Monday, May 31, 2021
A Giant Falls
I first met Sunderlal during the pilgrimage to India my wife
Geeta and I made after we married, in the spring of 1974. He arrived late one
day at the simple ashram in Silyara after touring neighboring villages:
Dusk
had fallen and we were already well into our simple meal when Sunderlal
arrived, laden with a huge backpack. He was a vigorous, ascetic man in his late
forties, close-cropped greying beard and hair, kind but intense eyes. He walked
huge distances talking with villagers about self-reliance (swadeshi) and claiming their rights (gram swaraj), nourishing himself on pre-cooked barley which he made
into gruel and wild berries—the mountain folk call them “gooseberries”—from the
Uttarakhand area. He claimed these berries held more vitamin C than any other
fruit. Sunderlal’s children, two boys and a girl, aged roughly eight to twelve,
slept in the bed with Vimla, while he slept on the floor, which seemed to me a
tremendous act of self-denial. The ashram at Silyara was home for Vimla Bahuguna
and her three children. For Sunderlal, it was a base of operations.
In
1987, Sunderlal received the Right
Livelihood Award on behalf of the Chipko movement, a network of village women
who protected the trees in their villages, often by chaining themselves to
them. They endured considerable abuse
from the loggings companies. Once the
prize purse was received, Sunderlal distributed it to the head woman in each
village, to be used to maintain their vigilance. The Indian government, under Indira Gandhi,
passed laws protecting trees in a wide area of Himalaya, with no trees over
three thousand meters being available for felling. This would be disastrous, both for
agriculture and for conservations, since theyoung mountins have thin, rocky
soil and are subject to flash flooding (one a few years ago killed thousands of
people and devastated many villages and one old temple town).
The
issues we discussed during the next four days ranged widely, including SLB’s
personal history, Indian politics and global economics, and the relationship
between science and Vedanta. “The blueprint for survival should be based on the
scientific facts of the West, but have the mystic vision of the East. Isn’t it?”
Sunderlal was in unassailable territory.
“How can everyone live off the land? What
happens to the huge number of city dwellers here and elsewhere if we quit the
industrial model?” I asked.
“The present rate of
growth of the world economy cannot be sustained. Those only will survive who
adopt traditional subsistent lifestyles. All others are lost,” he said.
“But I don’t understand how this jives with the
Hindu belief that the aim of creation is to recognize, once it reaches human
form, that it is God, merging back into the godhead. After the great die-off,
maybe even extinction of the species, what happens to all those souls and the
desire of creation to join the Creator once more?”
Sunderlal smiled. One man said, “It takes a
very long time. Kali Yuga is the end of an era, not the end of time.”
Tenzin added, “Hungry ghosts. The Buddhists
speak of this. There will be huge numbers of hungry ghosts desperately seeking
bodies to incarnate in. They will circle the globe, endlessly.”
Sunderlal nodded his head in agreement. “Don’t
worry about Hindu cosmology. Go back to America and tell your political and
industrial leaders to get off the backs of the poor. Encourage the farmers you
know to plant nut trees. It will take time. And we have no time to waste.”
Sunderlal fought the Tehri Dam for years, as well as others planned for the Himalayas. The power generated was destined for the big cities of the Gangetic Plain, not the hill people. Though he ultimately lost the battle in Terhri, he extracted a promise not to build any more of the dozen hydro dams the government planned for the world’s tallest and most massive mountain chain
Geeta, our son Jesse and I spent some time with Sunderlal again in 1999 and in the early 2000’s. He made an appeal for us to move to the area, build a little house, and work for the Himalayan people. But I had long before decided that my work was among Appalachian folk, and frankly, my life in the Southern Appalachians was too comfortable. Geeta reluctantly let go of her fantasy to have a life in both places. As for Jesse, he said he had never met an environmentalist who walked the talk so thoroughly.
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