Genesis of the project
Bhimashankar Wildlife Sanctuary is located in Ambegaon and Khed talukas of Pune district in Maharashtra. This seasonal cloud forest in the Sahyadri mountain range was given a protected status in 1984, mainly for the conservation of the Indian Giant Squirrel and its unique habitat. One of the major rivers of south India, Bhima, a tributary of the Krishna, originates here. The area of the sanctuary is 130.78 square kilometre which includes 9 tribal villages inside.
People
Mahadev Kolis, primarily hunter-gatherers, and secondarily pastoralists and agriculturists, have been forest dwellers over many generations and their life revolves around this evergreen forest.
Religious Tourism
Bhimashankar is a famous pilgrimage place because of its temple which is one of the twelve Jyotirlingas of India. The temple receives a minimum of 10 lakh devotees on one single day during the Mahashivratri festival, and another twenty five lakhs during the sharavan months in August and September every year. This is in addition to the year round tourists who either visit the sanctuary for its natural beauty or the temple. All of which, puts an enormous pressure on the sanctuary and has over the years also influenced the life style of the villagers. The pressure to meet the needs of the visitors has only increased the dependence and exploitation of the sanctuary resources.
The Bhimashankar Wildlife Sanctuary is small; just 130 square kilometre2; within this area, the forests are patchily distributed between rocky expanses. The sacred grove surrounding the temple is just 5 square kilometre2 – little over a few cricket stadia in total area. This smallness is the cause of its greatest vulnerability. In order to protect this small sacred forest and its people, it is necessary to reduce the dependency of the Mahadeo Kolis on this forest and to provide them with viable alternatives. In order to achieve this effectively, it is necessary to evolve a comprehensive developmental programme that is ecologically sound, socially just, gender-unbiased and economically viable. This developmental programme should also take into consideration that the visits of lakhs of pilgrims and tourists to the temple and sanctuary are parts of the problem and of the solution.