Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Indigenous faithful, Christians work with environmen­talists

- By Deepa Bharath

SHILLONG, INDIA » Tambor Lyngdoh made his way through the fern-covered woodland — naming plants, trees, flowers, even stones — as if he were paying older family members a visit.

The community leader and entreprene­ur was a little boy when his uncle brought him here and said these words: “This forest is your mother.”

This sacred space is in the village of Mawphlang, nestled in the verdant Khasi Hills in the northeast Indian state of Meghalaya, whose name means “abode of clouds.” On an overcast day, the forest, a bumpy 15-mile drive from the state capital of Shillong, was tranquil but for the sound of crickets chirping and raindrops rustling the bright green foliage.

The ground, carpeted by dead leaves and green saplings, was peppered with moss-covered sacred stones, which for centuries have served as sacrificia­l altars and recipients of chants, songs and prayers.

Mawphlang is one of more than 125 sacred forests in Meghalaya, and arguably the most famous one. These forests are ancient, virgin woodlands that have been protected by Indigenous communitie­s for many centuries; comparable tracts have been documented in other parts of India and around the globe, from Nigeria and Ethiopia to Turkey, Syria and Japan.

In Meghalaya, these forests represent an ancient tradition of environmen­tal conservati­on, rooted in Indigenous religious beliefs and culture. For hundreds of years, people have come to sacred groves to offer prayers and animal sacrifice to the deities they believe reside there. Any form of desecratio­n is taboo; in most forests, even plucking a flower or leaf is prohibited.

“Here, communicat­ion between man and God takes place,” said Lyngdoh, a descendant of the priestly clan which sanctified the Mawphlang forest. “Our forefather­s set aside these groves and forests to signify the harmony between man and nature.”

Many of these forests are primary sources of water for surroundin­g villages. They are also treasure troves of biodiversi­ty. Lyngdoh counts at least four species of trees and three types of orchids that are extinct outside of the Mawphlang sacred grove.

Today, climate change, pollution and deforestat­ion threaten these spaces. They have also been affected by the Indigenous population's conversion to Christiani­ty, which began in 19th century under British rule. Christian converts lost their spiritual connection to the forests and lore, said H.H. Morhmen, an environmen­talist and retired Unitarian minister. Meghalaya is 75% Christian in a country that is almost 80% Hindu.

“They viewed their new religion as the light and these rituals as darkness, as pagan or even evil,” he said.

In recent years, environmen­talists working with Indigenous and Christian communitie­s as well as government agencies have helped spread the message about why the forests, invaluable to the region's ecosystem and biodiversi­ty, must be tended. Morhmen said that work is bearing fruit in rural communitie­s.

“We're now finding that even in places where people have converted to Christiani­ty, they are taking care of the forests,” Mohrmen said.

Mustem village in Jaintia Hills is one example. Heimonmi Shylla, headman of the hamlet with about 500 households and a deacon, says almost all residents are Presbyteri­an, Catholic or members of the Church of God.

“I don't consider the forest holy,” he said. “But I have great reverence for it.”

It serves as the village's source of drinking water and is a sanctuary for fish.

“When the weather gets really warm, the forest keeps us cool,” he said. “When you breathe in that fresh air,

Donbok Buam, a native of Jaintia Hills in Meghalaya, stands in a sacred forest, a sparsely populated mountainou­s region of Meghalaya, a state in northeaste­rn India, in September. Buam still practices the Indigenous faith and is trying to promote ecotourism in the region.

In his village's sacred forest, he says, rituals are performed at the confluence of three rivers honoring the goddess Lechki, denizen of the forest and guardian of the village. your mind becomes fresh.”

Shylla worries about climate change and insufficie­nt rain, but he said there are plans to promote tourism and “make the forest greener” by planting more trees.

Petros Pyrtuh takes his 6-year-old son, Bari Kupar, to a sacred forest near his village, also in Jaintia Hills. He is Christian, but said the forest is an important part of his life; he hopes his son will learn to respect it.

“In our generation, we don't believe it is the dwelling place of the gods,” he said. “But we continue with the tradition of protecting the forest because our ancestors have told us not to defile the forest.”

B.K. Tiwari, a retired professor of environmen­tal science from North Eastern Hill University in Shillong, is heartened to see that conversion to Christiani­ty has not disconnect­ed the people entirely from the land.

“In the Indigenous religion everything is sacred — animals, plants, trees, rivers,” said Tiwari, who has studied the biological and cultural diversity of Meghalaya's sacred forests. “Now, they may not feel any connection with the divine or spiritual, but as a culture, they understand their roles as the custodians.”

Donbok Buam, a native of Jaintia Hills who still practices the Indigenous faith, explained that in his village's sacred forest, rituals are performed at the confluence of three rivers honoring the goddess Lechki, denizen of the forest and guardian of the village.

“If people have a problem or sickness or if women have trouble conceiving children, they go there and perform sacrifices,” Buam said.

One of the rituals involves carrying river water before daybreak and offering it to the goddess at a specific location in the forest. The water is poured in gourds and placed alongside five betel nuts and five betel leaves — four for the rivers and one for the sacred forest. A white goat is sacrificed in honor of the forest deity, he said.

“We believe the goddess walks in the forest, even today,” Buam said.

The Nongrum clan is one of three that cares for the Swer sacred forest near Cherrapunj­i, an area about 35 miles southwest of Shillong, which is among the wettest in the world. They follow the pantheisti­c Seng Khasi religion, which holds that God exists in everyone and everything.

 ?? ANUPAM NATH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ANUPAM NATH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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