Khejarli massacre explained

Khejarli Massacre
Subtitle:September 1730, 363 Bishnois were killed while trying to peacefully protect a grove of Khejri trees.
Image Alt:Memorial
Date:early-mid September 1730, likely on 11 September
Place:Khejarli, Rajasthan
Coordinates:26.1666654, 73.1591207
Causes:felling of trees by the Kingdom of Marwar
Result:363 Bishnois killed, tree harvesting halted and outlawed in the village
Side1:Khejarli villagers Supported by
Bishnoi practitioners
Side2: Soldiers and labourers of the Kingdom of Marwar
Leadfigures1:Amrita Devi Bishnoi, Bishnoi elders
Leadfigures2:Giridhar Bhandari
Howmany1:Several hundred Bishnoi practitioners
Howmany2:"Party" of soldiers and labourers
Casualties1:363 Bishnois villagers
Casualties2:none
Fatalities:363

The Khejarli massacre occurred in September 1730 in Northern India, when 363 Bishnois were killed while trying to peacefully protect a grove of Khejri trees. The soldiers were sent by the Maharaja of Marwar, Abhai Singh to cut the trees in the village of Khejarli to provide wood for a new palace. The killings were carried out on the orders of his minister Giridhar Bhandari. The effort had a long term impact on environmental advocacy, and the massacre later became known as a precursor to the 20th century Chipko movement. Due to the sacrifice of the protesters, the ruler took back his earlier order of felling trees.[1]

History

In 1730, Abhai Singh dispatched one of his ministers, Giridhar Bhandari, to collect wood to be used in the construction of a new palace; some sources report that the wood was needed to build the palace,[2] while others note the Marwars intended to burn the trees to create lime. Regardless of intended purpose, Bhandari and his entourage of soldiers arrived in Khejarli, where they demanded access to the village's trees. Led by a woman named Amrita Devi Bishnoi, the villagers refused to surrender their trees to the Raj's soldiers. Amrita stated that the Khejri trees were sacred to the Bishnois, and her faith prohibited her from allowing the trees to be cut down.[3]

The situation escalated and the Marwan party offered to leave the village's Khejri trees alone in exchange for a bribe. However, this was seen as a grievous insult to the Bishnoi values, and Amrita announced that she would rather die than to allow the trees to be cut down. She and her family began hugging the Khejris, shielding the trees with their bodies. Angered by the rebuke, the Marwans beheaded Amrita and three of her daughters before beginning to cut down the trees.<[4]

News of the ongoing desecration of Jehnad's trees quickly spread among Rajasthan's Bishnoi population. In all, Bishnois from 83 villages began to travel to Jehnad in an attempt to save the trees, and a council was convened to determine what could be done about the situation. The council's decision was that each Bishnoi volunteer would lay down their life to defend one of the threatened trees. Older people went forward first, with many of them being killed as they hugged the Khejris. Seeing this as an opportunity, Giridhar Bhandari claimed that the Bishnoi were only sending forward people who they thought were useless to be killed. In response, younger men, women, and children began to hug the trees, resulting in many of them being killed as well. In all, 363 Bishnois were killed while protecting the trees.[5] [6]

Shocked by the passive resistance of the Bishnois, Abhai Singh recalled his men and personally travelled to the village to apologise for his minister's actions. He decreed that the village would never again be compelled to provide wood for the kingdom.The village was later renamed Khejarli, and the site of the massacre became a place of pilgrimage for the Bishnoi faith.

Legacy

The Khejarli Massacre was an inspiration for the 20th century environmentalist Chipko movement.[7] Several temples and a cenotaph in Khejarli commemorates the massacre, and the village is the site of an annual Bishnoi ceremony held in honour of the event. A fair is organised every year on Shukla Dashmi of Bhadrapad (Hindu month) in September at Khejarli, Jodhpur, to pay homage to the victims.

The Government of India has also instituted the Amrita Devi Bishnoi Environment Protection Award recognising the sacrifice of Amrita Devi. In 2013, the Ministry of Environment declared the day of the massacre (11 September) as National Forest Martyrs Day.[8] [9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nature Conservation is my Religion. Mehra. Satya Prakash. 31 December 2008. The Viewspaper. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150602063517/http://theviewspaper.net/nature-conservation-is-my-religion/. 2 June 2015. 20 April 2020.
  2. Book: Thapar, Valmik. Land of the Tiger: A Natural History of the Indian Subcontinent. registration. 179. 1997. University of California Press. 9780520214705. en.
  3. Gottlieb, Roger S. "Bishnois: Defenders of the Environment." This Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature, Environment. Psychology Press, 1996. pp. 159-160
  4. Book: Kevin Desmond . 2017 . Planet Savers: 301 Extraordinary Environmentalists. . 18. 9781351280310 .
  5. Web site: Bishnoi villagers sacrifice lives to save trees, 1730 Global Nonviolent Action Database. nvdatabase.swarthmore.edu. en. 26 October 2018.
  6. Reichert A. (2016) Transformative Encounters: Destabilising Human/Animal and Nature/Culture Binaries Through Cross-Cultural Engagement.
  7. News: The Bishnois, India's original environmentalists, who inspired the Chipko movement - Ecologise. 28 May 2017. Ecologise. 26 October 2018. en-GB.
  8. News: National Forest Martyrs Day: History, significance and theme . 13 September 2022 . cnbctv18.com . 11 September 2022 . en.
  9. Web site: Join hands for forest conservation, says DCF. 11 September 2018. Deccan Herald. en. 14 July 2019.