CENTRE FOR RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES (CRDES)
20-46(102) Venkatapuram,Secunderabad-500 015
(REGD No>1273/2002)
Monday, May 14, 2012
Sandhya Hegde Almane , May 15, 2012, DHNS
In
sharp contrast to the world of concrete jungles that our towns and
cities have become, is the green heaven of Kyadhagikoppa in Uttara
Kannada’s Sirsi taluk, neighbouring the village of Andagi.
This
is the world of vanastrees – the women of the forest. Wearing bright
sarees, blouses and bangles, these garbed trees are beacons shining in
the darkness of environmental hazards.
There is a mutt in the
vicinity called Namdhari Guru Mutt which has a sacred grove. This is
the abode of the vanastrees. They are the dwarapalakas (gate keepers)
of this mutt. It is idyllic. Around the mutt, whenever the wind blows,
the dancing trees dressed in their beautiful clothes entrance onlookers
with their beauty.
Every amavasya (new moon day), a festival is
held. On this day, people from the surrounding areas visit the mutt in
droves, bearing gifts in the form of sarees and other vestments, to
worship the vanastrees.
Namdhari Guru Mutt is 20 km away from
the Sirsi taluk centre. It is renowned for its green-loving ways. Tree
worship is common in India and is mentioned in history as well as in
legend. At the mutt, all the trees are worshipped collectively. People
from the surrounding areas come to worship the trees in this area and
in this manner, the mutt has shouldered the burden of protecting
nature.
The system has also inspired a need to conserve nature
in all the villages. The founder of this mutt was Avadhutha Kaleshwara
Swami. The swamiji, who arrived in Andagi about a decade ago, fell in
love with the flora of the surrounding areas. He was known to say that
when he attained spiritual enlightenment, he saw holiness in trees. The
seer was the first to drape these trees with the holy vestments used
for gods in temples. He also inspired worshippers at the mutt to do the
same.
Though the seer breathed his last five years ago, the
tradition of tree worship has unfailingly continued in the mutt.
Worshippers gather there every amavasya, with no boundaries of caste,
creed or class separating them.
As usual, the devotees bring
vestments for the trees they worship, creating vanastrees in the
forest. This ensures that the trees will not be cut down. When wood
cutters encounter the garbed trees, they drop their axes and offer a
bow of supplication.
This staunch belief of the worshippers has supported the Namdhari Mutt’s movement to protect trees.
With
the swamiji’s blessings, the mutt is gaining fame for its unusual, but
beautiful practice. Lately, there has been a proposal to build a school
for the poor near the mutt.
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