” The lost poems sing of how to seek out the old medicine of the natural world to discover, again and again throughout our lives, another kind of freedom.

Ms. Muse: A Call for Poems

Please spread the word to poets who identify as women, or have in their past: Ms. Muse seeks poems about the lived experience of being a woman and/or girl. This is a call for sensory, image-rich writing that reflects women’s lives. I’m very open to poets who write from intersectional perspectives, including poets writing about having been or becoming female-identified.  

Email 1-5 poems in the body of your email, including your name, pronouns, and contact information to [email protected]. Selections are made based entirely on work submitted—no letter or bio needed. Simultaneous submissions are fine. Previously published poems from books with modest print runs (like most collections of poetry) are fine, but the poem must not appear elsewhere on the internet.

Ms. Muse poets retain full rights to their poem(s) for republishing elsewhere. We will promote you and your work to the millions of readers connected via our website, social media and email digest. Contributors will receive a one-year subscription to Ms.

U.S. democracy is at a dangerous inflection point—from the demise of abortion rights, to a lack of pay equity and parental leave, to skyrocketing maternal mortality, and attacks on trans health. Left unchecked, these crises will lead to wider gaps in political participation and representation. For 50 years, Ms. has been forging feminist journalism—reporting, rebelling and truth-telling from the front-lines, championing the Equal Rights Amendment, and centering the stories of those most impacted. With all that’s at stake for equality, we are redoubling our commitment for the next 50 years. In turn, we need your help, Support Ms. today with a donation—any amount that is meaningful to you. For as little as $5 each month, you’ll receive the print magazine along with our e-newsletters, action alerts, and invitations to Ms. Studios events and podcasts. We are grateful for your loyalty and ferocity.

Up next:





Source link

Previous Post

ICYMI: Women Just Took Another Hit

Next Post

Biden Just Canceled Significant Amounts of Your Student Loan Debt. Here’s How to Claim It

Anagha Salvi

Anagha Salvi

Associate Editor & Creative Director

Next Post
Biden Just Canceled Significant Amounts of Your Student Loan Debt. Here’s How to Claim It

Biden Just Canceled Significant Amounts of Your Student Loan Debt. Here's How to Claim It

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Who Is the Real China? Eileen Gu or the Chained Woman?

Who Is the Real China? Eileen Gu or the Chained Woman?

February 15, 2022
The Future of Female Entrepreneurs in Beauty Shines Bright—shark Tank India Has Proof

The Future of Female Entrepreneurs in Beauty Shines Bright—shark Tank India Has Proof

January 12, 2023
Shifting the Focus: Migration and Female Labour Force Participation

Shifting the Focus: Migration and Female Labour Force Participation

October 3, 2022
Recent global studies on digital equality highlight that digital transformation’s benefits across high, low and middle-income countries are not reaching most women

Digital transformations for gender equality

May 3, 2023
International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers Helps Fund Pioneering Nonprofit’s Construction Camp For Girls

International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers Helps Fund Pioneering Nonprofit’s Construction Camp For Girls

0
Marvel’s First Deaf Superhero: A First Step for Disabled Filmmakers

Marvel’s First Deaf Superhero: A First Step for Disabled Filmmakers

0
Working with the Taliban for Women’s Rights: It’s Like Speaking to Fish about Land!

Working with the Taliban for Women’s Rights: It’s Like Speaking to Fish about Land!

0

Announcing the Recipient of the Edie Windsor Champion for LGBTQAI+ Equality Award, 2021

0
TAGMA 2026 to Showcase Next-Gen Tooling Innovations at Die & Mould India Expo

TAGMA 2026 to Showcase Next-Gen Tooling Innovations at Die & Mould India Expo

March 30, 2026
Countdown To The Icc Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 Begins As Scoreboards Around The World Mark 100 Days To Go

Countdown To The Icc Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 Begins As Scoreboards Around The World Mark 100 Days To Go

March 5, 2026
Women’s Asia Cup Rising Stars 2026: Tanuja Kanwar Spins A Web Around Nepal As India A Qualifies For Semi-Finals

Women’s Asia Cup Rising Stars 2026: Tanuja Kanwar Spins A Web Around Nepal As India A Qualifies For Semi-Finals

February 18, 2026
India U17 Blank Bangladesh U19 To Win SAFF U19 Women’s Title

India U17 Blank Bangladesh U19 To Win SAFF U19 Women’s Title

February 10, 2026

Recent News

TAGMA 2026 to Showcase Next-Gen Tooling Innovations at Die & Mould India Expo

TAGMA 2026 to Showcase Next-Gen Tooling Innovations at Die & Mould India Expo

March 30, 2026
Countdown To The Icc Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 Begins As Scoreboards Around The World Mark 100 Days To Go

Countdown To The Icc Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 Begins As Scoreboards Around The World Mark 100 Days To Go

March 5, 2026
Women’s Asia Cup Rising Stars 2026: Tanuja Kanwar Spins A Web Around Nepal As India A Qualifies For Semi-Finals

Women’s Asia Cup Rising Stars 2026: Tanuja Kanwar Spins A Web Around Nepal As India A Qualifies For Semi-Finals

February 18, 2026
India U17 Blank Bangladesh U19 To Win SAFF U19 Women’s Title

India U17 Blank Bangladesh U19 To Win SAFF U19 Women’s Title

February 10, 2026

Welcome to our complete News Portal about Women India org, Lifestyle, News, and Articles. Take your time and immerse yourself in this amazing experience!

Facebook Youtube Twitter Linkedin Instagram Telegram

Women India Network

Women India Network
Beauty N Fitness India
Women India
Beauty N Fitness Times
Modern Fashion Life Style
Load More

TAGMA 2026 to Showcase Next-Gen Tooling Innovations at Die & Mould India Expo

TAGMA 2026 to Showcase Next-Gen Tooling Innovations at Die & Mould India Expo

by Anagha Salvi
March 30, 2026
0

Die & Mould India, the largest and most prestigious exhibition for the die and mould industry in India, is set...

© 2026 All Rights Reserved. Women India org

Powered By:Chrysolite Media Network Pvt. Ltd.

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. Women India org

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About us
  • News
    • Lifestyle
      • Home & Decor
      • Travel & Leisure
      • Fashion & Style
      • Beauty & Skincare
      • Food & Recipes
    • Health & Wellness
      • Mental Health
      • Nutrition
      • Physical Fitness
      • Women’s Health
      • Yoga & Meditation
    • Career & Business
      • Career Advice
      • Investment
      • Leadership & Mentorship
      • Work-Life Balance
      • Women Entrepreneurs
      • Inspiration & Stories
    • Inspiration & Stories
      • Women Achievers
      • Change Makers
      • Grassroots Heroines
      • Interviews & Profiles
      • Celebrity Stories
    • Culture & Society
      • Women in Indian Culture
      • Social Change
      • Festivals & Traditions
      • Regional Spotlights
      • Religion & Spirituality
    • Events & Community
      • Women-Centric Events
      • Webinars & Workshops
      • Community Voices
      • Local Groups & Forums
      • Awards & Recognitions
  • Magazine
  • Women’s Rights
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Women and Girls
  • Exhibitions
  • Contact Us
  • Team

© 2026 All Rights Reserved. Women India org