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Sanctuary-ABN
AMRO Wildlife Awards 2007 |
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“Hope
is a good thing, maybe the best of things. And no good
thing ever dies.” – Shawshank Redemption
Oft in the midst of noise and haste, one tends to forget
that there is a battle going on, a quiet, stealthy battle
waged against that which cannot speak in its own defence
– Nature. Irreplaceable ecosystems are being lost,
too many species are going extinct to keep a count,
and others are at the brink of extinction… floods
and droughts have become permanent ‘seasons’
across the globe. And in this face of aridity and hopelessness,
we have Earth Heroes who give silent Nature a voice,
while risking their lives everyday for us. That is what
makes them out of the ordinary. They give us hope for
a better tomorrow. For our children, and our children’s
children… For this, we honour them.
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Lifetime Service Award
Dr. Ullas Karanth: Ullas Karanth is a quiet, determined, effective defender of the wilds. He is also unarguably one of the world’s finest wildlife biologists. Dr. Ullas Karanth is first a scientist but, does not hesitate to take on the mantle of an activist. His work is one of the main reasons why the Nagarahole and Bhadra reserves are doing reasonably well. He started out as an engineer, then turned to farming – while working, all along, towards becoming an amateur biologist. He eventually trained under the legendary Dr. George Schaller in the United States and that was the fork in his road. [more]
Wildlife Service Awards
Ritwick Dutta: In the last few decades, one of the shining beacons for India’s beleaguered forests and wildlife has been the Supreme Court of India. That is because lawye rs such as Ritwick Dutta have had the stomach and grit to challenge some of the most powerful people in the country. Just 33 years old, Ritwick is a rare ‘species’ in a country that boasts of several environmental and conservation organisations and activists, but few full-time environmental lawyers. [more]
Sasi Kumar T.: Driven and courageous Forest Rangers like Sasi Kumar are our best hope in the fight against the ruthless illegal wildlife trade, which is taking such a terrible toll on India’s tigers. He works in Wynad, Kerala where he engages poachers on the ground. At 41 years, Kumar rose from the ranks, starting out on March 1, 1985 as a guard with the Kerala Forest Department in the Kuttiyadi Range, Kozhikode district.[more]
The Mahouts Of Bandhavgarh: The front line staff of wildlife reserves – daily wagers, guards, foresters and rangers – are seldom credited for helping protect the forests and wildlife they defend every day of their lives. Most live and die in anonymity. Mahouts, or elephant handlers, are even more invisible. In parks as far removed from each other as Corbett, Kaziranga, Rajaji, or Bandipur, mahouts are the eyes and ears, often the very sinews of the forest department. [more]
Bholu Abrar Khan: He was a mere child when his father, a cook, moved to Bharatpur to work for the Maharaja of Bharatpur, who used to hold massive shoots for all manner of dignitaries. Years spent here saw him fall in love with birds that were once shot, and the swamps themselves became part of his soul. His father joined the forest department in 1964 and 12 years later, so did Bholu Abrar Khan.[more]
Prerna Singh Bindra:In an arena dominated by ruthless men, this woman has investigated, explored, networked, fought and researched virtually every aspect of wildlife conservation and is often the source of first information reports on the seamier side of wildlife conservation. She unabashedly wears her heart on her sleeve for India’s forests and its endangered wildlife. [more]
Green Teacher Award
Sukumar Paira: He lives in tiger country. He nurtures young minds. He is the Headmaster of the Bijoynagar Adarsha Vidyamandir (BAV) located on an island called Bali, in the Sundarbans, in West Bengal. Distressed by the deteriorating relationship between people and the tigers of the Sundarbans, he started the Bali Wildlife Conservation Society way back in 1999 and has since been working variously with officials of the Sundarbans Tiger Reserve, the Wildlife Protection Society of India, WWF India and others to secure the future of wildlife. [more]
Young Naturalist Awards
Aditya Chandra Panda: He is all of 21, is doing his second year of B.Sc. and visits the Chandaka-Dampara Sanctuary near Bhubaneshwar every week to monitor elephant herds locked in a tragic and chronic human-conflict zone. He has also spent time monitoring tigers and prey density in the Satkosia-Gorge Wildlife Sanctuary and has studied the status of fishing cats in the marshes of the Chilika lake. [more]
Latha And Aneesh: The Mannans are amongst the most prominent of southern Kerala’s tribes. ‘Mannan’ quite literally means ‘king’. Hunter- gatherers by birth, most Mannans are now agriculturists, largely because the forests that once sustained them were hacked to make way for modern ‘development’. The bulk of the community lives in and around the Idukki District. They are led by a supremo called the Rajamannan or King of Kings. Expert fishers, Mannans once took sustenance from their lakes and rivers and supplemented their diet with wild honey, gooseberry, a forest plant they call dammer, creepers, flowers, seeds and the barks of trees.[more]
Travel Operators For Tigers (TOFT): An India- focused campaign with global dimensions, TOFT is attempting to turn wildlife tourism into a conservation tool. TOFT has the support of a large number of Travel Operators in the UK who want tourists to add their strengths to tiger conservation.[more]
Huli Vesha Dancers (Guest Performers)
The Huli Vesha art form was born of the love, respect and veneration showered on the tiger by the people of Dakshin Kannada for whom the striped predator was but another face of god. The origins of the dance dates back to days when people lived each day in awe, wonder and fear of the tiger. [more]
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Application Guidelines
*Nominations must be kept confidential from the
candidate.
*Nominations must be proposed and seconded by individuals/organisations
who know the candidate well.
*A brief note (around 500 words) on the achievements that
qualify the candidate for the award should be attached
along with a biographical note (around 250 words) and
photographs of the candidate at work.
*Details of specific instances/examples demonstrating
the candidate’s committment together with details
of the issue he or she is tackling.
*Press clippings/published material, if any, by or about
the candidate or the candidate’s work .
*Any other supporting material for the benefit of the
judges. |
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Fill in the form below or download a form and send it
with supporting material to Sanctuary Magazine,
145/146, Pragati Industrial Estate, N.M.Joshi Marg,
Lower Parel,
Mumbai 400 011, India.
The Sanctuary ABN AMRO Wildlife Awards Nomination
Form 2008
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