I am reminded of an incident from 2005. I had just started my career in rural development in Chhatola, a small village in the famous fruit belt of Ramgarh, Nainital. One morning, a local woman entered the courtyard of our staff quarters and began cutting a few twigs from a tree. My colleagues—environmentalist and nature-lovers—were deeply hurt. They rushed out to stop her. After a brief confrontation, the frail woman climbed down, muttered a few bitter words, and walked away. That moment stayed with me. Why did she walk so far for just a few twigs? Didn't she have anything better to do at dawn? What kind of systemic pressure forced her to pick a fight with an organization just for firewood? She knew she would be stopped, yet she came. Why? Years later, between 2010 and 2020, while working in Mandla (Madhya Pradesh), I saw this scene every single morning. Lines of women carrying heavy head-loads of wood; men carrying split logs in shoulder slings. Despite the launch of the Ujjwala...
सम-सामायिक विषयों, पोस्ट डेवलपमेंट (उत्तर विकासवाद) और विकास के वैकल्पिक मार्गों की बात; जंगल के दावेदारों की कहानियां, कुछ कविताएं और कुछ अन्य कहानियाँ, व्यंग्य