Billy Arjan Singh: Difference between revisions
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[[Kunwar]] '''"Billy" Arjan Singh''' (15 August 1917 — 1 January 2010) was an [[India]]n hunter turned [[conservationist]] and author. He was the first who tried to reintroduce [[Bengal tiger|tigers]] and [[Indian Leopard|leopards]] from captivity into the wild.<ref name="obituary">Thapar, V. (2010) ''Obituary: Billy Arjan Singh'' HT Media Limited, 2 January 2010 [http://www.hindustantimes.com/Obituary-Billy-Arjan-Singh/Article1-493083.aspx online]</ref> |
[[Kunwar]] '''"Billy" Arjan Singh''' (15 August 1917 — 1 January 2010) was an [[India]]n hunter turned [[conservationist]] and author. He was the first who tried to reintroduce [[Bengal tiger|tigers]] and [[Indian Leopard|leopards]] from captivity into the wild.<ref name="obituary">Thapar, V. (2010) ''Obituary: Billy Arjan Singh'' HT Media Limited, 2 January 2010 [http://www.hindustantimes.com/Obituary-Billy-Arjan-Singh/Article1-493083.aspx online]</ref> |
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Billy Arjan Singh died peacefully at his original farmhouse ''Jasbir Nagar'' on 1 January 2010. He remained unmarried all his life. His sister Amar remained as his companion. |
Billy Arjan Singh died peacefully at his original farmhouse ''Jasbir Nagar'' on 1 January 2010. He remained unmarried all his life. His sister Amar remained as his companion and attendant. |
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==Early life== |
==Early life== |
Revision as of 07:36, 24 June 2011
Kunwar "Billy" Arjan Singh (15 August 1917 — 1 January 2010) was an Indian hunter turned conservationist and author. He was the first who tried to reintroduce tigers and leopards from captivity into the wild.[1]
Billy Arjan Singh died peacefully at his original farmhouse Jasbir Nagar on 1 January 2010. He remained unmarried all his life. His sister Amar remained as his companion and attendant.
Early life
Kunwar "Billy" Arjan Singh was born in Gorakhpur on 15 August 1917 as the second son of Kunwar Jasbir Singh, CIE (1887–1942), a member of the royal Ahluwalia dynasty of Kapurthala. His grandfather was Raja Harnam Singh, Raja Maharaj Singh was his uncle, Rajkumari Amrit Kaur was his aunt and his elder brother was Air Vice-Marshal Kunwar Jaswant Singh, PVSM (1915–1963) In 1940, Singh was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the British Indian Army and was posted to the south of Iraq. Upon his return to India he purchased a farm in the remote district of Lakhimpur Kheri and built himself a home - named in honour of his father - Jasbir Nagar. He settled down to a life of farming and hunting. Nearly ten years later, he also acquired an estate on the borders of the forestry reserve at Dudhwa. This came to be known as Tiger Haven and it is there that he lived for most of the rest of his life.
Hunter turned conservationist
Singh described how in his youth he had been an insatiable hunter. However, one day having shot a young leopard in the lights of his vehicle, he dramatically changed his view of hunting, feeling nothing but revulsion for killing and vowing that from then on he would pursue the cause of conservation. His first major project was to save a herd of barasingha in the neighbouring Sathiana range of the forestry reserve at Dudhwa. In 1976, he was awarded the World Wildlife Fund's Gold Medal, the WWF's premier award, for his conservation work.[2] He was also largely responsible for persuading the then Prime Minister Mrs Indira Gandhi to transform Dudhwa into a 200-square-mile (520 km2) national park.
Singh's work with wildlife is best known for his reintroduction of both leopards and tiger into the wild. He started by bringing up an orphaned male leopard cub, which he called Prince, and subsequently two female leopards, Harriet and Juliette. All were allowed to roam free and in the case of Prince, returned ultimately to the wild. While Juliette had cubs, they and the mother subsequently perished, either because of flooding or, in the case of both Juliette and Harriet because of poisoning, probably by local farmers. With Mrs. Gandhi's backing, Singh then brought a tigress cub - christened Tara - from an English zoo and reintroduced her successfully in to the wild. This extraordinary experiment was well documented in his subsequent books as also in a film made by Anglia Survival. Tara successfully produced a litter of cubs. While some accused Singh of introducing Siberian tiger genes, he himself had little regard for such criticism, believing that it would have enhanced the local gene pool.
Awards
For his work in conservation, Singh was widely honoured. He received the Padma Shri in 1975, one of India's highest civilian national awards. This award was closely followed by the World Wildlife Gold Medal in 1976, then the Order of the Golden Ark only a year later as well as the Lifetime Award for Tiger Conservation. In 2004, at the age of 86, Billy Arjan Singh received the J. Paul Getty Wildlife Conservation award — a global honour administered by the World Wildlife Fund — in recognition of his outstanding contribution to international conservation. He has been honored subsequently with several more awards, including the Padma Bhushan in 2006.[3]
Legacy
To ensure that his work in conservation continued, Singh established the Tiger Haven Society in 1992. The Society's aims include preserving Tiger Haven and sponsoring research into wildlife.
Books
Singh was a prolific and well read author of the following popular wildlife books:
- Tiger Haven Macmillan, London 1973
- Tara, a tigress Quartet Books, London and New York, 1981
- Prince of cats Jonathan Cape, London 1982
- Tiger! Tiger! Jonathan Cape, London 1984
- The legend of the maneater Orient Longman, New Delhi 1993
- Arjan Singh's tiger book (co-author) Lotus Collection, Roli Books, New Delhi 1998
- Eelie and the big cats Oxford University Press, New Delhi and New York 2001
- Watching India's wildlife : the anthology of a lifetime Oxford University Press, New Delhi 2003
His biography Honorary tiger : the life of Billy Arjan Singh was written by Duff Hart-Davis and published in 2005 by Lotus Collection, Roli Books, New Delhi.
References
External links
- Articles needing cleanup from January 2008
- Cleanup tagged articles without a reason field from January 2008
- Wikipedia pages needing cleanup from January 2008
- Indian conservationists
- People from Gorakhpur
- People from Lakhimpur Kheri
- Recipients of the Padma Shri
- Recipients of the Padma Bhushan
- Punjabi people
- British Indian Army officers
- Indian royalty
- 1917 births
- 2010 deaths
- Indian Sikhs