Mission Statement: The mission of Nature's Beckon is working with the people to conserve, protect and increase wildlife, plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the people of India.
Nature's Beckon is an independent environmental activist group in Northeast India[1] which initiated the environmental movement in Assam.[2]
The organization was established by Ashoka Fellow Soumyadeep Datta[3] in 1982.[4][5][6] It aims to conserve and protect wildlife and habitats.[1] In 1991, the organization was formally registered under the Societies Registration Act.[citation needed]
Some programs are undertaken to teach students, environmental activists, and workers about the environment and habitat.[1]
Formation
Nature's Beckon started as a nature club formed by Soumyadeep Datta in 1982. Led by him, the members went on nature-trails and bird-watching expeditions in the Dhubri Forests. Kamal Narayan Choudhury provided guidance and helped them expand their activities.[8][15]
Activities
Chakrashila Wildlife Sanctuary Movement and conservation of golden languar
Nature's Beckon took up a 12-year-long conservation movement through people's participation in the declaration of the Chakrashila Wildlife Sanctuary.[16][17][3][5]
After the discovery of golden languar[18][19] in the hill reserves of Chakrashila, the organization worked for its protection through a movement at the grassroot level that involved local people, surveys and research, lobbying and other forms of activism.[11][20][21]
Rainforest Conservation Movement of Assam and the declaration of Dehing Patkai Wildlife Sanctuary
Nature's Beckon rediscovered the presence of rain forest in the Dibrugarh-Tinsukia districts of Upper Assam and undertook a movement for the legal protection of 500 sq km of contiguous rainforest in 1995. This movement started with baseline surveys of the region by the organization. On 13 June 2004, the state government declared 111.19 sq km of rainforest as 'Dehing Patkai Wildlife Sanctuary'.[22] The organization still demands and works for the area extension of the Dehing Patkai Wildlife Sanctuary, saying that the Dehing Patkai Wildlife Sanctuary should constitute the entire contiguous rain forest.[23][24][4]
^Datta, Soumyadeep (April–June 1998). "A report on the discovery of Golden Languar at Chakrashila Wildlife Sanctuay and its Conservation". Tigerpaper. 25 (2): 23–26.
^Datta, Soumyadeep Datta (December 15, 2003). "Feral Instinct". India Today.
^ abWolvekamp, Paul (1999). Forests for the Future: Local Strategies for Forest Protection,Economic Welfare and Social Justice. New York, London: Zed Books Ltd. pp. 58–65. ISBN1-85649-756-9.
^Datta, Soumyadeep (July 1996). "Battling to Protect the Environment". Participation and Governence. 3 (7): 3–7 – via Society for Participatory Research in Asia).
^"Visionaire Extraordinaire Soumyadeep Datta". The Eclectic-A Global Magazine. August 2007: 20–27. August 2007.
^"Chakrashila Wildlife Sanctuary". WildTrails Recent Sightings | The One-Stop Destination for all your Wildlife Travels. 2017-09-23. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
^Communities and Conservation:Natural Resource Management in South and Central Asia. California, New Delhi, London: Sage Publications. 1998. pp. 425–434. ISBN0-7619-9279-0.