Hindu God of Environment

How Himachal’s deities have quietly monitored forests for generations

Once every three years, villagers escort the deity across forests, grazing lands and farms, retracing the boundaries of their natural resources.

Rachna Verma | Shimla | December 8, 2025 1:35 pm STATESMAN NEWSPAPER

Every few years, deep in the mountains of Himachal Pradesh, the forests receive a visitor – not a forest officer, not a government team, but a deity carried on the shoulders of the people. Nearly 100 kilometres from Shimla, in a village named Bhog in the tehsil Theog, hundreds of villagers gathered as ‘Dodru Devta’, affectionately known as ‘Dev Nanu’, begin a month-long journey.

This sacred procession is far more than a religious ritual; it is an ancient ‘Environmental Audit’ in which damaged trees, polluted waterbodies or neglected cattle are noticed not through human inspection, but a divine power. For generations, this system has quietly upheld ecological discipline long before modern conservation laws took form.

Once every three years, villagers escort the deity across forests, grazing lands and farms, retracing the boundaries of their natural resources. According to tradition, the palanquin moves smoothly only when the environment is healthy. If a tree has been cut without permission, a stream polluted or a pasture overused, the palanquin halts. This pause indicates a violation of the deity’s nature rules. The violators responsible for the damage receive a symbolic punishment—‘dand’—reinforcing the belief and rules that the maintenance of the landscape is a shared duty.

Sangam Age Tamils called the spirits as ANANGU

These practices may seem unusual and unbelievable to many who might witness from outside, but for the Himachal culture and people, this tradition is an unwritten code deeply embedded in the state.  Across Himachal Pradesh, ‘devtas’ are regarded not only as spiritual guides but as custodians of land, water and forests. (TAMIL- ANANGU)  For generations, communities have followed these environmental norms set by their deities. These may include simple rules like offering the first harvest to birds, protecting water sources, protecting forests and not abandoning livestock. These customs evolved long before environmental laws and remain firmly upheld today.

Eighty-six-year-old Jamana Devi, one of Bhog’s oldest residents, has witnessed this tradition for more than eight decades. For her, the belief system is not just a festival but a lifeline. “Through these visits, the ‘Devta’ reminds us that he is always with us,” she said.

She recalled one of the earliest rules the ‘Devta’ set to protect the village’s drinking water. At a time when water was scarce and people often stepped into the community wearing slippers, the ‘Devta’ issued a strict command that no one would be allowed near the well with slippers, and the prasad would be prepared only with water drawn from that well. Gradually, the condition of the well improved, reinforcing the message of collective responsibility.

Jamana Devi also remembered how, in her childhood, any family or village dispute—no matter how small or serious—was taken to the ‘Devta’ for resolution.

As the procession begins, each household must send at least one member for the month-long yatra. Participation is non-negotiable. Throughout the journey, villagers arrange food and shelter for the ‘kardars’ and everyone accompanying the ‘Devta’. Neglecting these responsibilities, they believe, could anger the deity.

‘Dodru Devta’ is placed only on land considered sacred, marked by an old tree dedicated to him. Each village hosts the deity for a night, during which the ‘gur’, or medium, shares warnings and guidance. Villagers listen intently, trusting the deity to protect them from illness, calamities and misfortune—and to safeguard their forests. Even today, no one cuts a tree for house construction without seeking the permission of ‘Devta’.

Digvijay Singh Thakur, the ‘Adhisthak’ (who ensures rules are followed) of ‘Dodru Devta’, explained that the deity is viewed as the protector of natural resources. “The fields, forests and water sources flourish because of his blessings,” he said. The Devta travels with ‘gana’ (followers) named ‘Tunda’ and ‘Rakashan’, the latter believed to ward off evil forces.

village well

Historian Dr Surat Thakur noted that this practice extends across Himachal Pradesh. “From sacred lakes in Mandi to forest groves in Kullu and serpent shrines in Sirmaur, ‘Devta’ culture has created community-led conservation systems that have survived for centuries,” he said. At a time when the Himalayas face growing threats from construction, tourism and climate change, these traditions show how faith can sustain ecological balance.

In 2013, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the G.B. Pant Institute of Himalayan Environment and Development, Almora, studied the role of religion in preserving local ecology and culture. Their documentation recorded 514 sacred groves. These groves—commonly known as Devata Vans—are protected spaces where no activity is permitted without the deity’s consent. These untouched forest patches hold old-growth trees and rare species, safeguarded for generations through faith rather than formal enforcement.

Speaking to The Statesman, Principal Chief Conservator of Forests Sanjay Sood said, “If it were possible, I would declare all forests as ‘Dev Vans’. People are remarkably sincere about this tradition, and we have never received complaints of illegal activity from these areas.”

He added that the traditional folklore surrounding ‘devis’ and ‘devtas’ has naturally woven ecological conservation into daily community life. During customary eco-visits, the deities are believed to inspect their territories, while villagers perform simple but meaningful rituals to honour water bodies, trees and forested land.

In these villages, the guardians of nature are not distant officials or modern policies, but the very gods who walk the land with their people. Through faith, reverence, fear and tradition, communities continue to protect forests in ways that modern conservation efforts often struggle to achieve.

(This article is an outcome of the Stories of Hope Media Fellowship by IUCN India under the Himalaya for the Future initiative.)

—subham—

Tags- Himachal, Dodru Devta, Forest God, Environment Protection

Environmental Concerns in Atharvana Veda (Post No.10,409)

WRITTEN BY LONDON SWAMINATHAN

Post No. 10,409

Date uploaded in London – –   4 DECEMBER  2021         

Contact – swami_48@yahoo.com

Pictures are taken from various sources for spreading knowledge.

this is a non- commercial blog. Thanks for your great pictures.

tamilandvedas.com, swamiindology.blogspot.com

The Hymn to Earth (AV XII-1) with 63 stanzas/Mantras is the most famous ‘Verse on Earth and it beauty’. Most of the nature lovers knew about it. But there are more smaller poems on cleanliness and environment in Atharvana Veda.

Here are a few which needs the attention of environmentalists: –

HYMN CXX; Book Six; AV

A prayer for pardon of sins and felicity hereafter

1.If we have injured Air, or Earth, or Heaven, if we have wronged
   our Mother or our Father,

  May Agni Gārhapatya here absolve us, and bear us up into the
   world of virtue.


2.Earth is our Mother, Aditi our birth-place: our brother Air save
   us from imprecation!
  Dyaus, Father, save us, from the world of Fathers! My world
   not lost, may I approach my kindred.


3.There where our virtuous friends, who left behind them their
   bodily infirmities, are happy,
  Free from distortion of the limbs and lameness, may we behold,
   in heaven, our sons and parents.

XXX

PARDON ME EARTH, PARDON ME WIND

This was sung by our forefathers thousands of years ago. In other parts of the world people were not that civilized or matured. Their thoughts have not been elevated to this level. If anyone looks at this along with the Bhumi Sukta/ Hymn to Earth, one will be amazed to see the high level of thinking. Now the newspapers high light these concerns. World leaders meet to discuss the environmental problems and each country accuses the other countries saying ‘You are the Culprits’.  Expecting this our seers sung this before other cultures got civilized.

One may think that if they have sung about it, the problem should have existed even then. There are two answers

Yes the problem did exist, but in very minor scale. How do we know that?  Hindus say a mantra even before they place their feet on the ground from the bed in the morning. Hindus worship the land even before they start the cultivation. This is repeated every day or every year. That means they knew they do some damage to Mother Earth for their own selfish interests. But one can’t avoid it they know.

Even today whenever a new proposal for constructing a dam is announced by the respective government, whenever an oil drilling is announced by the government, immediately an environmental group opposes it in the name of saving environment. Then the government reasons out saying there are more benefits to humanity than the damage it causes or it may cause. So, this is an eternal conflict and never ending argument.

Even when Arjuna and Krishna proposed to burn the forest Khandava Vana, there was opposition from Naga tribals. But both of them went ahead and there was a big fight between the Pandavas and the tribal Nagas. But that did something good. Mayan Danavan led one section to South America to establish Mayan Civilization.

Now let us see the merits in the above verse.

Mantra 1

If we have done anything against heavenly Mother and Father (Earth and Sky/atmosphere), if we have done anything wrong to earthly Mother and Father (parents) we seek your pardon.

Garhapatya Fire is the eternal fire in a family. That fire is never extinguished for generations. One father passes it to his son when he gets married. That lighted pot will be there till his death. In the meantime, his sons would have already got them from him, when they got married. They did daily fire ritual at family level.

An earthen pot with paddy husk and cow dung will have this fire burning for ever in a corner of the house. There were three types of fire in every Brahmins house. Even 2000 year old Tamil Sangam verses praised Brahmins as 1, 2 3, 4 men (1.Always running after One Brahman, 2. One who has Two births/Dvija; one before sacred thread, one after wearing sacred thread; 3. One who keeps Three types of fire at home- Gaarhapatya, Aahvaneeya and Daakshinaagniya; 4 one who practises Four Vedas; it goes on like this)

Mantra 2

Earth and sky are described as close relatives. And with their support, I would survive. I would have all good things in life.

Mantra 3

Praying for healthy life without damage to any limbs or organs.

Hindu scriptures say that people residing in Swarga/heaven are always happy. That is wished here on earth and up above.

Hindu belief is the reason for this hymn. They believed that if you do any harm to anything that will affect you. That is why they did worship animate and inanimate things

xxx

PERSONAL CLEANLINESS AND COUNTRY’S CLEANLINESS

19. For ceremonial purification. AV BOOK SIX; HYMN 19 (SUKTA192)

1. Let the god-folk purify me; let men (mánu) purify me with prayer (dhī́); let all beings purify me; let the purifying one purify me.


2. Let the purifying one purify me, in order to activity, dexterity, life, likewise unharmedness.


3. With both, O divine impeller (savitár), with purifier and with impulse, do thou purify us in order to seeing.

This verse is found in all the texts that have vs. i. RV. (ix. 67. 25) VS. (xix. 43)

Purity exists in two levels- physical and mental. We know that one contributes to another. Since Hindus originated in India, their life depends fully on water. Vedic rituals and the hundreds of references to rivers show this. The took a bath before sun rise and started their prayers very early in the morning. All mythological stories also confirm this. This personal mental and physical purity should have led them to national cleanliness. Though it is not in this verse it is understood.

In Tamil there is a proverb: ‘One tree doesn’t make a grove’ equivalent to ‘A single swallow cannot make a summer’. So clean individuals make a cleaner country/ cleaner society.

–subham—

Tags — Purity, environment, concern, cleanliness, in Vedas.