I had the opportunity to visit the temple Sorimuthayan with the Atree team who has been working in the KMTR region for quite a while now. The festival that attracts a crowd of whooping 5lakh pilgrims (tourists) for almost a period of 10 days leaves tell-tale signs of post festival debris and other effects that would take the forests a long time to recover from. The festival has been celebrated by the villages that were under the Singampatti Raja for around 150 years now. What was a earlier a crowd of 5000 has now blown out into 5 lakh attendees, with more and more villages adopting Sorimuthayan as their family God. Families camp inside the forests clearing the forest cover to put temporary tents for a period of 10 days bringing along with them food packets wrapped inside plastic bags, and a variety of other items that gets discarded inside the forest.
Sorimuthayan temple during the festival
The irony is the pilgrims not only live for these 10 days in this mind numbing rush of people and stomach churning atmosphere but take bath downstream after defecating upstream! With every year the magnitude of people visiting the temple and the the Dam sites within the Mundanthurai Tiger reserve has gone up exponentially.
Euphorbia Susanholmesiae
Samiyeri Lake
Dabguli is a small settlement close to Urigam in Tamil Nadu within the Uganiyam Reserve Forests. the people here are mainly fishermen surviving on the money they make from fishing in Cauvery. Every year during the temple festival a large number of people from the surrounding villages visit the temple and litter the place with plastic. Several such temple sites in the Melagiris exist, like the one close to the Samiyeri lake in Aiyur reserve forests attracts a large crowd of people who perform sacrificial rites, tent along this lake which is the source of water for the elephants. Here we see not only a possible littering of forests but also possible Man-Animal conflict.
Ulvi Caves
As a kid i have been Ulvi Jatra which is famous for its Chennabasavanna Temple. The jatras are held here during Shivaratri, Makarasankranti, Basavajayanthi and Maghapurnima during which innumerable people, locals and others visit the caves. Rest assured the devotees carry a variety of food packets in plastics and without second thoughts litter the place. Also, the impact of tourist and pilgrims across the year is tremendous since the caves have always been known to the den of some of the big cats like Black panther and Tiger.
My concern is not just these few days in a year when the devotees throng these temples in large numbers, the concern is also the permit that is sanctioned to anybody to trespass into our last few remaining wildlife sanctuaries and reserves under the pretext of visiting the temple. Unlike the tourists the pilgrims are under no obligation to the FD or the wildlife.
[The opinion in this blog is is personal. Other than the Sorimuthayan temple the other temple instances do not have any reliable scientific data but are merely my personal experience of having been a witness to these festivals at the temples or from the account of people who have been a witness to them]
4 comments:
Religious tourism-
Increasing number of tourists thronging to religious places in Reserved forests is systematically increasing in India and is a very potent threat.
The tourists are not only noisy, they flout basic rules of eco-tourism. Increasing prosperity in India is resulting in more people going to forest in the guise of religion.
Local politicians who have scant regard for conservation of forest encourage people to visit these core areas, in fact in some forests they have built roads to facilitate the travel.
Handful of forest guards can barely control the huge influx of tourist to the forests.one way is to educate the elders and local people about the sensitivity of wildlife.Temporary recruitment of forest guards during such festivals is another way out to counter this threat.
One way out is education, and giving more power to forest gaurds
I like the title; kinda implies Nature is God or vice versa.
Things get really tricky when religion is involved. All along the Mukurthi Trek, even in the most remote parts of the forest, there were freshly installed idols and crosses! Religious Tourism hubs of tomorrow, I fear,
@ Mani - You have pointed out the deadliest combination - Religion and Politics, very true.. The only reason what is happening at Mundanthurai is because it is being backed up by the Sigampatti Raja (who is the local politician) and of course they want their vote banks intact. They not only encourage this trend but literally channel more tourists inside.
@George - That's so true! This happens not only in forests but in cities too! A road construction is on and "suddenly" they will unearth a shiva linga or something else and whoa! the site is sacred, and so pop! comes along a temple eating half the road..
I have always been wary of finding these little idols popping all along the Uganiyam trail :(
U have highlighted a very pressing issue. The problem is that these pilgrims are not answerable to anybody. Tourist entry is a little more regulated but thats not the case with pilgrims.
Recently a friend of mine wrote about the number of road kills that happen and also the changes in the behaviour of certains nocturnal animals due to the festivals at the temple. Unless the number of pilgrims entering the forest every year is resticted, its bound to degenerate soon.
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