For how long will we encourage this silence and live so comfortably in ignorance? When it comes us, we make a noise, a huge fuss, we shout and scream slogans and want our voices to be heard. We fight for our rights. We fight for what we think we deserve. But what about the ones who have no voice? Being the more evolved, we think we are superior; that these innocent animals have no voice to be heard. It is time for us to take a step towards the disgraced “beasts” and “man eaters”. It is time to remember that the innocent leopards are not our enemies, all they want is to live, is that so unreasonable? Have we become so insensitive that we have forgotten that these leopards are also living beings and also have certain natural rights. We must be their voices, the voices of change, the voices that help them obtain the land that we have so insensitively snatched from them and return their habitat. We are the encroachers, and now it is time for us to realize our mistake and help the innocent canines. Let us embrace our co-existence, support the Paw Project and help us take a step towards solving the long drawn man-animal conflict.
THE PAW PROJECT
This is an initiative of the Media Students from St.Xavier's College to explore the possibilities of challenging what has been posed to us as a "man-animal" conflict from time immemorial. We want to breakdown the walls of ignorance for the commoners and probe them to embrace the existence of leopards as equal inhabitants and not encroachers. Disclaimer: The blogs quote a few hypothetical situations where not acknowledged.
Tuesday, 23 February 2016
Friday, 12 February 2016
I leap, I pounce, chase my freedom
Trapped in the limitations of my earth,
Only the limitless sky to my share,
If only I could walk the clouds.
Should I regret the existence of the creatures who I cohabit this space with?
For they define my boundaries, render me helpless, call me ruthless.
Or be grateful to them for they have given me the mere chance to breathe because it seems to me I don't have a voice, It has drowned in their force.
I leap, I pounce, chase the hypothetical.
Trapped in the limitations of my earth,
Only the limitless sky to my share,
If only I could walk the clouds.
Should I regret the existence of the creatures who I cohabit this space with?
For they define my boundaries, render me helpless, call me ruthless.
Or be grateful to them for they have given me the mere chance to breathe because it seems to me I don't have a voice, It has drowned in their force.
I leap, I pounce, chase the hypothetical.
“Go to sleep or the tiger will come and eat you!”
In our childhoods we have heard this threat repeatedly. Whenever we dared to do
the mistake of staying up on a school night, our mothers used this persuasion
tactic of fear to convince us to go to sleep. We were taught that animals like
tiger, cheetahs and leopards were scary and to be afraid of. We were terrorized
with the story of the ‘man-eating’ animal and had been conditioned to be
fearful of these big cats.
The leopard in the popular threat is gruesome, scary and ruthless, while the leopard of reality is the defensive, scared and unprotected.
Mumbai, the sprawling metropolis on India’s west coast, is home to over 20 million people—and around 35 leopards. The whole of Mumbai metropolitan region covers an area of 4,355 sq. km. And is the most densely populated metro city in the country. A tussle between natural wildlife and humans is inevitable, but is it fair?
The media hasn’t helped in any way to reduce the misconceptions that build up the people's minds, and instead adds to it by broadcasting headlines like “man eater attacks a biker” and “khunkhar tendue ne kiya hamla”! Even today, these myths are propagated more and more for the purpose of selling sensational news. Then how do we uncover the truth?
The truth is that, leopards attack when they are provoked. They are as scared, if not more, as humans, and want to prevent themselves from harm's way. They also venture upon humans when they mistake them for animals. Krishna Tiwari, a wildlife researcher conservationist states that leopards usually eat spotted deer but due to the wide-spread encroachments, they have been forced to feed upon other smaller preys like dogs, cats, goats and rodents. A leopard requires 10-15 sq kms of land with availability of prey, water and shelter to survive comfortable. However, in this situation, a good number of leopards are staying in a small stretch of land, and are unable to move to other areas, which they ideally would have done, due to the park being surrounded by development on all sides. They avoid confrontation, do not understand man-made boundaries and are innocent victims in this situation.
The leopard in the popular threat is gruesome, scary and ruthless, while the leopard of reality is the defensive, scared and unprotected.
Mumbai, the sprawling metropolis on India’s west coast, is home to over 20 million people—and around 35 leopards. The whole of Mumbai metropolitan region covers an area of 4,355 sq. km. And is the most densely populated metro city in the country. A tussle between natural wildlife and humans is inevitable, but is it fair?
The media hasn’t helped in any way to reduce the misconceptions that build up the people's minds, and instead adds to it by broadcasting headlines like “man eater attacks a biker” and “khunkhar tendue ne kiya hamla”! Even today, these myths are propagated more and more for the purpose of selling sensational news. Then how do we uncover the truth?
The truth is that, leopards attack when they are provoked. They are as scared, if not more, as humans, and want to prevent themselves from harm's way. They also venture upon humans when they mistake them for animals. Krishna Tiwari, a wildlife researcher conservationist states that leopards usually eat spotted deer but due to the wide-spread encroachments, they have been forced to feed upon other smaller preys like dogs, cats, goats and rodents. A leopard requires 10-15 sq kms of land with availability of prey, water and shelter to survive comfortable. However, in this situation, a good number of leopards are staying in a small stretch of land, and are unable to move to other areas, which they ideally would have done, due to the park being surrounded by development on all sides. They avoid confrontation, do not understand man-made boundaries and are innocent victims in this situation.
We must remember that the leopards were here long before the millions of people
turned Mumbai into a bustling megacity. There were once a sizeable population
of tigers in the city too, but the SNGP's peripheral have never been as densely
populated as they are now, and many conservationists believe that this is the
reason for the increased sightings.
According to Nikit Surve's research, the leopard-attack situation has been heightened since the 2000s. Very recently, in January 2016, a boy in Aarey Milk Colony witnessed a leopard walking with a puppy in his mouth. In another incidence in January 2016, a man spoke about seeing a female leopard with her cubs in their backyard every alternate evening. (However it must be noted that the leopard never attacked the humans partly because the humans never attacked the leopards). In February 2016, a 43-year-old woman was attacked by a leopard when she went out to relieve herself. There have been several such incidences where the leopard is very easily blamed and named as the culprit.
According to Nikit Surve's research, the leopard-attack situation has been heightened since the 2000s. Very recently, in January 2016, a boy in Aarey Milk Colony witnessed a leopard walking with a puppy in his mouth. In another incidence in January 2016, a man spoke about seeing a female leopard with her cubs in their backyard every alternate evening. (However it must be noted that the leopard never attacked the humans partly because the humans never attacked the leopards). In February 2016, a 43-year-old woman was attacked by a leopard when she went out to relieve herself. There have been several such incidences where the leopard is very easily blamed and named as the culprit.
In all the fable tales that children hear, we have seen the big cats as the
villains. This has created a psychological impact on the mindset of the growing
children and instilled fear in them. However, there is need for a revolutionary
change in the thinking of the people. What we, as reporters and media
personnels say about such incidences, and the way we speak the truth of the
incidence will not only gradually change this angle of the man-eating aadam-khor
animal and make him into an equal inhabitant of this earth. After all, it is
their lands as much as it is ours, and let us not forget that we took over
their land, the land of the innocent defenceless animals and called it our own.
Now it’s up to you to decide: are they encroaching our lands or are we
encroaching their lives?
An initiative for the canine.
Are they encroaching our lands or are we encroaching their
lives?
THEY FEARS US AS MUCH AS WE FEAR THEM
Why is it that the power of intellectual capacitation has
given mankind the right to decide the fate of animals, make the decision of
restricting them, alienating them from the habitat that they are entitled to,
render them helpless because they cannot speak for themselves. The present
situation of this animal-man conflict has pushed us to ponder if it is
justified to label an innocent canine as a ‘savage beast’ when all it is trying
to do is fend for its life. The Paw Project is our initiative to explore this
dimension and cater awareness to consumers through the means of this blog. Anushka Maheshwari
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