Tigers, humans forced to cohabit India forest
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Most people feel their best defense is the blessing of Bon Bibi, the forest goddess, who controls the tigers, snakes, sharks and crocodiles that roam her kingdom. Before venturing into the fickle woods, which are reshaped constantly by the tides and shifting sands, they visit her shrine and ask for her protection.
But the bright-eyed goddess' job is getting harder.
Rising sea levels, erosion and increasingly brackish waters have ruined once-dependable crops, forcing farmers into the forest to forage. Scientists say global warming has contributed to the Bay of Bengal rising more than three millimeters a year, causing more floods. One of the largest islands is predicted to shrink by 15 percent by 2020.
As India booms, its many irrigation and hydropower projects have also reduced the flow of the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers which feed the Sundarbans. That means less fresh water in the tidal basin.
The changes have made watermelons, once an attractive crop, impossible to grow. Rice paddies, the backbone of both the village diet and its economy, are producing less. Harvest season comes earlier every year.
The tigers are suffering from the changes, too. Once more commonly spotted in the south, where no humans live, they have been increasingly seen in northern woods, closer to the inhabited islands.
"It's certainly become more inhospitable than it used to be," said Anurag Danda, senior program coordinator of WWF India Sundarbans. "Of course people are scared, but that sense of fear has always been there."
Despite the fear, the villagers also prize the tigers because they know the beasts are all that's keeping the crowded outside world from encroaching on their homes.
"Without the tiger," said Bish Tarafdar, a fisherman who was mauled last year, "there would be no jungle."
He's almost certainly right. As India industrializes, it is facing serious deforestation problems elsewhere.
But it's also true that without the tiger, Tarafdar's uncle would still be alive. A tiger killed the fisherman 30 years ago, and his widow still dresses all in white, the color of mourning.
"The tiger is an enemy," said Dulali Tarafdar, his widow. "If I could, I would curse the tiger. I would tell him, 'You have ruined me.'"
Place of last resort for both
As hard as life is, the villagers can't leave the Sundarbans because they have nowhere else to go. Many are descended from families that came here generations ago as landless migrants from Bangladesh or rural east India. This menacing forest was the last frontier, and their last chance.
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Gautam Singh / AP A fisherman navigates through a creek in India's Sundarbans forest on Aug. 4. |
Monoranjan Mondal hasn't returned to the forest since that March day when a tiger killed his friend. But money is running out, and the forest is calling.
"I am very scared," Mondal said. "But I have to go back."
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