Wild India – Love in the Wild
India is Wild. India is beautiful.
I had read these lines during my childhood days and had always imagined being in our forests, quietly listening to the roaring waterfalls, watching magnificent snow caped peaks, observing beautiful denizens of wild india the tigers, leopards, rhinos, elephants – listening to the chirping of birds, watching dolphins diving and crocodiles lazily getting into water.
I have often been mesmerized by the beautiful vistas unfolding infront of my eyes. Several life threatening incidents haven’t deterred me from visiting various parts of Wild India again and again. I feel blessed again and again.
I have been capturing the beauty of Wild India through my photographs for close to two decades, and about five years back I decided to tap the power of moving imagery of films to promote awareness about our fast vanishing wilderness and wildlife. When you are in the jungle, you are oblivious to the happenings in the society. When I come back from such serene places of Wild India to our metro cities, the huge difference strikes me.
In the past few months, I have been deeply disturbed by the happenings in our society. The violations of women and children who are systematically hunted by pack of maniacs raises several questions for which I find no answer. The Hon’ble High Court of Delhi has said that behaviour of police in trying to suppress the information of such crimes coming to light and beating up innocent protesters is worse than animals.
Earlier, Amitabh Bachchan, megastar of Indian Cinema, had said in twitter “Wanted to say so much of the day.. but so disturbed by the gang rape case in Delhi.. atrocious and unforgivable!!… The fear of system, of order, of conduct guided by justice, is fast disappearing. Is this the freedom that our elders fought for!! “On this public platform I dare not even attempt to mention the details of the rape case… even an animal would not behave so,”
This repeated assertion by people indicates that animals are worse than humans. Is it so?
Who is more human?
The female of the animal species choose their mate themselves from a host of suitable males of their species, who in turn try to impress the females by showing off their vigour. The peacocks display their feathers, the adult lions are known by their rich luxuriant manes, the deer stags have large antlers to display, some male birds build nest to impress the females, some sing, others display their spectacular colours, pouches, size etc.
The females in the non-human animal species are at a higher pedestal as they need not bring in any dowry or material goods to make the groom agree. As opposed to that we humans force the girls to bring in money and material goods. Else, they are tortured, burnt etc.
Our angry politicians are known to call each other dogs. Even wild dogs who live in packs, don’t team up to forcibly violate a female of their species.
Mating in non-human species is for reproduction, for passing off their genes to the next generation. Unlike humans, it is not about pleasure. Only when a female of the species comes in oestrus, other males line up as suitors and the most suitable one is selected. In ancient India, this tradition of Swayamvara was prevalent, where a princess used to select from a host of suitable kings and princes.
In this era of intolerance and violation of women, Love and affection seems to have become a huge casualty. One sees unalloyed joy and happiness in the animals.
We never find any pretensions in the love and affection displayed by animals. Can we learn love and affection from the animals? I created a short film showcasing endangered wild animals nourishing their young. The bond between mother and child is the most sacred. I hope by watching calves of one horned-rhino, Asiatic wild ass, Asiatic wild buffalo, Asiatic elephant, gaur etc suckling milk and leopard cubs playing we can imbibe some love and affection from them.
India has a rich history. Several females like Gargee, Maitreyee etc used to be revered in the society. Only during a brief period of several hundred years when invasions by muslim/mongol tribes, who used violation of women as a weapon to shock, numb, humiliate, mentally break down and subjugate their opponents led to traditions of veils and pushing women behind the doors. Modern Indian should not be held hostage to those few hundred years as that is a spec compared to several thousands of years of rich history of this ancient civilisation.
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Thought provoking and impressive, the way you compared the unpoisoned naturalness of the animals with the lust of the rapacious monsters called humans. No surprises that animals beat us hands down. Loved the pristine video with a heavenly background score. Thanks for the beautiful post, Sabyasachi!
Thanks Umashankar! I am happy that you liked the article and the short “Mother and Child”.
Cheers,
Sabyasachi
Going by what is happening in human civilizations, one can easily say animals are better, they never kill except when hungry and avoid conflict as much as possible. No cases of harassment, sexual abuse or slavery etc. are recorded from animal kingdom. And humans are only species that is killing this planet.
I completely agree. With 7 billion plus population and growing, we are cornering all the resources to ourselves and forcing other species to become extinct. We have got the arrogance to call ourselves as the best species and used the term human to denote it. Alas, how wrong we are!
Beautiful! Just stumbled upon this site now. Going to stay tuned! Together, lets make a difference.
Hi Minu,
Each one of us has to strive hard. The challenge to save this planet is much beyond any one us. Unless everybody come together, it is going to remain as a distant dream.
Cheers,
Sabyasachi
Man is a social animal. Now, I wonder whether we are animals but after reading your post where you showed us a better and more civilized side of animals (than us), I am confused and sorry for ourselves. We are deteriorating at such a speed that few years down the lane, jungle will be more safe OR is it already?
Hi Saru,
We have been brought up with stereotypes of animals as fierce, wild, unpredictable etc. We are taught to fear animals. In fact, that is actually not the case. Animals have a set of rules and follow those. It is we humans who don’t follow any rules. I feel safe in dense jungles. Don’t find much safety in our big cities.
Sabyasachi
You sound like my father. My parents live in HP in a remote village and there are many animals around in the forests and they say the same thing. As long as we don’t disturb them, they won’t harm us. It’s delightful to watch various species while sipping morning tea from the balcony.
Amazing photography… Very inspiring…