Kangali, along with friends K B Maraskole and Sheetal Markam, visited Kachhargarh in
Bhandara district,
Maharashtra, having read about the traditional Gond fair or
Jatra held there on the occasion of
Maagh Purnima. In Gond tradition, the day marks the rescue of the mother goddess, Mata Kali Kankali's children from a cave by the Gond ancestor, Pari Kupar Lingo and his sister Jango Raitad. They discovered that the fair had shrunk in attendance from the past, down to around 500 visitors. They began the work of reviving the significance of the fair among the Gonds until the fair scaled back up to attendance in 1986 by as many as 3-4 lakh tribals from Central India, Maharashtra, Odisha and Andhra Pradesh. Recognized for his efforts, Kangali was appointed head of the apex religious body of the Gonds, the
Gondi Punem. Keshav Banaji Maraskole, who hails from Maharu Tola, had first told Kangali about the location of the supposed cave from which the rescue occurred. Traditionally, local Gond residents would worship at that cave in a ceremony called
Gongo. Kangali researched the antecedents of the worship and the cave itself, and discovered references to it in the writings of
Robert Vane Russell and C U Wills. Kangali, Maraskole and Sunher Singh Taram (editor of the
Bhopal periodical
Gondwana Darshan) attended the fair in 1980. In 1984, two more notable Gond leaders, Bharat Lal Koram and Sheetal Markam (by then, the head of the
Gondwana Mukti Sena organisation) joined them and the five made the first trek from the fair to the location of the cave. Over the next few years, Kacchargarh emerged as the primary religious centre of Koitur Gonds and in 1986,
Hira Singh Markam also joined the pilgrimage. Koiturs from many states began joining the
jatra. Over 40 years, visitors to the
jatra now number in the millions. == Writing career ==