惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

SecWiki News
SecWiki News
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
博客园 - 司徒正美
I
InfoQ
V
V2EX
L
LangChain Blog
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
H
Help Net Security
美团技术团队
Y
Y Combinator Blog
G
Google Developers Blog
小众软件
小众软件
The Cloudflare Blog
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
Jina AI
Jina AI
量子位
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
博客园 - 聂微东
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
F
Full Disclosure
S
Securelist
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
F
Fox-IT International blog
H
Hacker News: Front Page
C
Cisco Blogs
D
Docker
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
T
ThreatConnect
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
J
Java Code Geeks
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
Project Zero
Project Zero
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
博客园_首页
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
博客园 - 叶小钗

India’s National Fortnightly Magazine

Pandav Kumar’s Killing Exposes Delhi’s Migrant Labour Crisis The Shrinking Muslim Presence in India’s Legislature Inside the Legacy of Pather Panchali National Security Act and Noida Workers: Is Solidarity a Crime? Trump, Xi and the new G2 West Bengal Election Signals India’s Managed Democracy ( NEET 2026 cancellation exposes India’s education crisis Astrologers in Indian Politics: Faith, Power, & Fear 2026 Heat, Humidity, and Inequality in a Warming India NEET 2026 cancellation exposes India’s education crisis Labour’s Collapse and Reform’s Rise Signal a New Phase in British Politics V.D. Satheesan’s Rise Marks Congress Reset in Kerala NEET Paper Leak Case: Maharashtra Coaching Nexus Under CBI Probe India’s AI Ambitions Expose the Limits of its Digital Model DMK Social Media Failure in Tamil Nadu 2026 Politics Shift Why the Rupee Is Collapsing Under Modi’s Economic Model West Bengal Election 2026: Voting Speed Raises Questions Tamil Nadu 2026: Vijay’s TVK and the Crisis of Dravidian Politics Bengal Under BJP: Bulldozers, Policing, and the Criminalisation of Dissent The Frontline Weekly | Blown away Mario de Miranda at 100: The Last Great Indian Cartoonist Why Hindutva Can’t Erase the Mughal City from India Great Nicobar Project: Petition Tops 2 Lakh in 2026 Punjab Elections 2026: AAP Defections, ED Heat, Security Fears ‘The Dystopian Times’ by Appupen OMC Losses, Rupee Slide, and Rising Inflation Signal Economic Trouble How BJP's Language Policy Is Quietly Erasing Urdu From Kashmir's Administrative and Cultural Life Bengal after the BJP victory: Identity, surveillance, resistance India’s Water Crisis Is About Power, Not Just Scarcity Modi’s Austerity Advice Exposes India’s Economic Rot Sivakasi Fireworks Explosions Expose Safety Failures (2026) Romila Thapar on her memoir, Hindutva, and India’s plurality The fall of Karuna Human bombs at work in Jaffna Relying on stealth Direct hit Deploying diaspora The opposition gets the government it deserves (2026) Inside Subodh Gupta’s largest-ever solo exhibition in Mumbai Supreme Court’s Anti-Environment Tilt Sparks Outrage (2026) Chalam Bennurakar and the Documentary Politics of Silence How Vijay’s TVK Pulled Off a Stunning Tamil Nadu Breakthrough How Women Voters Are Reshaping Assembly Election Outcomes in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, and Assam Did Voters Reward Performance in 2026 Assembly Elections? Women Welfare Schemes and Voting Patterns The Seed of the Sacred Fig: Iran’s Revolt on Screen SAHA 2026 Shows How Türkiye Plans to Shape the Next Age of Warfare BJP’s New Chief Ministers: Defectors, Not Cadre (2026) How the human tongue made us human How Bengal’s Landslide Pattern Helped BJP Secure a Massive Mandate Salman Sagar on JKNC’s Post-2019 Strategy: Statehood First, Article 370 Later Great Nicobar Project: Why the Debate Misses the Point Marathi Co-Official Language Demand Reopens Goa Faultlines Manipur Violence 2026: The War of Maps and Buffer Zones Intermediary Lives: Intellectual Flux, Gender Autonomy, and the Roots of Historiography in Independence-Era India West Bengal 2026: BJP Win and Bengal’s Violence Economy CBI Director Appointment: Why the CJI’s Seat Fails India Modi UAE Visit 2026 and India’s Foreign Policy Crisis The Frontline Weekly | Yours truly, madly, deeply ‘The Dystopian Times’ by Appupen New Releases in Indian Literature: From H-1B Visa Scams to Bundelkhand’s Feminist Media How Ananya Vajpeyi’s "Place" Reimagines Global Cities through Personal and Political History Mohammad Deepak and the Fight for Shared Identity Tracing the IFS' Origins: Why MEA Dropped the 1783 Claim Delhi’s Central Ridge Faces Ecological Threat from Themed Forest Plan AAP Defections Expose Leadership and Ideology Crisis Why Ladakhis oppose the new district reforms Iran, Trump, and the Crisis of Nuclear Deterrence Ashok Ferrey’s Hot Butter Cuttlefish Is funny and wise Photography and the Unreachable Itch of Meaning Kalyani Thakur Charal and the silence around Dalit writing The Granular Reality of Rebuilding After Partition: A Review of Bhawana Somaaya’s Farewell Karachi Decolonisation and Dispossession: How Post-War Borders Fractured Asian Migration and Citizenship Manipur Conflict Enters Third Year as State Loses Grip on Violence Bengal SIR Disenfranchisement: A New ADM Jabalpur Moment? Romila Thapar at 94: Dissent and India’s History Reverie. Pause. Rupture at Anant Art Delhi review Vijay’s TVK Victory Signals a New Phase in Tamil Nadu Politics Ken-Betwa Dam Faces Protests Over Displacement "Perumazhakkalam" vs "Kerala Story": What Changed in Cinema Noida Worker Protests: CITU on Labour Codes and Wages Supreme Court Hate Speech Ruling 2026: A Retreat Bangladesh’s China Turn Under Tarique Rahman Tests India Ties Namami Gange and the Ganga Cleaning Mission’s Hidden Cost: Displacing Riverbank Communities India and Global Warming: Why Annual Maps Can Mislead Kerala CM Race 2026: Congress Delays Decision Amid Rift BJP Fear Factor: Why India’s Opposition Is Withering (2026) Why India’s Recent Election Results Demand Rigorous Scrutiny of the Electoral Process and ECI Neutrality Who is Suvendu Adhikari, West Bengal's new Chief Minister in 2026? Assam Election 2026: BJP’s Solo Majority Built on Polarisation West Bengal Election 2026: How BJP Swept Mamata Away Kerala Election Results 2026: UDF Landslide Ends Communist Rule as the Last Left Citadel Falls Tamil Nadu Election: Vijay’s Stunning Debut Rewrites Dravidian Politics Who is Suvendu Adhikari, West Bengal's new Chief Minister in 2026? Why UP Education Minister Yogendra Upadhyay wants Rain Rain Go Away removed from school textbooks Debi Chatterjee on Caste, Dalit Literature and Rights (2026) ‘Bhatinde Wale Aloo’ and the Politics of Fake Local Food ‘Bhatinde Wale Aloo’ and the Politics of Fake Local Food Karl Marx at 208: What If the World Had Never Known Him? Ageing, Remembrance, And Literature on Mortality
Aranyak and the Death of Forests
2026-05-23 · via India’s National Fortnightly Magazine

Dear Reader,

Great literature has a habit of accosting you unexpectedly—something innocuous reminds you of a passage you read long ago, and that sudden flash of memory bathes the usual in a rare glow. This happened to me yesterday, as I was admiring the rain-drenched devil’s trees (Alstonia scholaris) gleaming green in the traffic-clogged streets of Bengaluru. Called chhatim in Bengali, the trees are known for their strongly scented flowers, which bloom in late autumn.

Watching the trees glisten, I thought I smelt the absent flowers’ phantom fragrance; this was accompanied by a mental image of the trees growing in profusion on a mountain slope, their whitish-green flowers strewn like stars on the black rocks below. The image, vivid in memory as if based on a scene I had witnessed in real life, is actually from the pages of a book—Aranyak (Of the Forest, 1939) by Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay.

It comes towards the end, when the narrator, Satyacharan, makes one last trek to his beloved Dhanjhari hills (somewhere in the Chhota Nagpur Plateau) before leaving the wilderness behind once and for all. His heart is breaking, and all around him the chhatim flowers breathe out their heady, cardamom-like aroma. “As I stood there, soaking the atmosphere of the place in, I knew that this lovely afternoon was to join the ranks of some of the most favourite memories that I would cherish for the rest of my life” (translation: Bhaskar Chattopadhyay).

Although Bandyopadhyay is chiefly known outside Bengal for Pather Panchali and its movie adaptation by Ray, he wrote many novels and short stories that are equally touching and profound. His love for nature, bordering on devotion, is apparent in all of them. But Aranyak stands out for its depiction of untamed, unbound nature—different from the controlled, domesticated nature as portrayed in, say, Pather Panchali—which is as cruel as it is attractive. Nature is not a backdrop but a character in Aranyak, moulding Satya and others like him who are receptive to its influence. But the novel is also a lament for the death of nature, brought about by unbridled greed.

Long before bulldozers were lined up to fell trees and clear forest lands in our times, Bandyopadhyay understood how avarice can flatten all things beautiful and worthwhile. “Such a vast and rich tract of priceless forest land was nothing short of a national treasure; had this been any other country, there would have been laws passed to turn this land into a protected national park. Wearied and exhausted from their day-to-day lives, men and women from the cities would have come here to spend a few quiet days in contact with nature. But that was not to be.”

And he had no doubt about the identity of the destroyers either: not the usual targets—the indigent masses who inhabit or till the earth for subsistence—but the landlords who lease them the land to extract revenue from it. The feudal zamindars of Bandyopadhyay’s time have now been replaced by capitalist conglomerates, but the structure of exploitation remains the same.

Nature, the chief actor in Aranyak, is surrounded by a large cast of human figures who are not related to one another but are connected to the forest, either as its keepers or its despoilers. In Satya’s scheme of things, good and evil are clearly demarcated, and he has no time for the latter group—the philistine, propertied class, the landowners, moneylenders, even his own employers, the zamindars of Mymensingh (now in Bangladesh), on whose acres in Bihar’s Purnia he finds employment as a manager. 

At the heart of the novel is an unresolved contradiction: if the forests Satya so loves are fated to disappear, he himself has signed their death warrant as the zamindars’ deputy, parcelling out the woods to lessees and collecting rent in the form of crops grown on the cleared patches. Of course, if he had not done it, someone else in his place would have, but the guilt persists. He tries to make up for it by distributing some of the land among the poorest, who need it for survival, and by writing off their rents in the initial years. He also confesses the wrongdoing to his readers, hoping for expiation, while knowing in his heart that the forest gods will never forgive him.

Satya is a romantic idealist. As a city-bred man, he initially misses Kolkata when he takes up the job in the remote forest, but soon falls in love with the wilderness. In Kolkata, he had belonged to the throngs of jobless youth, living in a hostel and barely pulling through, but the dire poverty he encounters in Bihar takes him aback. The landless agricultural labourers he meets there—most of them from the marginalised Gangota caste—widen the horizons of his head and heart, acquainting him with ways of life entirely different from his own.

He is educated, from a powerful caste and middle-class family, unlike the labourers, who have almost nothing of their own. They survive on boiled China grass or pulse grist, eaten with salt and chillies. Rice, essential to many Indian diets, is a luxury for them. How do they survive hunger, homelessness, loneliness, lack of education, the absence of any means of entertainment? Satya questions them again and again, like Wordsworth grilling the old and impoverished leech-gatherer in “Resolution and Independence to find out his mantra of survival: “How is it that you live, and what is it you do?”

Gradually, he uncovers their “secret”—they are like the rocks of the forest, not just living in nature but a part of it. Nature is their parent, friend, and provider. In this, they are precisely what Satya wants to be but can never become, removed as he is from the state of nature by his cultured sensibilities. Contemporary readers might wonder whether his attitude towards the forest-dwellers is one of sympathy rather than of empathy (most of them address him as “huzoor” and are dependent on his generosity), but he does try hard to become one of them, listening intently to their stories, breaking bread with them (unthinkable for a Brahmin of his time), and helping them in whichever way he can. He might not be woke enough for 2026, but by the standards of 1939 he is a rebel, guided by his faith in the holiness of the heart’s affections.

It is this rebellious nature that makes him take so easily to the forest, whose expanses call out to him, whispering of a freedom not to be found in the stifling confines of a city. It is a freedom so vast that it negates the call of civilisation, and is dangerous as such. Satya knows that he cannot embrace it entirely—he must ultimately return to the city—but for as long as he remains, he belongs to it. He also belongs to the people there. Satya envies them their innate connection to the earth and their ability to be wholly themselves.

They are as fey as the forest—Jugalprasad, the accountant with no talent for moneymaking; Raju Pandey, the unworldly cowherd with a knack for homeopathy; Dhaturia, the young orphan set apart by his artistic talent; Dhaotal Sahu, the compassionate moneylender; Dobru Panna, the tribal king with no kingdom; and his granddaughter, the elegant and guileless Bhanumati, whose only prized possession is a mirror gifted by Satya. It is as if their poverty elevates them, granting them a dignity the rich cannot possess.

Diametrically opposed to them are the unscrupulous moneylenders like Rashbehari Singh, or the affluent city picnickers who chatter incessantly and leave behind “dozens of empty tins of jam and condensed milk” in forests. Satya is somewhere between these two categories—the poet, the outsider, who sings of the Eden he cannot inhabit, and his longing is predicated on loss.

The descriptions of nature in Aranyak are intoxicating. Sadly, Chattopadhyay’s functional English translation fails to bring out the poetry. Native trees, wild flowers, moonlight, brooks, birds, foxes, and vines decorate the pages; Satya’s adoration is inscribed in his deeply felt account. Here, for instance: “The forests of Saraswati Kundi... had the power to infuse mirth in every pore of my body, just like a lively tune would. They took me to a languid, dreamlike state. I had spent countless afternoons sitting in silence in the shade of a tree by the calm waters of the lake, and my mind would wander away from the chirping of the birds, the fragrance of the freshly bloomed flowers of the wild neem and the bounty of water lilies right in front of me. Having spent hours lost in my own thoughts, I would suddenly realize that night was falling, and that it was time to head back home.”

Elsewhere he says: “To those who don’t see beauty in a jungle flower, to those who have never felt the irrepressible desire to heed the call of the horizon, the true meaning of living will forever remain unknown, and this planet they call home will always remain alien to them.”

A spirit runs through Aranyak: pagan, benevolent, all-pervasive, and itinerant, like the nomadic labourers of Labtulia. Writing about Bandyopadhyay in the essay “A Citizen of the Cosmos,” Trinankur Banerjee says, “Bibhutibhushan was the product of a syncretic age, which valued the ancient scriptures and Western methodologies of knowledge in equal measure. He filled up the gaps in liberal rationalism with his belief in nature and an itinerant god. This is nowhere more apparent than in the novel often considered to be the earliest example of ecological fiction in India: Aranyak. The conflicted protagonist of this meditative novel is torn between his deep love for wild nature and his duty as the manager of a large expanse of forest land to cut it up and distribute it among farmers for cultivation. The narrative was based on Bibhutibhushan’s own experiences in Bhagalpur, where he worked in the employ of a prominent landowner.”

Trinankur happens to be Bibhutibhushan’s grandson. Recently, he curated a month-long exhibition of the writer’s memorabilia and manuscripts in Kolkata. He writes about the show and Bibhutibhushan’s legacy in a moving essay here

As the bulldozers get ready to uproot the millennia-old rainforests of Great Nicobar, let us keep in mind Bibhutibhushan’s assessment of those who cannot find beauty in a wild flower.

See you again soon.

Till then,

Anusua Mukherjee 

Deputy Editor, Frontline