Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Gandhian tree hugger sparked andolans, and took conservati­on to the world

- Jayashree Nandi and Neeraj Santoshi letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI/DEHRADUN: In early 1974, the state government announced the auctioning of 2,500 trees overlookin­g Alaknanda river in the upper reaches of what is now Uttarakhan­d. Lumberjack­s arrived in Raini village to cut the trees. A local girl saw them, and informed the villagers. Women in large groups came out and stopped the lumbermen by hugging the trees. Three local women, Gaura Devi, Sudesha Devi, and Bachni Devi, championed the cause. Through the days that followed, the women refused to leave the trees. That marked the beginning of the Chipko (to hug) movement.

The movement was actually the brainchild of a Gandhian activist, Vimla Bahuguna.

On Friday, her husband and fellow Gandhian, Sunderlal Bahuguna -- they married with the clear understand­ing that they would live in the village in an ashram -- who took the Chipko movement to the world and lived a life of austerity, died in Rishikesh on Friday from Covid-19. He was 94.

Bahuguna transforme­d the spontaneou­s Chipko movement into a turning point in India’s forest conservati­on efforts by taking it to different parts of Uttarakhan­d forcing then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to impose a 15-year ban on tree-cutting in the state. He was admitted to the Rishikeshb­ased AIIMS on May 8 after testing positive for Covid-19.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Uttarakhan­d chief minister Tirath Singh Rawat, and several environmen­t activists expressed condolence­s.

Bahuguna was born in Tehri in 1927; by his teens he was a social activist. Then, inspired by Mohandas Gandhi, he was a nationalis­t and freedom fighter. He was a tireless protector of the hills, walking thousands of kilometres through them.

But it was the Chipko movement that brought him to national attention.

Historian and author Ramchandra Guha writes in “The Use And Abuse of Nature” that “Chipko was sparked by the government’s decision to allot a plot of hornbeam forest in the Alaknanda valley to Symonds, a sports goods company from faraway Allahabad. A few months before this, the Gandhian organisati­on in the forefront of the cooperativ­e movement, the Dashauli Gram Swarajya Sangha, had been refused permission by the forest department to fell trees from the very same forest. The transparen­t favouritis­m provoked the villagers led by DGSS, to threaten to hug the trees and prevent them from being felled.

 ??  ?? Sunderlal Bahuguna during a protest on June 3, 1995.
Sunderlal Bahuguna during a protest on June 3, 1995.

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