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Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
Monday, November 4, 2013
Teenage girl is real-life elephant whisperer
Fourteen-year old Nirmala Toppo has
become something of a celebrity in the eastern Indian state of Orissa.
As panic gripped the industrial city of Rourkela when a herd
of wild elephants entered residential areas from dense forests nearby,
Nirmala acted as a real-life "pied-piper"
when she managed to drive the herd back to the forest, much to the
relief of the
residents, forest department officials say. She walked many miles with
the herd, guiding it out of town, in the process
getting blisters on her legs which later turned septic. "The infection
is now gone and my wound has almost dried up," she said from her
hospital bed where her treatment was organized by the local Red
Cross Society.
State forest department officials sought help from Nirmala, who is
originally
from the neighboring state of Jharkhand, when they could not get the
elephants
to leave the city. Forest official PK Dhola says: "When the herd entered
the city, we tried our
best to contain its movement. There were 11 of them, including two
calves. We
managed to make the herd go into the local football stadium, but we were
not
sure how we could drive them back to the forest. It was a difficult
task." Mr Dhola says that was when the department decided to seek
Nirmala's help.
"We knew of a tribal girl who lived in Jharkhand, who talked to
elephants and
was able to drive them back. We called up her father and she arrived
along with
some other tribal people from her village." The state government paid
the girl for her services, he added.
Nirmala says she talks to the herd in her local tribal dialect -
Mundaari -
and persuades the animals to "return to where they belong". "First I
pray and then talk to the herd. They understand what I say. I tell
them this is not your home. You should return where you belong," says
Nirmala
who is a Roman Catholic. Her mother, she says, was killed by wild
elephants and that was when she
decided to learn the technique to drive them away. In her work, she is
assisted by her father and a group of boys from her
village. "We surround the herd. Then I go near them and pray and talk to
them." But some are not convinced by Nirmala's methods. Orissa-based
social activist Rabi Pradhan says there is no scientific
evidence that wild elephants can understand what a human says. Mr
Pradhan says
the girl claims to talk to the herd in her own tribal language, but
there is no
basis for the elephants to follow what she says.
However, others explain such behavior by saying that tribal people and
elephants - or for that matter, other wild animals - have been cohabiting in the
forests for ages. Niel Justin Beck, a member of the district council in Jharkhand's Simdega
area, where Nirmala comes from, says due to their co-existence with the wild
animals, the tribal people know how to deal with them. "In Jharkhand, we call Nirmala a lady Tarzan. Whenever
marauding elephants
enter a village or destroys crops, the local forest department officials
never
turn up. It is then that the villagers approach Nirmala for help. And
she is able to
successfully drive away the herd after talking to them." More than 3,000
elephants roam the forests of the three states of Jharkhand,
Orissa and Chhattisgarh, stretching across central and eastern India,
but over
the past decade the region has become the epicenter of man-animal
conflict. According to the ministry of environment and forests, more
than 200 elephants
and some 800 people have been killed in the last 10 years.
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