A TANGO for the Tiger
With the passing of Vallu, Ranthambhore has lost one of it strongest voice. Today as we gather to celebrate his life I would like to share a few words on how I look at their life together. I had a ring side seat.
Dad gave Vallu a purpose in life at a time when he was trying to find one and Vallu gave Dad a voice for the Tiger. To me it resembles a Tango that danced them through life’s ups and downs on a roller coaster ride unlike any.
What a ride they had together?
What they had in Ranthambhore cannot be had even if you were a billionaire today. How they complimented each other in making Ranthambhore what it is today?
It is a partnership no other park had, has or will have again. Together they painstakingly crafted Ranthambhore into what it has become today. The reason such a partnership may never happen again is not that it can’t happen again but those engaged in Tiger conservation are territorial just like the Tiger.
There is so much competition to be called the Tigerman that such a partnership is the rarest of the rare.
Dad and Vallu had their own competition, but they always managed to find a way around it. Ranthambhore owes a huge debt to them because it would not be what it is if they had not walked this ground together.
50 years is no small length of time.
In this territorial quest they had another amazing quality in that they would find a way to reach out and bring people together even if they didn’t agree and rarely did anyone refuse. That’s a vacuum that will be hard to fill if not impossible.

Vallu was not a people person and like Dad he believed the park has a boundary and that needs to be inviolate and what happens to the people outside is another matter. For them, the Tiger came first. Although Dad was a lot more empathetic because he saw the heart wrenching moments when he relocated 16 villages out in 1976 and his early years were spent to secure the park boundary from villagers who lived outside at all costs. This was also the time when Vallu came for the first time to Ranthambhore in 1976 so he saw the flag end of that process.
This bullish protection of the Park saw increasing conflict between the park authorities and the people eventually culminating in 1981 with a brutal attack on Dad by illegal graziers near Lakrda. This one incident ushered in the first thoughts that the park cannot be saved without the people who live around it. I believe this is most likely the time when they started to have conversations about what to do and maybe set up an NGO. In 1987 the Ranthambhore Foundation was set up with the help of some of Dad’s dearest friends and ardent Ranthambore fans. Vallu took the initiative with Avninder Singh, Mala, Tejbir, Bharat, John Singh to name a few and set up the Foundation. Then there were those that were not part of the Foundation like Peter Lawton who raised the first major tranche of funds.

They were all people with passion and great connections and were able to raise substantial amount of funds to help the people centric projects.I became the first Field Director and later a member of the board.
It would take forever to even begin to explain the profound impact these first steps of community conservation had over the years. The next 5 decades will see the establishment of a few more NGO encouraged by Vallu and Dad with the Foundation being a sort of umbrella. A state of the art hospital was built and it continues to offer affordable health care, a CBSE school that continues to offer scholarships to children living in the immediate vicinity of the park many of whom are now Doctors and Engineers including girls. A non formal environment education that has partnered with local schools and brought environment awareness to hundreds of thousands of children. Breed improvement programs and dairy development projects have helped improve milk yields dramatically with a couple of private dairy operatives collecting milk a change from a time when even the government run RCDF would not because milk yields were not there, alternate energy programs like growing wood for wood (over a million trees distributed and planted) and biogas won Ranthambhore the Ashden Award for sustainable energy. Dastakar, Dhok and the Anokhi production unit all started by friends to help provide employment to local people. Tiger watch became the flag bearer of Vallu and Dads main thrust of monitoring Tigers and keeping an eye on the park and its management and proved critical in 2003-4 in exposing the rampant poaching that was happening right under the eyes of the Park authorities. Had Dad and his TW team not done this Ranthambore would have most likely lost all its Tiger. Vallu became the national voice for the Tiger at this time spotlighting its plight not just in Ranthambhore but through out India. God knows how many young people took to nature and wildlife as a direct result of the books they wrote together and the films in which they represented wildlife and Tigers. Valmik became the Attenborough of India spreading the message of conservation world wide while Dad stayed close to Ranthambhore guarding it like a soldier. Today their forays are the largest employers in the District after the government.
Together, they Tangoed for the Tiger; and what a Tango they danced.
I, of course, had a ring side seat.
— Dr. Goverdhan Singh Rathore