Hargila Army
Green Oscar winner environmentalist Purnima Devi Barman (right) joins “Kitchen Queen” Taanishi Inam (left) during the cooking lessons at Dadara on Saturday.

Taanishi Inam is a well-known face to all food lovers and exquisite recipe seekers of the state. She appears regularly on the TV channels providing new information about indigenous and exotic food.

Over the years she has won several competitions in cooking and confectionary competitions to the extent that it has earned her the title “Kitchen Queen.” On Saturday, she visited Dadara on the outskirts of Guwahati with a noble and unique mission.

As a Diwali gift from her side, she conducted a recipe workshop for the members of the “Hargila Army”, a group of volunteers consisting mainly of rural womenfolk, who help Green Oscar winning Assamese environmentalist Purnima Devi Barman in the conservation and protection of the endangered Greater Adjutant bird, known in Assam as the Hargila.

On May 18 last year, Purnima had bagged the Whitley Award, also known as Green Oscar, from the hands of Princess Royal Anne, patron of the Whitley Fund for Nature (WFN), in London in recognition of her pioneering work in the protection and preservation of an endangered species.

Purnima is associated with Aaranyak NGO that works for wildlife conservation. Besides Dadara Village, she has also been working with Pachariya and Hingimari Villages of Kamrup Rural District to save the greater adjutant stork, locally known as ‘Hargila’ in Assam.

On their arrival in Dadara on Saturday, Purnima took Taanishi and her team on a visit of the Hargila Habitat and explained to the visiting group the details of Hargila’s life cycle, their breeding habits, and the threats that now pose before their existence in our midst.

Taanishi Inam (seated right), Purnima Devi Barman and other guests at the recipe workshop.

While Purnima has been successful in creating awareness among local people about the need for preserving this bird, she is worried that with the expansion of the city limits, it may be very difficult to provide the Hargila a safe abode for a very long time in the near future.

She said, “There are about 35 beels or water bodies in the areas where I work for the conservation of Hargila, but the land mafias have their eyes on these and they contemplate to fill these water bodies in order to build apartments and industrial estates.”

During the recipe workshop, Taanishi prepared five dishes before the Hargila Army – vegetable pulao, raita, besan halwa, fruit malpua, firni.

In addition, she prepared a special dish named “Kavi Sammbardhana” which was prepared first time in honour of Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore and later became one of his favourite items on the dinner table.

The programme was organized by Aranyak, an NGO that works for the environment, as part of its Diwali celebrations for the year. About 50 members of the Hargila Army were present on the occasion.