Restoring the complex ecosystem of India’s sacred Arunachala Hill

There are many stories about the sacred Arunachala Hill, which rises alone from the surrounding plains to a height of 860m in India’s Tamil Nadu state. One of them is a story of restoration and rebuilding for a sustainable future –  of how dedicated volunteers helped reverse decades of wood clearing and burning that left the once-green Hill barren and dry by the 1970s. In some ways, it is a story that has echoes of the ancient stories of how the Hill came to exist.

By Sakthiprasanna – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=107609007

Australian ecologist John Barrie Button, who first encountered Arunachala in 1989 when he was invited to help local people reforest it, tells the mythic legend this way: ‘Shiva, Lord of Destruction and Re-creation, was asked to adjudicate an argument between Vishnu, Lord of Preservation, and Brahma, Lord of Creation, as to who had precedence. Having manifested Himself as a column of the pure light of consciousness, he bade each of them to find His limits; one to seek the lowest point, and the other the highest. Neither apparently was successful, and in their awe of Shiva’s brilliance, they pleaded with Him to take a form less dazzling, which mere mortals could then behold. Shiva agreed, and transformed himself into the form of the mountain, Arunachala, which has been venerated ever since.’

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