HomeNewsLifestyleBooksBook review: Arati Kumar-Rao’s Marginlands is a timely reminder of why we need to listen to our environment

Book review: Arati Kumar-Rao’s Marginlands is a timely reminder of why we need to listen to our environment

In the book, the journalist documents her time spent with marginalised communities and firsthand accounts of the apathy towards the environment and how it is affecting lives on the fringes of our country.

June 11, 2023 / 16:02 IST
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Wetlands are vital fishing grounds for the people living in the Ganga–Brahmaputra basin. (Photo: Arati Kumar-Rao/Marginlands)

In March this year, a report announced the discovery of 77 new glacial lakes in the Kumaon Himalaya. In all likelihood, it’s a piece of news most of us would have missed. Or simply chosen to ignore and move on. The only way it would have hit the limelight and the mainstream was if one of those lakes had caused a flash flood, resulting in loss of life and land lower down. A momentary discussion around climate change and human folly would have ensued. Soon, we would be back to our daily routines.

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These blink and miss headlines are reported everyday. Most times, there’s little done in terms of action or reaction, unless it were to directly affect individuals, especially those of a certain privilege. It typically portrays our relative indifference towards a constantly changing world around us and those directly affected by it.

This is a potent cocktail of manmade actions and nature’s response to it. In Marginlands, journalist Arati Kumar-Rao documents firsthand accounts of this apathy toward the environment and how it is affecting lives on the fringes of our country.