logo
The one-man army who secured the tiger — with love and awe: Valmik Thapar (1952-2025)

The one-man army who secured the tiger — with love and awe: Valmik Thapar (1952-2025)

Indian Express31-05-2025
Conservationist and tiger chronicler Valmik Thapar passed away early this morning after a brave and tough fight with cancer at his Kautilya Marg residence in New Delhi, his family said. He was diagnosed with cancer in his digestive tract.
Considered one of the world's foremost authorities on tigers, Valmik Thapar inspired generations to rally for the cause of wildlife conservation.
A veritable one-man army, he authored over two dozen books mostly on big cats, presented several wildlife documentaries, including the seminal BBC series Land of the Tiger (1997), and remained the loudest – and most articulate – voice for conservation in India since the 1990s.
With no formal training in wildlife biology or conservation, Thapar developed a deep understanding of tiger behaviour, as he put it, by watching wild tigers in Ranthambhore over five decades. In 1976, it was a chance encounter with Fateh Singh Rathore, then director of Ranthambhore tiger reserve, that had him hooked for life.
Both outspoken and often contrarian, Rathore and Thapar formed an indefatigable partnership — until Rathore's demise in 2011 — that influenced and, often, shaped India's conservation efforts and policies over the decades.
Thapar served in multiple apex bodies of the government, including the National Board for Wildlife and the Central Empowered Committee of the Supreme Court. He was also a member of the Tiger Task Force set up to prescribe reforms in the aftermath of the disappearance of tigers from Rajasthan's Sariska in 2005.
That was also the year I started learning the mercurial ways of India's Tigerman.
Thapar was warmly supportive of my work in The Indian Express from the day I first reported the total loss of tigers in Rajasthan's Sariska tiger reserve in January 2005. He offered me encouragement, insights and contacts, as the investigative series took me to parks across the country: Ranthambhore (Rajasthan), Panna, Kanha (Madhya Pradesh), Indrawati (Chhattisgarh), Valmiki (Bihar) and Palamu (Jharkhand) over the next three months.
In May 2005, I reported how Ranthambhore was in shambles despite attracting more money than all other tiger reserves combined. Non-profits, including Thapar's NGO Ranthambhore Foundation, had received a sizeable chunk of those funds. The report appeared in the morning then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited Ranthambhore. Thapar was livid over what he said would be his last phone call to me.
It was a we-told-you-so moment for a couple of young conservationists who had flagged how often Thapar used to grandly bemoan how he failed to save 'his' tigers. 'Valmik is in love with his ego,' his critics would carp.
Two months later, it was Thapar himself, back at what he loved doing, who would alert me to what he perceived as a 'pro-people bias' in the Tiger Task Force report which observed that the tiger 'issue is not about the tiger per se… but about rebuilding forest economies.''
Thapar's legendary stubbornness – a key shield for his activism – did not come in the way of changing his mind. Inviolate areas are often impractical, he would eventually concede, and 'conservation is impossible without community support.'
Thapar had set up his Ranthambhore Foundation back in 1987 to work towards integrating local communities into conservation efforts, and also partnered with another non-profit, Dastkar, to create livelihoods for displaced villagers.
But Thapar's fight, as he wrote in his 2012 book Tiger My Life, Ranthambhore and Beyond, 'was always for inviolate spaces—where the tiger could live free, away from noise, away from humans.' Post-Sariska, though, reform was in the air and prompted him to look beyond the model of exclusionary conservation.
Around 2006, Thapar's 'tiger guru' Fateh Singh Rathore was also warming up to 'soft strategies' — such as educating children from traditional hunter communities — pushed by biologist Dharmendra Khandal, who had recently joined Rathore's non-profit TigerWatch. From mostly-stick, the Rathore-Thapar conservation scale started leaning decisively towards mostly-carrot in a matter of years.
What did not change was Thapar's inbuilt distrust of the government system, even though he remained an insider most of his life. Perhaps that intimate knowledge led him to observe that 'bureaucracy killed more tigers than bullets ever did.'
Yet, even Rajesh Gopal, who took heavy flak as then head of Project Tiger from Thapar during the Sariska years, is quick to assert that his adversary was not self-serving. 'All said and done, Valmik really helped the tiger's cause,' Gopal told The Indian Express.
Until his last days, Thapar was involved in conservation work, guiding Khandal on various TigerWatch projects, and curating a defining collection of photos of Ranthambhore.
Thapar was born in 1952 in Mumbai to Romesh and Raj Thapar, journalists and co-founders of the political journal Seminar. He is survived by his wife, actor and director Sanjana Kapoor, and son Hamir Thapar.
Days before his death, I had called Thapar for a comment about a story I was working on related to the use of live bait to lure tigers. He never mentioned he was admitted to a hospital, but readily agreed to weigh in on the 'stupid thing they are doing, feeding tigers and risking lives.'
The promised quote arrived on WhatsApp within minutes. Later, I learnt he was in considerable discomfort and 'fussed all day in an irritable mood.'
On his first tiger sighting, Thapar once wrote: 'It was like shedding one layer of skin and putting on another… The transformation was total.'
Until his last days, the mere mention of tigers would have the same impact on the man. Not always William Blake's tiger with its 'fearful symmetry' but something softer, more magical.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

5 creepy secrets buried in Genghis Khan's past
5 creepy secrets buried in Genghis Khan's past

Time of India

time5 days ago

  • Time of India

5 creepy secrets buried in Genghis Khan's past

Across the annals of history, few figures loom as large as Genghis Khan. His stories of conquest advanced the boundaries of continents, while his leadership brought together peoples from diverse backgrounds. Beyond the battlefield, the Great Khan's life touches upon interesting human stories, about culture, power, mystery, and legacy. Here are five surprising facts about Genghis Khan, his empire, and conquests , His harem was massive Officially, Genghis Khan had 44 recognised wives and concubines, but historians estimate his harem numbered up to 500 women. This huge household was organized into four sub‑harems, or 'ordos,' each managed by a principal wife, namely, Börte, Khulan, Yesui, and Yesugen. Börte held the highest status as great empress or khatun. Each woman had her own yurt, and the Khan visited several each night, resulting in a vast progeny. How he died remains unclear The circumstances of Genghis Khan's death in 1227 are still debated. Some accounts say he died from injuries after falling from his horse, while others suggest illness like pneumonia or malaria. A legend tells of a Chinese princess who allegedly murdered him in revenge. But historians cannot confirm any version, making his demise part of an enduring myth. However, this is just based on popular legend. His descendants are his biggest legacy Genghis Khan's many children have left a remarkable genetic footprint. According to National Geographic, nearly 8% of men in Asia carry nearly identical Y‑chromosome sequences, meaning about 0.5% of men worldwide, or 16 million people, likely tracing back to a common ancestor in Mongolia about 1,000 years ago. Scholars say this is a rare case where culture amplified one male lineage's reach. Nobody knows where he's buried Genghis Khan was buried in secret, in an unmarked grave somewhere in Mongolia, possibly near his birthplace in the Khentii Mountains or the Onon River region, as per reports from BBC. To hide the location, stories say his followers killed everyone along the funeral route and rode 1,000 horses over the grave, forests and a diverted river may conceal it still. Even today, archaeologists have not located his tomb. He promoted ethnic diversity in his empire Genghis Khan's nomadic Mongol Empire was vast, but the Mongols lacked the bureaucratic skills to administer it alone. Instead of enforcing homogeneity, he welcomed talent from the conquered masses. For example, Central Asian Muslims and Han Chinese were appointed as administrators in new territories to help govern effectively. In Bukhara, for instance, he placed Chinese and Khitan administrators over Muslim populations. This strategy from Khan about inclusion helped strengthen his rule across vast regions.

UK Couple Find "Nazi bunker" Underneath Their Home With German Writings On Walls
UK Couple Find "Nazi bunker" Underneath Their Home With German Writings On Walls

NDTV

time6 days ago

  • NDTV

UK Couple Find "Nazi bunker" Underneath Their Home With German Writings On Walls

A couple in the United Kingdom was stunned when they found a World War II-era "Nazi bunker" underneath their home, the BBC reported. There were also German writings on the walls. "It's not something you find every day!" Shaun Tullier said while recalling the "completely wild" discovery. The man, along with his wife Caroline, 32, moved into their new home in Guernsey in October 2021 and found the bunker. However, the finding went viral after the BBC's recent report. The couple said they already knew that it had been the site of a World War II German gun emplacement, and when they learned about the possibility of a bunker underneath their house, they started digging and found a stunning piece of history. "A lot of people still have bunkers here, but they are down the road and in gardens, not underneath the house." The bunker had two large rooms and a hallway. The couple wanted to make a games room and gym in the bunker; however, they didn't want to disturb the historic elements. On walls, they found phrases such as "achtung feind hort mit", which translates to "beware, the enemy is listening". The bunker was built when the island of Guernsey was occupied by German forces from 1940 until 1945. This remarkable find highlights the island's complex history and the extensive network of underground structures built during the occupation. While speaking to BBC Channel Islands, "From the outside, you could tell it was sitting on top of something. We've been doing up the house anyway, so I hired a digger and, with the help of a mate, we started digging up the driveway to see what was there." "We kept digging down for a while, and then finally, the ground just gave way, and this doorway appeared." The bunker is a remnant of World War II, when the island of Guernsey was occupied by German forces. This remarkable find highlights the island's complex history and the extensive network of underground structures built during the occupation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store