Dinner in darkness Yet why was I, who as writer of this column should be excited about such drives, not too enthused? Well, in the morning, on the same day, appears the news of an obnoxious, Rs 300-crore memorial project in NOIDA, on a land that was till two years ago a pristine stretch with a dense wood. Now, I used to take the road along that stretch on my way to office till last year. Around end 2006, I started noticing felling of trees and sensed it right that the government in power had set its eye on that piece of land. Next, trees along the road were felled and an ugly wall cropped up in its place. Which meant that the forest, which was a delight to passersby, was out of reach to common man now. But what was the purpose of the wall, and what was going on behind that wall, was still not clear. The media let the cat out of the bag yesterday, when it reported that the land will be used for a 300-crore Dalit Memorial, a dream project of Ms Mayawati. It makes me sick. Sick at the jaundiced view of development which does not take into account the aesthetic needs of a society; sick at the single-point agenda of devoting national resources to mindless appeasement of vote bank and self-promotion; and sick at the complete apathy of the ruling class to the silent constituency, that’s environment. Who has given leaders like Mayawati the mandate to cause a permanent scar on the face of this earth, I wonder? Is it a school, a college, an industrial training institute, or a hospital which will, by benefiting the society in some productive way, justify the cutting of thousands of trees and endangering the Okhla Bird sanctuary next door? A PIL has been filed, but given India’s recent track record in settling environment-vs-development disputes, there’s not much to be hoped out of legal course. There definitely will be an out-of-court ruling. In the end, nature will have the last laugh. But will I be happy with that judgment? Certainly not. Because it will not be fair on those small, well-meaning kids in ordinary homes, who do their bid for environment protection by eating their dinner in darkness. |
—The author is the Executive editor of Management Compass and Career Choices |