The Power of Mahua Seeds: How a Tiny Seed Supports an Entire Community

The Power of Mahua Seeds: How a Tiny Seed Supports an Entire Community

In the tribal villages of Nandurbar and Palghar, summer mornings reveal women and children carefully cleaning and drying Mahua seeds. These small seeds carry the livelihood, culture, and hope of thousands of families.

A Small Seed with a Big Impact

Mahua is often called the lifeline of the forest. Its flowers, fruits, seeds, and oil support tribal life.

Mahua oil is used for:

  • Cooking
  • Hair care
  • Skin nourishment
  • Traditional medicine
  • Natural soaps and balms

Where the Journey Begins

The journey starts in the forest. Tribal women collect fallen fruits early in the morning, remove seeds by hand, wash them, and sun-dry them patiently.

One woman told me:

“These seeds are wealth for us.”

Women at the Heart of the Process

Women manage:

  • Collection
  • Cleaning and sorting
  • Drying
  • Preparation for oil extraction

This work provides independent income, confidence, and stability.

Fair Prices Through Support Systems

Earlier, middlemen controlled prices. Today, with Van Dhan Kendras, self-help groups, and Shabari Naturals, tribals receive fair rates and direct market access.

Pure Oil Through Traditional Methods

Mahua oil is extracted using:

  • Slow traditional processes
  • Hand filtration
  • Sun drying

No chemicals.
No artificial fragrance.

Support from Shabari Naturals

Shabari Naturals assists with:

  • Improved seed sorting
  • Clean processing
  • Better packaging
  • Fair income
  • Market connectivity

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