Monday 30 January 2023

Peace to the Waters, Peace to Herbs & Trees (Yajurveda 36:17) : Forest Day & Water Day

Peace to the Waters, Peace to Herbs & Trees (Yajurveda 36:17) : Forest Day & Water Day





Rains: A Hate to Love Story

As a child I hated rains, though I did brave them.  In those times, when even an umbrella was a precious possession to be taken lightly, I lost my umbrella, and received scolding for being careless.  But as a fifth grader I firmly resolved not to use umbrella, and did manage my time as a school student up to grade tenth, to survive the heavy monsoons of Keralam, somehow or other, but determinedly not using an umbrella. I hated rains because they invariably happened whenever we had been on those very rare trips or tours.

Then I left home to join the order, and chose to be in the North of India, leaving the green Keralam and returned only after 3 years - it was 1983.  As the Kerala Express moved into the evergreen Kerala border, I was shocked to see coconut palms drooping and their fronds withering in the waterless summer - it had been an unusually long summer – colleges, hostels, schools etc. had to be closed down due to lack of water.  I sensed the tragedy arriving and the great blessings the rains were! It took another two months when the dry spell finally saw its end, with skies opening up! I got transformed into a lover of rain. Since then, I have never felt bad about having rain, the channel of elixir of life for our land! Even when it rained heavily almost obstructing our movement in the open-air basketball courts, our company of youngsters relished to splash in the waters and continue our game with relaxed rules. 

Water for Life - The Global Scenario

World consciousness collectively responded to the vital significance of water a decade later, with UN beginning to observe a world water day since 1993. The scientific world noticed a missing beat. The normal water cycle is where water in the water bodies and the soil, and the water stored as ice in the glaciers (oceans 95.5%, lakes, river & soil 1.7%, glaciers & permanent snow 1.7%, water vapour in the atmosphere .001%) getting evaporated in the sun or escaping from the trees through transpiration, condensing and getting back to these sources and even get stored in the earth as ground water.  This was getting disrupted thanks to human intervention.  This took the forms of extraction of ground water, interference with surface cover of trees by felling, and top soil by way of construction, leading to rapid run-off and displacement of ground water.  It also led to lowering of ground water level. Further, industrial, agricultural and domestic effluents entering water bodies and ground water have made waters contaminated and posing health hazard.  

This realisation of the urgency behind the issue has led to SDG (Sustainable Development Goal) 6 - safe water and sanitation for all.  Water is a basic requirement for everyone, affecting all domains of life, influencing key development issues such as health, hunger, sanitation, gender equality, jobs, agriculture, industry, transportation, weather, disaster, migration and peace!! Hence it has been made part of the global development agenda as the 6th development goal for 2030. 

The annual report series on various aspects of water released on March 22, the world water day by UNESCO is an eyeopener towards the vital implications of water for the world.  So far it has looked into domains connected to water such as energy (2014), sustainable world (2015), jobs (2016), waste water as a resource (2017), nature-based solutions (2018), inclusion (2019), climate change (2020), valuing water (2021), ground water etc. 

Some Water Facts: aapah shantih (Peace to the Waters) 

  • 2.2. billion lack access to safely managed drinking water, while 785 million are denied even access to basic drinking water.
  • 3 billion people lack access to basic handwashing facilities – found to be a most effective practice to combat COVID.
  • More than 80 per cent of wastewater resulting from human activities is discharged into rivers or sea without any treatment for waste removal.
  • Each day, nearly 1,000 children die due to preventable water and sanitation-related diarrheal diseases
  • Approximately 70 per cent of all water abstracted from rivers, lakes and aquifers is used for irrigation
  • Floods and other water-related disasters account for 70 per cent of all deaths related to natural disasters
  • By 2030, it is feared that 700 million people will be displaced (climate refugees) on account of lack of access to water.
  • A typical soft drink per litre is said to be produced at the expense of over 200 litres (or more) of water. Plain bottled water takes 1.39 litres for 1 litre, whereas, carbonated water needs 2.02 litres. 

Taking into account the grave scenario, UN has declared 2018-2028 as Water Action Decade.

Forests & Water Connect

As if it is a prelude to this vital concern, befittingly, UN has introduced another holiday on March 21st, as International Day of Forests or World Forestry Day since 2012. And indeed, water cycle is greatly influenced by forests.  

A recent longitudinal study observed that changes in Amazon rain forests appeared to have direct impact on the Himalayan Tibetan plateau, a store house of water for almost 2 billion population. It points to the significance of the protection of forest cover wherever possible, as they all contribute towards the world wide web of water and natural resources. 

Studies have also found the several zoonotic diseases are kept under check and control thanks to the presence of forests - mindless destruction of forests, displacing diversity by monoculture etc. besides impacting the climate and water-cycle, may also release organisms that would be a threat to several other species including the humans.  Scientists point out that viruses such as HIV-AIDS, Nipah, Corona, H1N1 etc. are likely to be the impact of such human interference with the ecosystems. 

A Healthy Heritage for Harmony

The ancient Indian literature has ample proof indicating an insight into this vital link between water and trees.  A salutation to trees goes thus: namo vrukshabhyo hari keshebhya.  I salute the trees which are the hair of God.  This can be linked to the ancient legend where the torrential waters of Ganga brought down to earth by Bhagirath was tamed into a life-giving channel on the land by shivjata, the hair-locks of Shiva, the ascetic dweller of Himalayas. The symbolic 'shivjata' is the tree-cover of the mountains that makes running water walk and crawl and stop on the earth to form reservoirs below. 

This linkage is also found in another aphorism from Matsyapurana (also cited in Vrkshayurveda) where goddess Parvati justifies her equal care for a Deodar (Cedar) sapling as much for her son: “Dasa Koopa Samo Vaapi Dasa Vaapi Samo Hridha Dasa hridha Sama Putra Dasa Putra Samo Druma”, which means, ten wells = one pond; ten ponds = one lake; ten lakes = one son; and ten sons = one tree. The cultural insight into the link between forests and water, and the consequent need for conservation, are seen in the saying. 

There is a sacred conservation tradition of micro-forests in the South of India linked to water, especially, in the once-water-rich Keralam: Don't tread the Sacred Groves (kaavu), the ponds will dry up, and adversity will befall the family.

Poet Joyce Kilmer wrote: I think I shall never see a poem lovely as a tree.  Poems are made by fools like me, but only God can make a tree.

All these religio-spiritual and poetic traditions point to the need to re-look at the human interference with nature, especially, water resources and forests. Combinedly, the two days are an invitation to individuals and communities to revere the Mother Nature we too are part of, once again examine our life-styles and initiate appropriate action. 

BE A WATER WARRIOR 

Against the alarming loss of almost 32000 million hectares of forest annually, United Nations proposes these annual holidays to revere, restore and recreate our forest and water resources.

In India, we have a modern day Bhagirath, Dr Rajendra Singh, who successfully led the efforts to bring life back to the farmers around the dead Alwar river of Rajasthan through a people's movement named as Tarun Bharat Sangh. 

In Keralam, we had Green Peace River Keeper - Mr. V.J. Jose, who led a one man fight to protect the precious Periyar river from industrial pollution. 

People like them show the possibilities before individuals like us. Before water-wars set in, we have to act, beginning with ourselves: 

  • Save water: Take shorter showers and don't let the tap run when brushing my teeth, doing dishes and preparing food
  • Break taboos: Talk about the critical connection between toilets, natural processes like menstruation and water.
  • Fix Leakages to Prevent Wastage & Pollution: of plumbing, taps, flushes and tanks (storage & septic).
  • Stop Polluting: Don't put food waste, oils, medicines and chemical down the drains
  • Make it equal: Where still water fetching is required, let it be the task of all - men, women, boys, girls.
  • Buy & Eat Local: Seasonal and home-grown food; and look for products made with less water
  • Watch your drink: check if you can reduce on water guzzlers - bottled water, soda, soft-drinks and packaged juices
  • Be Curious: Find out where my water comes from, its quality, its treatment processes
  • Be a Water-Warrior: Plant a tree; help water to walk, stop, sleep & sink in your plot (if feasible) or campus
  • Clean up: Take part in clean-ups of my local rivers, lakes, wetlands or beaches.

                                                                                                                        (Adapted from UN World Water Day Campaign)

As we celebrate these days, let us remember what Mahatma Gandhi told: "What we are doing to the forests of the world is but a mirror reflection of what we are doing to ourselves and to one another."  

Water Day <https://www.worldwaterday.org/> Jan. 30, 2023

Water Cycle <https://climatekids.nasa.gov/water-cycle/> Jan. 29, 2023

Forests and Climate change <https://www.wionews.com/science/climate-extremes-in-amazon-rainforest-directly-impact-those-in-tibetan-plateau-556681> Jan. 29, 2023

Zoonotic Diseases <https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/24/disease-outbreaks-more-likely-in-deforestation-areas-study-finds> Jan. 29, 2023

Zoonotic Diseases <https://india.mongabay.com/2020/04/deforestation-and-disease-how-natural-habitat-destruction-can-fuel-zoonotic-diseases/> Jan. 29, 2023

Water Use in Drinks: <https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2013/10/28/241419373/how-much-water-actually-goes-into-making-a-bottle-of-water> Jan. 30, 2023

 


No comments:

Post a Comment