Sirsi Karnataka, Nov.17 ANI: The 25 years of Appiko or, hug the
tree Green Movement on the Sahyadri Mountain ranges in the western ghats of Karnataka has created a tremendous impact here. This movement started in Gubbi Gadde, a small
village near Sirsi in the north Uttara Kannada
district, has forced the forest department to change the forest
policy on felling of
trees. Besides affecting the forest policy, it also spread to other parts and saved forests.On Sep.8, 1983, Pandurang Hegde, the fiery activist, started the Appiko to hug movement. He derived inspiration from Sunderlal Bahugana's Chipko movement in Uttar Pradesh, in which villagers used to hug trees to save them from being felled by the
State, which then had no
laws against felling of timber inside protected areas.Appiko movement was started against monoculture the agricultural practice of
producing or growing one single crop over a wide area in the western ghats. Today, it has become a part of the lives of
people. Their non-violent protest movement has compelled the forest department to amend the policy against felling of forests in eco-sensitive region. There has been a silent revolution in the Western Ghats. anduranga Hegde, the founder of Appiko Movement says that this movement has become a part of the
culture in the western ghats and has saved the very sensitive eco sphere. "This movement, started to protest against felling of trees, monoculture, forest policy and deforestation, has succeeded in changing the forest policy. This first ever people's green movement in south
India to save our
natural resources has become a
model of sustainable development," said Panduranga Hedge, the founder of Appiko movement. "The
activists used local folklore to reach out to the masses. Another activist and
farmer Mahabaleshwara Hegde of Gubbi gadde village finds this movement a part of the lives of people in this area. The Gandhi of environmental movement, Sunderlal Bahuguna, not only inspired the movement but visits here regularly to guide the people," Hedge added. Mahabaleshwara Hegde, said: "The river Kali meanders through the valley linking the past and the present. The
song of Apppiko reverberates in the hills. The 25-year-old movement, reminds the people of the need to conserve sensitive eco sphere. In 1983, the villagers in Sirsi taluka of North Kanara district launched an 'embrace the trees' campaign."In 1950, forests covered more than 81 percent of the geographical area in Uttara Kannada or North Kanara district. But being declared a 'backward' district, the area was selected for major
industries-- a pulp and
paper mill, a plywood factory and a chain of hydroelectric dams constructed to harness the rivers. By 1980, forest in the district was believed to have shrunk to 25 per cent. Locals, especially the
poor, were displaced by dams. Environmentalists blamed monoculture for drying up
water sources, affecting forest-dwellers. Started in Sirsi, the Appiko movement spread across the western Ghats, including in
places outside Karnataka. By linking up, campaigners managed to build awareness to conserve the sensitive
environment in this region.Appiko is seen by some as a kind of echo of the more prominent Chipko movement of north
India.The western Ghat biodiversity include 120,000
living species, 4,500 flowering
plants, 500 species of
birds, 120 species of
mammals, 160 species of reptiles, 70 species of frogs, 800 species of
fish and 1493 species of medicinal plants. ANI