From being a professional wildlife photographer and filmmaker, to being a wildlife conservationist, the transition may have seemed rather obvious to most. But for Belinda Wright, the turn of events happened at the cost of a deeply emotional loss. 바카라It was when one of my favourite tigers went missing in the summer of 1994,바카라 says Wright. Wright had come to know that a gang of poachers had been desperately looking for the tiger. 바카라It was this incident that really motivated me to becĀome a full time conservationist. I couldn바카라t believe that someone could do that to an animal,바카라 she says.
After that, Wright made the decision to become a conservationist. From living in the heart of a jungle to shifting base to its concrete counterpart in Delhi, the transition was tough. 바카라I ended up living in a city, which would never have been my first choice. I am a different person at my home in the jungle in Madhya Pradesh. When I go there, I바카라m happy, I laugh and it brings out the best in me. But when I바카라m in Delhi, I tend to be a different person. I바카라m much more stressed here.
Wright has headed the Wildlife Protection Society of India for over 24 years now. Her approach to the growing human-wildlife conflict is one of coexistence. 바카라I am not one of those conservationists who hate people. I don바카라t think it바카라s possible to solve wildlife conservation problems if we don바카라t listen to the problems of the local people,바카라 Wright concludes.