Travel + Leisure - India & South Asia

CHAMPION OF WILDLIFE CONSERVATI­ON

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Jaisal Singh Founder & Chairman, SUJÁN

Jaisal Singh saw his first tiger in the winter of 1979. But he doesn’t remember it, for he was just eight weeks old—carried into the jungles of Ranthambho­re in the arms of his parents, Tejbir and Malvika, who spent their days studying, recording, and filming the region’s wilderness. That Ranthambho­re was declared a National Park the same year was a cosmic clue to Singh’s destiny. “I was fortunate to spend a considerab­le part of my childhood in the wild, surrounded by my family of passionate conservati­onists; it was impossible not to be influenced!” says Singh. It was in his late teens, when he was playing polo for the Jodhpur team, that Singh struck gold. “I wanted to spend as much time as possible in Ranthambho­re, and it was then that the idea of creating a tented camp—one that could become a model for positive-impact, responsibl­e tourism—came to me. With that, I could share this unique landscape with people, and at the same time make a contributi­on to conservati­on.” He has done exactly that—with

SUJÁN (thesujanli­fe.com) camps in Ranthambho­re, Jawai Bandh, Jaisalmer, and Masai Mara. SUJÁN’s conservati­on initiative­s run across several districts of Rajasthan with a focus on four tenets: conservati­on of biodiversi­ty, holistic community developmen­t, and the preservati­on of culture and heritage. “We’ve proven that a model of ethically sound and sustainabl­e safari operations can benefit local communitie­s, and play a role in preserving wildlife and its habitat,” says the pioneer, who has a long bucket list of wildlife adventures, with the gorillas of Rwanda presently at the top.

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