Elephants are not gentle giants.
This is Lesson 1, I was told, twenty-seven years ago when I
took my first baby steps into wildlife as a volunteer with a bunch of friends
who were wildlife conservationists researching ways to identify crop-raiding
elephants.
Lesson 2: never forget Lesson 1.
In those initial years, from the comfort of a jeep or a
Sumo, I saw elephants deep inside Bandipur and once spent an unforgettable,
uncomfortable, terrifying night on top of a tree by the Kabini reservoir,
surrounded by a herd below that was minding its own business but unhappy about
our being there and trumpeted in annoyance (it helped that our team of four had
two forest guards for company who were composed). Along the way I read – in Vivek Menon’s book
on pachyderms – the story of a forest officer who remarked to a researcher,
almost casually, about a herd nearby, “I know my elephants, this herd is fine”.
And minutes later, he was charged and killed.
The researcher later said that the poor man knew his elephants but the
elephants, well,….they did not know him.
I never forgot Lesson 2.
The farm, Random Rubble, is in a zone of uneasy coexistence
with elephants. My old friend, Mottai
waal, wanders around at night with a certain panache, all nine and a half feet
+ six tons of him. He is an old fellow and hasn’t been known for
aggression in years, yet I would rather see him from the first floor at fifty
feet and admire a miracle of evolution. In
2024, the two juveniles keeping him company trampled a farmer who followed
them, pelting stones; the man hadn’t learnt from his village’s history and he
hadn’t memorised the roll call of the dead.
I read the account – and saw the video – of the foolhardy roadside
tourist in Bandipur who was trampled a couple of days ago by a tusker. His bravado – of proximity - was stupid,
uncalled for, needless and driven, no doubt, by that primeval need to have
video footage that he would then broadcast.
There were many others doing precisely that who have lived to tell the
tale (and this man has survived as well), but each of them could have been the victim.
How stupid is that? What story
does his family assimilate: a rogue elephant got my father? Wouldn’t that be a travesty?
Tourism is a mixed bag, for it assumes responsible behaviour
which, it would seem, is too much to ask.
As tourism – including wildlife watching - has exploded, elephants find
themselves to be the stars of Instagram and the nucleus of trite stories, now uploaded
and instantly forgotten in a search for ceaseless admiration. This is dumb,
incredibly daft behaviour. Can we – as
footloose itinerants in SUVs - leave elephants alone and avoid that urge for a
compulsive reel? Can we park far away
and accept that they have right of way?
Can we provide them the space to move away from us?
And can we spread this word to ensure that no lives – not
human, not elephant - will pay the price for a moment of gratification?
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