Article 51: Bharat Is Not for Beginners – The Winged Whānau Returns: Bharat’s Wildlife Traditions and Living Creatures

Bharats Wildlife And Living Ecosystems

Kia ora, friends—imagine spotting a kea in Fiordland’s misty peaks, its cheeky squawk echoing, but picture instead a Sariska jungle, where a tiger’s amber eyes glint through dawn mist, or a Gujarat marsh, where flamingos wade in a rosy tide. This is the 51st thread in our 100-article journey through Bharat Is Not for Beginners, a remarkable trek that’s woven a tapestry of a land alive with wisdom and wonder. Now, we’re soaring back into Bharat’s winged whānau—its wildlife traditions and living creatures—where every paw, every wing, is a taonga, a treasure cherished from Vedic hymns to modern sanctuaries. This isn’t just about animals; it’s Bharat sharing its whakapapa with the creatures that roam its wilds.

Bharat doesn’t regard its wildlife with a passing glance—it embraces them with reverence and responsibility. Its ecological kaupapa isn’t a forgotten tale; it’s a vibrant hui, a gathering of rituals, stories, and conservation efforts that stretch from the sacred yajna’s animal kin to the camera traps of today’s forests. This land is a living menagerie, a vital ticker that’s thrived alongside its people through monsoons, migrations, and millennia with a profound respect for all life. This isn’t for those after a quick safari—it’s an exploration of a civilisation that’s made its bond with creatures a remarkable legacy, a fellowship that ties its past to its present with grace and care.

The Vedic Paw: Wildlife’s Sacred Beginnings

Let’s step back to 1500 BCE, when animals weren’t just neighbours—they were divine. The Rigveda sings of Pashupati, the Lord of Beasts, a deity guarding cattle and deer, his presence invoked in yajna chants where ghee was offered to honour the herd. Rta, the cosmic order, wove creatures into the web of life—cows as gau, givers of milk and dung, revered as mothers; elephants as gaja, symbols of strength, their trunks a nod to Ganesha’s might. The Atharvaveda blessed peacocks and serpents as devatas, their feathers and coils sacred signs of rain and renewal.

By 1000 BCE, texts like Taittiriya Samhita urged ahimsa—non-violence—sparing wildlife from harm unless survival demanded it, a rishi’s code to balance human need with nature’s pulse. The Arthashastra, around 300 BCE, brought law to the wild—kings set abhyaranya forests as sanctuaries, fining poachers who hunted deer or trapped parrots, while royal elephants were tended with hasti-ayurveda, a veterinary art for tusk and trunk. Vedic farmers shared fields with sparrows, their chirps a jyotisha-timed cue for sowing.

This wasn’t mere coexistence—it was pashu-dharma, the duty to creatures. Herders and hunters weren’t just keepers; they were pashupalas, guardians of a sacred bond, their care a hui that linked Bharat’s spirit to its hooves and wings with a sage’s reverence and a deep wairua, a spiritual kinship that endures.

A Whānau of Creatures: Wildlife Across the Land

Bharat’s wildlife forms a whānau, a family of beings, each region hosting its own lively kin. In Rajasthan’s Sariska, Royal Bengal tigers prowl thorn forests, their roars a desert taonga that echoes Vedic Pashupati. Down south, Kerala’s Periyar shelters gaja—Asian elephants—trumpeting through teak groves, their herds a matriarchal hui along the Western Ghats. Assam’s Kaziranga cradles one-horned rhinos, their armoured bulk grazing Brahmaputra floodplains, a northeast relic of prehistoric might.

Gujarat’s Gir Forest is the last bastion of Asiatic lions, their tawny manes a Saurashtra pride, while Odisha’s Chilika Lake hosts Irrawaddy dolphins, their leaps a brackish ballet. Bengal’s Sundarbans hide mangrove tigers, stealthy swimmers in tidal creeks, a delta devata revered by fishers. Himachal’s Great Himalayan Park shelters snow leopards, their ghost-paws treading alpine scree, a mountain whisper of survival.

Tamil Nadu’s Gulf of Mannar sparkles with dugongs, sea cows nibbling seagrass, a Sangam-era treasure, while Andaman’s coral reefs teem with parrotfish, their colours a submerged rainbow. From Ladakh’s black-necked cranes, dancing in icy marshes, to Maharashtra’s gharials, snapping in Chambal’s currents, Bharat’s creatures are a whānau—diverse, resilient, and truly impressive, each a living thread in the land’s vibrant web.

Creaturely Mana: Wildlife Meets Spirit

Bharat’s animals carry mana—sacred vitality woven into their being. The cow, gau, isn’t just livestock—she’s Kamadhenu, the wish-fulfiller, her milk a homam offering, her dung a fuel for Vedic fires. The peacock, mayura, dances for Krishna, its plumes a tika to rain gods, while the serpent, naga, guards rivers, its coils a yajna symbol of eternity. Elephants, gaja, bear gods in temple processions, their steps a rta-guided march.

Festivals honour this mana—Nag Panchami fetes snakes with milk and mantras, a nod to ahimsa’s care, while Gaja Purnima blesses elephants with turmeric baths. Rivers like Ganga, home to sushuk—river dolphins—are tirthas, their flips a living prasadam. Even daily life reflects it—farmers spare owls in barns, their hoots a charm against pests, while women feed kites with roti scraps, a dana for winged kin.

Ayurveda draws from wildlife—mushika (rat) herbs heal, their names tied to Vedic totems. Tribal aranyaka—forest lore—reveres leopards as clan spirits, a pre-Vedic pashu-dharma alive in Jharkhand’s groves. Creatures weren’t mere fauna here—they were wairua, a sacred hui tying Bharat’s spirit to its claws and feathers, a living nada brahma in roar and rustle.

The Global Hui: Creatures Reach Out

Bharat’s wildlife wisdom didn’t stay caged—it wandered far. By 200 BCE, hasti-ayurveda’s elephant care reached Persia, shaping stables along the Silk Road. Buddhist Jataka tales, starring wise deer and brave monkeys, trotted to China, their ahimsa ethos seeding animal ethics in Zen. Chola ports shipped peacock feathers to Rome, a mayura taonga dazzling emperors.

Mughal shikarnamas—hunting logs—shared tiger-tracking tips with Safavid courts, a Desi skill gone global. Today, it’s a worldwide hui—NZ’s kiwi recovery mirrors Bharat’s gharial breeding, a Vedic twist in Otago’s bush. In Wellington, zoologists study Kaziranga’s rhino playbook, while Kiwi birders eye Bharat’s sar us cranes for migration cues.

From African lion reserves to Dunedin’s albatross colonies, Bharat’s creatures are a friend—wild, wise, and truly far-reaching, a Vedic pawprint inspiring the global whānau to cherish their own wild kin.

The Modern Rāka: Creatures Keep Roaming

Colonial times wounded the wild—British hunts culled tigers, their pelts a trophy—but Bharat’s creatures endured. Post-1947, the waka turned with resolve. Project Tiger, launched 1973, revived Sariska and Ranthambore, boosting tiger counts with abhyaranya sanctuaries. Project Elephant, 1992, carved corridors for gaja migrations, linking forests with GPS tags.

Gharial hatcheries in Uttar Pradesh release snouts to rivers, while Assam’s Pobitora saves rhinos with drone patrols. Community efforts shine—Sundarbans fishers plant mangroves to shield tiger turf, a pashu-dharma remix for salty tides. Urban zoos, like Delhi’s, teach tamariki about mayura and naga, sparking young stewards.

Kiwi friends see the spark—Auckland’s eco-parks echo Bharat’s abhyaranya model, Wellington’s wetlands nod Chilika’s dolphin care. It’s not a relic—it’s a live rāka, Bharat’s wild mana roaming from Vedic Pashupati to camera-trapped jungles, a whānau that keeps thriving.

Why the Whānau Stays Wild

What keeps these creatures soaring? Bharat’s devotion runs deep—nanas tell Jataka tales of kind deer, tamariki feed pigeons in city squares. Rangers guard abhyaranyas like treasures, passing down pashu-dharma with a Hurricanes ruck’s focus. It’s Vedic at its core—ahimsa’s mercy, rta’s balance, still hold it tapu, a sacred trust unbroken.

Communities keep it alive—tribal naga shrines, village bird counts, urban wildlife clubs. UNESCO’s marked sacred groves as heritage, but it’s the people who uphold the kaupapa—sparing owls in fields, tracking tigers in labs, teaching pashu care to the next wave. It’s not just wildlife—it’s whakapapa, a fellowship Bharat’s nurtured since the rishis blessed the herd, a whānau that stands fierce.

Why It’s a Vital Yarn

Why soar back into Bharat’s winged whānau? Because it’s a vital yarn—creatures that inspire, endure, and enliven, a remarkable tale that deserves a deep gaze. It’s taonga—gau older than the Treaty waka, mayura glowing with Vedic fire—and it’s alive, roaming from Kaikoura’s shores to anywhere life stirs. For us in Aotearoa, it’s a hui—spot a sar us, hear a tiger’s roar, catch Bharat’s spark in every wing.

This whānau bridges worlds—past and present, jungle and city, Bharat and beyond. It’s in the rhino that grazes a floodplain, the dolphin that leaps a lagoon, the crane that dances a marsh. It’s not just wildlife; it’s wairua, a spiritual force, and Bharat’s got it thriving wild, a fellowship that invites us all to protect, to revere, to join the flock.

Excerpt

That’s 51 threads in our 100-article rāka of Bharat Is Not for Beginners, and Bharat’s still roaming—a land of remarkable gifts. Keep your eyes sharp as we tread through more of its taonga. Join us tomorrow for Article 52: “Bharat Is Not for Beginners – The Iron Backbone Returns: Bharat’s Engineering Innovations and Living Structures”, where we’ll build back into the frameworks that shape a civilisation’s strength.

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