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  by Stephen Messenger
 April 2, 2012
 
			from
			
			TreeHugger Website 
			  
			  
			 
			  
			A little over 30 years ago, a teenager named Jadav "Molai"
			Payeng began burying seeds along a barren sandbar near his 
			birthplace in northern 
			
			India's Assam region to grow a refuge for 
			wildlife.
 
			  
			Not long after, he decided to dedicate 
			his life to this endeavor, so he moved to the site where he could 
			work full-time creating a lush new forest ecosystem. Incredibly, the 
			spot today hosts a sprawling 1,360 acre of jungle that Payeng 
			planted single-handedly.
 The Times of India
			
			recently caught up with Payeng in his remote 
			forest lodge to learn more about how he came to leave such an 
			indelible mark on the landscape:
 
				
				It all started way back in 1979 when floods washed a large number of 
			snakes ashore on the sandbar. One day, after the waters had receded, 
			Payeng , only 16 then, found the place dotted with the dead 
			reptiles.    
				That was the turning point of his life. 
					
					"The snakes died in the heat, 
				without any tree cover. I sat down and wept over their lifeless 
				forms. It was carnage . I alerted the forest department and 
				asked them if they could grow trees there.    
					They said nothing would grow there. 
				Instead, they asked me to try growing bamboo. It was painful, 
				but I did it. There was nobody to help me. Nobody was 
				interested," says Payeng, now 47. 
			While it's taken years for Payeng's 
			remarkable dedication to planting to receive some well-deserved 
			recognition internationally, it didn't take long for wildlife in the 
			region to benefit from the manufactured forest.  
			  
			Demonstrating a keen understanding of 
			ecological balance, Payeng even transplanted ants to his burgeoning 
			ecosystem to bolster its natural harmony.  
			  
			Soon the shadeless sandbar was 
			transformed into a self-functioning environment where a menagerie of 
			creatures could dwell. The forest, called the Molai woods, now 
			serves as a safe haven for numerous birds, deers, rhinos, tigers, 
			and elephants - species increasingly at risk from habitat loss 
			elsewhere.
 Despite the conspicuousness of Payeng's project, Forestry officials 
			in the region first learned of this new forest in 2008 - and since 
			then they've come to recognize his efforts as truly remarkable, but 
			perhaps not enough.
 
				
				"We're amazed at Payeng," says 
				Assistant Conservator of Forests, Gunin Saikia. "He has been at 
				it for 30 years. Had he been in any other country, he would have 
				been made a hero." 
			  
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