Ideas
Shri Sunderlal Bahuguna (Twitter)
Between December 13 and 20 of 1977, the Indian press was flooded with reports of a new kind of movement. In the Advani forest of the Henval ghati region of present-day Uttarakhand, women in large numbers were hugging and protecting the trees of the forest. The women had organised, among other cultural activities, reading from the Bhagavad Gita and the Srimad Bhagavata.
Women narrators of the divine lore of Srimad Bhagavata Katha reinforced religiously in the minds of the listeners the spiritual centrality of the forest to Indian spirituality. The entire enchanting life of Sri Krishna and His adventures have always taken place in forests and fields adjoining the forests.
The protest now famous worldwide as the Chipko movement was an uniquely Indian environmental movement. It was a people’s movement. It was a green protest not of the Western variety with alien ideologies but a spiritual protest movement.
The man behind the movement was Sunderlal Bahuguna.
A Gandhian working in the Himalayan villages, he understood the importance of forest to the lives of the villagers. From the colonial government to the post-independent government, the state had followed the mechanistic path to development which gave little value to nature.
In the USSR, any talk of environmental protection was a sure invitation to a KGB midnight knock and an assured ticket to the Gulags in Siberia.
In such a global environment, Sunderlal Bahuguna in 1973 spoke of the importance of protecting the forest and linking them to the livelihood of mountain villages and ensuring that vulnerable human communities are safe from imminent ecological disasters.
Sunderlal Bahuguna personified an ecological movement for a developing, post-colonial country; a movement that derived its strength from the spiritual culture of the people. In his demise, we have been left with an inspiring life and nebulous thoughts for the making of a vibrant Hindu environmental vision.
Walking more than 5000 kilometres on foot, he took his message to the people. Padayatras have always been a traditional way of reaching out to people – not in the spirit of propaganda and proselytising but as a means to Jana-Darshan, to learn from the people with humility – how people live and sustain themselves economically and spiritually and ecologically.
Sunderlal Bahuguna successfully showed how important it is to incorporate environmental protection as part of the developmental process and how environmental movements can derive their strength from the natural, spiritual traditions of Sanatana Dharma. He explained:
Sunderlal Bahuguna had taken long fasts during his environmental protection movement. But he was careful not to 'secularise' it in the reductionist sense of the term.
This is from a man who in May 1995, went on a fast for 45 days against the Tehri Dam construction. The man who made the then Prime Minister of the nation assure him that a complete review of the Tehri dam project would be undertaken and in less than a year's time when the assurance of the PM was not kept, Sunderlal Bahuguna undertook a fast for 74 days. In his own words:
Today, a protest movement against every development project in India would likely have its strings being pulled from outside of India.
However, not every protestor is a traitor. There are many complex forces in play in a pluralist democracy like India. That is a reason why India needs a genuine green movement with its roots strong in India’s core spiritual values.
With powerful and independent organisational resources and an ecologically sound value system within, Hindutva is in a position to evolve an indigenous environmental movement that combines science, spirituality and environmentalism. Bahuguna himself had explained the kind of workers the movement needs and again this reflected a vision rooted in the spiritual tradition of India:
The above words of Bahuguna, whether one accepts all his worldviews or not, should be an arousing call to Hindutvaites, both thinkers and activists -fortunately the movement of the Sangh has no such distinction- to create a powerful India-rooted environmental movement.