Thursday, November 29, 2007

Integration-Nature's Way




Integration- Nature’s Way

While political leaders, religious heads and individual men have been crying themselves hoarse on the subjects of National Integration and Human Brotherhood, to no avail, Nature has been quietly practising this exalted philosophy for time immemorial without any hue and cry. There are no banners, no cut-outs and no advertisements by Nature. There is no colossal waste of money conducting rallies, processions and TV serials in the world of Nature. All one has to do is to pause in the busy schedule of one’s daily life and OBSERVE! Nature is quietly practising integration and brotherhood instinctively, everyday and everywhere.
This silent feat of Nature was brought home to me on a fine day. Near my house there is a hoary, huge tree, commonly known as the “Flame of the Forest”. In late summer the tree flares up into a flame of orange-red flowers. Very few leaves are seen. From a distance the tree looks as if it has caught fire. Usually, after having finished the domestic work, I draw up a basket chair near the balcony and sit watching the busy traffic on the road-of buses, lorries, cars, bullock-carts, cycles and two-wheelers, a symbol of Man’s busy life.
On that particular day my attention was suddenly drawn to the tree by some activity which was as busy as the road traffic itself, but with a difference. While the vehicles went screeching and loudly honking the horns for permission to overtake, the activity at the tree was absolutely quiet, except for an occasional “Caw”! Yes, two crows were building a nest of sticks and dry leaves and twigs between two branches of the tree. They were totally engrossed in their construction, as engrossed as an architect in erecting his own, self-designed house. While the male crow brought sticks and twigs, the female arranged and rearranged them fussily, throwing down a stick here and a leaf there with great impatience. Suddenly she will change her mind, sweep down to the ground, pick up the discarded stick and insert it in to the nest with great precision.
The nest building was over in a month’s time. One afternoon I found the crow sitting in the nest for hours, now and then adjusting her position. Sometime one crow would relieve the sitting crow to go for a food and sit in her place. I realized that the eggs were laid and incubation had started.
One fine morning I had the chirping of the nestlings as I sat with a cup of steaming coffee in my favorite chair. Though I couldn’t see the baby bird I could see the open beaks, red as the flowers of the tree, ready to receive food from their parents. Watching the parents, tirelessly bringing food, from dawn to twilight eternally adjusting the twigs so that the fledglings may not fall off, hardly taking time to feed themselves, taught me a lesson in patience. I found myself often sitting and watching the family of crows.
I do not know how many days went by, when one day I saw one of the baby birds, sitting on a branch near the nest. She looked different from the father and the mother. The shape of the body was different and she had grey and white dots under her wings, had and tail. She was a not a crow, but a bird of different species. Gradually she left her nest and hopped from one branch to another. She had outgrown her nest, but unable to fly and fend for herself. Within a few days, another fledgling came out of the nest. Though she was similar to the first one, she was darker with yellow dots under her wings. She also was of different species. These two birds had become too big for the nest and so had moved out. But they didn’t wholly abandon the nest. Evenings found them huddling with the other inmates of the nest.
The next to leave the nest was a bird, quite different from the other two. She was jet black and shiny with the round head and a fan-tail. Her voice was raucous. Three birds occupied different branches of the tree. They would call out to their crow parents, demanding food. The lone youngster occupying the nest was too small to leave the nest. She contented herself in fanning her wings and looking at the other three with great admiration. I was wondering about the fourth bird in the nest. Was she also a bird of different species? Had the crow parents foolishly incubated eggs of other cleverer birds, who shirked their responsibilities of parenthood by laying their eggs in the unwary nest of crows? Were the crows aware of the difference in species?
Each of my questions was answered soon. In a week’s time the sole occupant of the nest came out to join the other three birds. I had a good look at her. She was a crow baby with great throat and black body. When her mother arrived with food, she uttered one single cry “Caw” to attract the attention of the mother. But the mother brought her food only after feeding the other three birds. So, out of the four fledglings only one was crow and the other three were birds of different species.
In a month time, after leaving the nest the birds had grown larger. The markings were different a well as the shape and size. The parent crows were obviously puzzled. The three fledglings who had left the nest earlier than the fourth were completely different. The sounds they made were also completely different from the “Caw” of the fourth one. While the baby crow returned to the security of the nest now and then, the other three remained on the branches and never returned to the nest. Even on a rainy day they sat huddled in the tree and never came back to the nest. But the crow baby sat in the nest, with her head buried in her wing feathers. Though the four birds had lived together in the same nest for more than a month, there was no communication between them.
The crow parents would sit on a branch at a distance and watch the three birds with heads tilted. They were quite conscious of the fact that the three birds were different from the fourth. They never watched the fourth for they were confident that the baby was theirs. When the mother brought the food, she would sweep down to the branch where the little crow would sit with open beak and feed her without any hesitation. Gradually the father crow grew indifferent and stopped feeding the three birds.
By now I was able to identify the other species. The first bird was grey and black with white and black dots. The local people call it as ‘ Onan Kothi’. The second one belongs to the species of ‘Kauvthari’, a black spotted bird. The third one was the ’Kuil’ , Cuckoo, black as midnight with red eyes and long fan-tail with an enchanting voice, a bird of inspiration for poets William Wordsworth to the Tamil poet Bharathi. Though the mother crow continued to feed the three birds she also losing interest in them. She fed her own baby more frequently and little crow followed her mother wherever she went.
On a fine morning, I sat in my favorite chair, waiting to see the family. The nest was empty. The tree was empty.
The family members had gone their separate ways to pursue their own ways of life as Nature had ordained. A lone black raven sat on the tree, stareing at the empty nest. Was he planning to raise a family in the same nest?
I felt a sense of shame within me for the whole of humanity. We, the so called ‘highest evolved species’ with the ‘SIXTH SENSE’ are selfish and have time only for what is ‘ours’ and ‘ours’ alone . But the comparatively the unevolved crow, looked down upon by man and derogatorily described as ‘scavenger’ proved better than man. Till the fledglings could fend for themselves though they knew full well that the three birds were not their own. The three were abandoned only when they flew away on their own to join their own species. Integration –Nature’s way will haunt me – forever.

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