The Hindu (Kolkata)

WITNESS TO CHIPKO Chandi Prasad Bhatt’s memoir is both a chronicle of a life and a record of the long fight to protect forests in the Garhwal

- Mahesh Rangarajan

handi Prasad Bhatt’s memoir, Gentle Resistance, is a remarkable book, by a man no less unique. Bhatt came to public prominence in the wake of the Alaknanda floods of 1970. Over the next few years he concluded that the “selfrelian­ce and selfrespec­t” of hill communitie­s in Garwhal and Kumaon were tied to the fate of the forests.

The Chipko protests of 197374 had a longer background in the loss of control of the forest in the late 19th century as timber became vital to British imperial interests. As he writes most movingly, it was the largescale road constructi­on after 1960 that changed things in epochal terms.

He writes of how the surroundin­gs of Joshimath had “bears hidden by the foliage of oak trees. Tigers were known to stalk the various rivulets. By spring time, the hills were radiant with the red and pink of the rhododendr­on. All these beautiful trees were brutally hacked down.”

CLoss of forest cover

By 1970, for him, the loss of forest cover and the wrath of the rivers gave it urgency. The historic women’s protest in Reni, Chamoli in March 1973 questioned not only a contract for a specific company but the very approach to control and exploitati­on of the forest with industry and forest revenue as priority.

This is what makes for a fascinatin­g read: it is both a chronicle of a life and the times of the author and a record of his long years of service in the Bhoodan movement under Vinoba Bhave and subsequent­ly in forestrela­ted initiative­s.

The English book follows close on the Hindi original published in 2021. It is shorter and rather than being a literal translatio­n, a rewrite of the gist of the original. This has been a meticulous­ly executed project for the translator, Samir Banerjee. The black and white photograph­s tell their own story.

Rejecting hierarchie­s

The experience­s and events of the early years of his life and milieu are of much importance. Born in 1934 to a priestly family of Gopeshwar Brahmins, his was a world of both hard scrabble struggle, and an awareness and rejection of deepset social hierarchie­s. ‘Untouchabi­lity’,

Gentle Resistance,

The Autobiogra­phy of Chandi Prasad Bhatt Translated by Samir Banerjee Permanent Black

₹895

a pernicious practice, was rife even as services of key Dalit groups, like iron smiths, carpenters and basket weavers, were integral to the wider village community.

But the austerity was real: when unable to deliver dues from customers for a welloff relative’s business he returned to his village. But the family was unable to produce enough from their agricultur­al fields, and it was only when Bhatt got a job at the Motor Owners Union of Garwhal that they could eat arhar dal and rice.

It was in the late 1950s after a march with Acharya Vinoba Bhave that he turned to fulltime social work. This also meant that when he ploughed the land, he ate with Dalit labourers, prompting the ire of many for violating caste boundaries.

The early phase that saw

Chandi Prasad Bhatt the formation of the Dasholi Gram Swaraj Sangh in 1964 are critical to comprehend the roots and staying power of the later Chipko movement. The idea of village selfrule through voluntary organisati­on was an old Gandhian idea. The author’s pen portraits of men, women, events, and episodes are priceless. There is a selfeffaci­ng tone and a deep sense of giving others their due.

In 1959, many ideas, such as primacy to local needs in forest use and workers cooperativ­es to ensure gains were locally and evenly spread out, were spelt out in a report under deputy minister Baldev Singh. Later, in the 1970s, stalwart Chief Ministers of UP like N.D. Tiwari and H.N. Bahuguna gave their assurances to implement these ideas but that made no difference on the ground.

Peaceful protests

As Bhatt shows in the Reni case, it was individual­s like Gaura Devi and other women protestors who managed to stall, and chase away, those licensed to fell trees for a company. Well beyond that, the cooperativ­es gathering and processing herbs and other products and the voluntary raising of broadleave­d tree saplings became the main stay in Chamoli. The movement as much as its method of determined peaceful protest had widespread resonance. Specific demands like an end to forest auctions were hard won.

The troubling part of the narrative is when he reflects on his long journey. The montane ecosystem is more fragile and constructi­on is taking a heavy toll even as community bonds are vulnerable. But Bhatt’s book will stand both as an eye witness account and as inspiratio­n.

The troubling part of the narrative is when he reflects on his long journey.

The montane ecosystem is more fragile and constructi­on is taking a heavy toll even as community bonds are vulnerable

The reviewer teaches History and Environmen­tal Studies at Ashoka University, Haryana.

 ?? (SPECIAL ARRANGEMEN­T) ?? ◣
(SPECIAL ARRANGEMEN­T) ◣
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India