It used to be such a pleasure when the wind blew. When it blew through thousands of its leaves and dozens of its branches. Its tip was often seen brushing our balcony and its fallen leaves and flowers were often seen pleasantly littering our garage. Women and girls would pluck its flowers for puja. Therefore, I was very upset to discover some months ago that the tree had been felled by its owner and my neighbour.
He doesn’t know the harm he has done because good trees mean good rains and good rains mean water, the only daily need that has no substitute.
And I saw the importance of water when I visited a small town in West Bengal some years ago.
And I saw the importance of water when I visited a small town in West Bengal some years ago.
Almost every courtyard in the town had at least half a dozen fruit-bearing trees, a sure source of round the year shade, rain and pleasure to the palate.
It wasn’t like that 20 years ago because there wasn’t enough water. That’s because there wasn’t enough rain. And that’s because there weren’t enough trees.
But the residents didn’t give up. Each one of them played a Greta Thunberg and worked hard to launch a powerful campaign to plant trees and nourish the existing ones.
It did call for an enormous amount of commitment, labour and time, but it worked. Rain, and by association water, isn’t a problem anymore.
Picture used for illustrative purpose only.
The effort had to pay off. Because the desire for change was from within. And not an initiative launched by people, whose lives begin and end in ballot boxes, and whose genius lies in refashioning rhetoric and marketing dreams.
One morning I decided to visit the railway station because that is where the action is in county towns.
On both sides of the avenue I took were beautifully done-up houses. Some of their courtyards played host to breathtaking gardens, some to cars, some to cows and goats and hens and ducks, some to taps, where clothes were being washed. And the refreshing scenario could be attributed to one single factor: plenty of clean water. It was flowing in huge jets from taps. The homes had wells too.
Some households, I could see, had placed garden chairs and even umbrellas among coconut and mango trees. My host had done the same.
On reaching the station market I could see a row of fishermen soliciting customers. But the loudest were the vegetable vendors telling us emphatically how fresh and nutritive their items were. Again, we could source that to an enviable irrigation system.
Well, let’s do what the town did and not wait for the Thunbergs to arrive. We can begin by fighting the felling of trees.