By Abhilasha Mohan (Cotton University)
The youth of Northeast India, once seen as remote and rebellious, are now telling a new story of ambition, identity, and a global vision. From the lively streets of Shillong and Aizawl to the distant villages near the Myanmar border, young people are moving beyond old stereotypes. They are looking for chances that go beyond geography, politics, and prejudice.
This change is especially clear in Meghalaya, a state known for its matrilineal traditions and rich culture, but also for issues like unemployment, drug use, and poor infrastructure. Today’s youth are driven by new goals. They are launching start-ups in Shillong’s growing digital scene, pursuing civil services, or exploring fields like music, journalism, coding, and sustainable agriculture. A quiet revolution is taking place.
Better connectivity, social media exposure, and education have helped create a more aware and ambitious generation. Recently, thousands of students from Meghalaya and the wider Northeast have made their mark in universities in Delhi, Bangalore, Pune, and abroad. Many return with degrees, but also with confidence, ideas, and a sense of connection to their roots and the larger world.
However, this journey has its challenges. The discrimination faced by Northeast youth in mainland India is still a serious issue. From subtle bias to outright racism, young people often have to struggle for jobs or school admissions, and even for simple acceptance. Yet, many use these experiences to fuel their advocacy, organizing campaigns, representing their communities in youth forums, and becoming links between cultures.
Importantly, aspirations are not just about leaving home. There is a growing wish to build from within to improve their hometowns instead of fleeing them. Young entrepreneurs in Meghalaya are starting ecotourism ventures, sustainable fashion brands, digital media groups, and farm-to-market supply chains. The revival of local crafts, language learning programs, and storytelling platforms shows that today’s youth in the region focus on reclaiming their identity as much as pursuing new opportunities.
Government programs and civil society initiatives are gradually catching up, but structural problems remain. Skilling programs must be tailored to the region, mental health support for youth needs immediate attention, and infrastructure from roads to reliable internet must keep pace with their ambitions.
The future of Northeast India depends not on imposed development models, but on understanding the unique goals of its youth. They now speak the language of both the hills and the world. They do not aim to break away; they want to be acknowledged, heard, and supported on their own terms.
Today, the youth of Meghalaya and its neighboring states refuse to wait for inclusion; they are creating the spaces where they belong. Their story deserves not just attention, but celebration.