About
The Flim
Ranthambore National Park, Rajasthan is perhaps the most popular tourist
destination to watch tigers in the wild. But despite the tourist dollars,
the Park’s main attraction, the Bengal Tiger is in danger of getting decimated
here, as it has already happened in Sariska. Is it time we looked outside
the park for the reasons, at the humanity which is living outside, their
lives still connected to the Park- the people who are living with the Park?
This
short film from WildBytes.tv, is a look at
the popular tiger reserve as an integrated
universe comprising its animals and people
in the adjoining areas. The forest connects
the two and neither one can flourish without
the other. So is the policy of segregating
the park as a preserve for animals alienating
the people who lived in harmony with the
park for decades, helping the Park? There
are no quick answers. The camera shows people
around the Park voicing their pride in and
reservations about the Park. Is the Park
management listening? For in the interest
of preservation it seems foolish to ignore
the distilled wisdom of people whose lives
are in tune with nature. The
questions the film raises are:
1) Can we integrate life outside the Park with efforts at preservation?
2) Do the people living around the Park have a stake in protecting the
Park and its animals?
3) Given a stake in the health of the park, a role in running it, will
they develop a sense of pride and protect the animals inside?
4) Can conservationists help people living with the Park, see the linkage
of the Park with their own well-being?
5) Will these people who have lived in harmony with the Park for many
years, then develop a stake and pride in the Park and its animals?
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