Caring for the environment on a daily basis and not just on world environment day

Radio Active marked World Environment Day (held on 5 June every year) by inviting some of the most passionate environmentalists and environment activists to share personal stories of change-making and to highlight the importance of the day.

RJ Padma Priya interacted with Padma Ashok, founder of the ‘Save Tiger First’ initiative.

When Padma Priya introduced the topic stating that conservation of forests and wildlife is important and needs to be addressed, Padma Ashok went on to speak a little more about the term ‘Parisara’: “When people think of nature they think of silence, fresh air and that makes them think of hill stations or forests – that is what we think is ‘parisara’. But, where we stay and what is in our surroundings constitutes the environment as well! We need to think that today we are living in a polluted environment.”

“From a garden city, Bengaluru is fast becoming a concrete jungle. If we conserve the environment we are living in, we can also automatically take care of other aspects of environment including forests and wildlife. Everything needs to be in balance.”

Listen on to know more

 

RJ Vijaya spoke with Vijay Nishanth, an urban conservationist and animal activist, who is the co-founder of Project Vruksha and a vociferous promoter of tree transplantation as a conservation tool. He is popularly known as the ‘Tree Doctor’.

Vijay shares a little about the theme for this year as specified by the United Nations which is ‘Connecting people to Nature’ with Canada being the host for this year. People of the host country usually involve themselves in various activities like cleaning the environment nearby, planting saplings, etc. The idea is to keep our environs clean.

Vijay talks about the time when Suresh Heblikar (Kannada filmmaker, director, actor, and an environmentalist), the founder of Eco-Watch, had visited his school to deliver a lecture on environment protection and how his interest for sustainability multiplied after that speech.

He goes on to talk about how people are staying indoors a lot these days due to factors like urbanization and work pressure. They are not connecting to nature and a gap is growing between people and nature. The idea of this year is to draw people to the outdoors and into the lap of nature and our environment. He then talks about various ways of conservation (using, not abusing), and other things.

 

RJ Priyanka spoke with Manjunath Pattegar, Narasimaiah, and Ravindra R Gowda from the Miditha Foundation. They highlighted the simple formula they preach to make the planet greener which is: “Our aim is to visit every house in every ward of Bengaluru and encourage people to plant at least one plant in their homes.”

Listen in to hear about the challenges they have faced, how people have responded to their campaign and how they are trying to protect and plant more trees in Bengaluru and nearby areas.

 

RJ Padma spoke with Dr. Umesh who is the adopted son of the renowned Saalumarada Thimmakka.

A nature lover and winner of Karnataka Rajya Parisara Prashathi, Umesh shares about his life with plants and trees. He also shares about how Saalumarada Thimmakka has influenced his life and the lives of many others.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

Safety still out of reach: Everyday struggles of women with disabilities

Women with disabilities face increased risks in public and private spaces because of consent violations, unsafe surroundings and neglect.

Every morning, Samidha Dhumatkar travels from her home in Mumbai’s western suburbs to Churchgate, where she works as a telephone operator at a university campus. Her journey involves taking a rickshaw, boarding a train, and walking to her workplace, similar to thousands of other Mumbaikars who commute daily. However, as a person with a visual disability, Samidha’s commute is fraught with threats to her safety. In their book, Why Loiter? Women and Risk on Mumbai Streets, writers Shilpa Phadke, Sameera Khan, and Shilpa Ranade, argue that spaces are not neutral. Moreover, they are not designed equally. “Across geography and time,…

Similar Story

India’s stray dog debate puts the nation’s conscience on trial

Street dogs spark a national test — will India choose compassion or fear as law, humanity and coexistence come under strain?

At the heart of a nation’s character lies how it treats its most vulnerable. Today, India finds its soul stretched on a rack, its conscience torn between compassion and conflict, its legal pillars wobbling under the weight of a single, heartbreaking issue: the fate of its street dogs. What began as a Supreme Court suo moto hearing on August 11th has morphed into a national referendum on empathy, duty, and coexistence, exposing a deep, painful schism. Two sides Caregivers and animal lovers: They follow Animal Birth Control (ABC) and Catch-Neuter-Vaccinate-Return (CNVR). Their goal is to reduce dog populations and rabies…