Deg Rai Mata Oran: Grove of the Gods and a Changing Landscape
Photo StoryPublished : Jan 21, 2022Updated : May 24, 2022
Rajasthan’s sacred groves, locally called orans, were once secure wildernesses that also supported livelihoods. Today, with power lines and green energy projects dotting the landscape, they are no longer safe spaces for their rare and diverse wild residents
Text by: Radhika Raj
Photos by: Dhritiman Mukherjee
Rajasthan’s sacred groves, locally called orans, were once secure wildernesses that also supported livelihoods. Today, with power lines and green energy projects dotting the landscape, they are no longer safe spaces for their rare and diverse wild residents
Sumer Singh Bhati learnt his first lesson in conservation aged five. “I remember my father fighting several men to save a chinkara. I didn’t understand much, but I was very scared,” he says. The fleeting memory of quarrelling voices and fear stayed with him — and a lesson, that speaking up for the wild needs grit, and sometimes, takes a fight.
Bhati was born in Sanwata, one of the twelve villages around the Deg Rai Mata Oran, a sacred grove in the harsh Thar desert. At 22,000 hectares, it is one of Rajasthan’s largest sacred groves. Legend has it that 600 years ago, the ruler of the Bhati dynasty stopped by the Deg Rai Mata temple in Sanwata to ask for blessings and, in return, donated land to it. Since then, the villagers have treated it as divine and protected everything that lives within it. There’s no rule book or fence that guards the oran, says Bhati, just a traditional value system passed from generation to generation through songs and stories. “Every child knows that you can’t cut a single branch here, not even a datoon (twig used to clean teeth),” he says. “It’s what my parents taught me; it is what I teach my children.”
The Thar is one of the smallest but most thickly populated deserts of the world. Despite the unforgiving climate and a land sapped of water, large populations call it home. In part, life here is made possible by the orans. “Several villages in Rajasthan are attached to an oran. Every oran houses secure water resources like lakes and tanks and doubles up as grazing grounds for livestock,” says Dr Asad Rahmani, senior scientist and ornithologist. “In return, the villagers safeguard the biodiversity within it.” Untouched by time, preserved over generations, orans are genetic storehouses of near-natural native vegetation and secure homes for several threatened species. About 25,000 orans stretch across Rajasthan — each with its own deities, waterbodies, wildlife, and guardians.
In a parched landscape like Sanwata, where calamity is just a failed monsoon away, the 32 waterbodies in Deg Rai Mata Oran provide water to twelve villages and a population of about 50,000 people. During the harsh summer, villagers turn to these forests to harvest ker berries (Capparis decidua), and sangri beans from the khejri tree (Prosopis cineraria). They come here with sacred red cloths to tie around the khejri tree — to pray for rain, good fortune, offspring, and love. Orans are the lifelines of the desert.
is one of India's most prolific wildlife and conservation photographers. His work has been featured in leading publications. He is also a RoundGlass Ambassador, and an RBS Earth Hero awardee.