(Forest, Its Destruction and Struggle of the Forest People)
In the true sense the forest is mother to hundreds of species of trees, fauna, and people who consider themselves the children of forest, their traditions, knowledge and much more. With the vanishing natural forest, the forest dwelling indigenous communities of Bangladesh have progressively lost their communal ownership and control over land and other local resources. Their knowledge, cultures and local technologies are also getting lost. This puts them in perilous condition.
What factors have led to this outrageous condition? Most obnoxious arguments come from the government agencies, profiteering companies and agencies from the forest industry, and many supranational institutions that put all the blame on the poor people and the forest-dwelling communities who are indeed the custodians of the forests. The SEHD book, Bon, Bonbinash O Bonobashir Jibon Shangram (Forest, Its Destruction and Struggle of the Forest People), edited by Philip Gain, compiles information, arguments and insights that challenge the official contention.
For more than a decade SEHD has remained engaged in action-oriented research, reporting and producing documentary films. Additionally, it has brought together representatives of indigenous communities at the national level discussion. In its effort in June 2003 SEHD brought together about 200 indigenous people, forestry professionals, academics, environmentalists and activists for examination of the state of the forest and indigenous peoples of Bangladesh and the quality of action that are taken to save the forest and its custodians.
Bon, Bonbinash O Bonobashir Jibon Shangram compiles keynote presentations of the seminar that explain why the government proposition and that of the supranational regarding the factors for deforestation and depletion of the natural resources are flawed. With strong research backing, the SEHD researchers and others have illustrated how “simple plantation forestry” mostly with alien and invasive species has ruined the natural forest and the gene pools it used to support in Bangladesh. Plantations of different types particularly on the public forestland, often sugarcoated as “social forestry” have also severely limited the access of the forest-dwelling indigenous peoples to the forests that used to be their commons for centuries. A number of write-ups also explain the lies told about plantation.
Eleven investigative and interpretative reports [of different situations throughout the country], put together in one chapter of the book, show the trend of drastic changes in the forestry industry and unprecedented threats to the forests. These reports also show examples of atrocities committed against the indigenous communities at different times. Reading these reports one might seem like traveling through the destruction of the Modhupur sal forest, Chokoria Sundarban, and the Chittagong Hill Tracts.
The last chapter of the book compiles seven declarations that the Adivasis, environmentalists, activists and development workers have adopted at different times during a decade. These declarations present aspirations, promises and recommendations that government, external entities, and different proponents must pay attention to for the protection of the forest and forest-dwelling peoples of Bangladesh.
Edited by Philip Gain
Bangla, PBK 263 pages, 2004
Price: Tk.250 US$10
