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October
25, 2000
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Dagger
Drawn
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NINA
PILLAI
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Spirit
of Giving
While India
celebrates the twin festivals of Dussera and Diwali, a pall of gloom
hangs over the burgeoning number of tiger and leopard deaths in
recent months. The delicate balance of the environment we inhabit
has precluded that animals, however rare or nearing extinction,
have a lesser right to life on our earth.
Without our animals and their natural habitat, the forest, we are
presiding over a disaster of untold magnitude that will cost us
dear as it will be irreversible.
Watching the
National Geographic and Discovery channels as a regular, I marvel
at the grace of lions, panthers, tigers, leopards and other wild
cats their proud carriage and grace, their fierce loyalty and gentle
mothering all have the ability to bring tears to my eyes. Yet, nearly
everyday, the newspapers are the harbinger of yet another gory skinning
by poachers.
Ancient Chinese
medicine had many uses for the tigers' anatomy, which even the advent
of Viagra has not made a dent into, as the tiger's bone is meant
to enhance male virility like no blue tablet can ever dare to claim.
Our elephants face similar extinction for their tusks. It is still
not too late to try and preserve our ancient heritage, culled into
folklore through the stories of our nation's animals and birds.
Protection of
the Indian tiger, leopard and elephant has become a gargantuan task,
as poor funding and poorer manpower resources and inadequate infrastructure
are ensuring an unfair advantage to the trigger-happy poachers.
The very santuaries that are meant to protect and preserve the vast
depletion of our tiger population are now becoming the source of
supply, as the number of dead animals swell at times with tacit
support from the keepers themselves.
If our animals
in the wild are threatened, the animals we have in captivity in
the handful of zoos across the nation, tell an even more painful
story neglected, ill, starving animals that seem to be rotting and
moulting in front of our very own eyes. The gloom and stench of
the zoos in India make a very sad statement that the dwindling numbers
of visitors confirm.
Any zoo in the
western hemisphere is a joy to visit as children learn to imbibe
and enjoy their day at the zoo. The Singapore Zoo can be visited
day and night and has rare examples of flora and fauna plus its
usual fate of wild cats, elephants, turtles, mammals et al. If we
can emulate these new age zoos, we will have somewhere to take our
children, even if only to keep them on a reality check that though
near extinct tigers and elephants still exist and will do so if
we address the problem of wild animals and their diminishing habitat.
On a war-footing.
On a recent
visit to London, I had a pleasure to be invited by Lord and Lady
Swaraj Paul to special enclosure of the London Zoo built by the
family in memory of Ambica, the daughter they lost some years ago
patrons are not uncommon in the well-managed London Zoo. It is not
difficult to raise capital from corporates, and individuals who
can perhaps adopt individual animals, or indeed like the Pauls an
entire section of the zoo, thus perpetuating a legacy of giving
with an understanding of the ecological balance of life.
I would love
to see a TV telethon, where instead of dolling out one or ten crores
you highlight the plight of the poor, the needy, even perhaps a
zoo desperate for a cash injection and have phone lines that one
can pledge money to, big or small, like every drop of water it will
go to make an ocean of giving to a worthy cause. To give is far
more noble than to receive.
Instead of inculcating
greed and an escalating material want, through programmes like KBC
and SDKK why not teach our people the age-old tradition of giving
to the less fortunate. If I see a beggar that has a limb missing
I stop and give him some alms. How much more impact would an image
of dire need have when beamed straight into my bedroom, I know I
will call in to a telethon and pledge a token of help and so will
all my friends. To balance the programmes based on the lure of filthy
lucre, we must have programmes than instill values of care, concern
and inculcate a true sense of giving. I can hear the hot lines jangling,
only when we give can we be truly blessed.
This Diwali,
let us try to burn less crackers, buy less and try and give, as
tradition demands, something to the less fortunate. Let us be driven
by the need to give rather than take. Let us inculcate in our young
a sense of purity by adhering to the principals of dharma, by bringing
a little light to the darkness of the less fortunate.
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