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Quaid Najmi

4 January 2025 at 3:26:24 pm

Thackerays’ ‘Taandav’ for trees, tigers

AI generated image Mumbai: Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) President Raj Thackeray launched a sharp attack on the government for the systematic degradation of the state’s environment under the garb of development, even as the climate change poses a direct threat to the environment, economy, agriculture, public health and the future of both rural and urban centres. Questioning the state government’s claims of having planted millions of trees, he rued how the World Environment Day has been...

Thackerays’ ‘Taandav’ for trees, tigers

AI generated image Mumbai: Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) President Raj Thackeray launched a sharp attack on the government for the systematic degradation of the state’s environment under the garb of development, even as the climate change poses a direct threat to the environment, economy, agriculture, public health and the future of both rural and urban centres. Questioning the state government’s claims of having planted millions of trees, he rued how the World Environment Day has been reduced to an annual ritual of tree-planting drives and clicking selfies for social media, though 90 pc of the saplings don’t survive even a day. “Only the government knows where those trees really are,” said Raj sternly. He recalled a "Blueprint of Maharashtra’s Development" he had proposed in 2015, in which he advocated how development without environmental sensitivity is hollow. Justifying, he said that the consequences are visible where roads, bridges and infrastructure projects are hailed as achievements, but even a short spell of rainfall can paralyze entire cities. Referring to recent reports on farmers returning from the fields after 10 am due to the scorching heat, Raj said that the worsening climate crisis has become an everyday reality. Citing official statistics, Raj claimed that extreme heat has caused productivity losses of nearly USD 159 billion and slashing of 160 billion work-hours annually in recent years. He mentioned the World Bank estimates that India’s GDP could plummet by 2.5-4.5 pc while 57 pc of the country’s districts sheltering 76 pc of the population stare at serious climate-related crises. Taking a swipe, he said while the governments boast about growth figures and economical rankings, they are silent on the staggering costs of environmental destruction. He questioned the development model “whether flooded cities, washed-away crops and unbearable summers” genuinely indicate progress. Claiming that Maharashtra was increasingly becoming unliveable for upto 8 months in a year, he said excessive monsoon rains disrupt rural life and urban floods cripple cities, while extreme heat make normal life a torture in summers in both urban-rural areas. Targeting the Centre, Raj alleged that nearly 173,984 hectares of forest lands were diverted in the past 11 years for mining and infrastructure projects to benefit the PM’s single favourite Adani Group. He said that these lands amount to 1,730 sqkm, or equivalent to the area of 16 Sanjay Gandhi National Park (SGNP) that is spread over barely 104 sqkm. Dissolve state wildlife board: Aaditya Shiv Sena (UBT) leader Aditya Thackeray has accused the Maharashtra government for issuing a permit to carry out mining activity in the sensitive tiger corridor between the Tadoba-Andhari and Indravati sanctuaries housing the big striped cats. In a strongly-worded letter to the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) Member-Secretary Sanjay Kumar, Thackeray sought his immediate personal intervention, sacking the Maharashtra State Board for Wild-Life (SBWL), revoking the permit, and probe against the Chief Wildlife Warden & Principal Chief Conservator of Forests (PCCF) M. Srinivasa Reddy for the alleged lacunae. Aditya’s two-pager says the permit has been granted for “scientific exploration and excavation/systematic recovery of low-grade iron ore in existing mines in villages Hedri, Bande, Parsalgondi and Round Parsalgondi, in the Etapalli taluka of Gadchiroli district”. Last January, Aditya – MLA from Worli – had first raised the issue saying that the proposed mine would create only 120 jobs, including 32 permanent, and the estimated output is pegged at 1.1 million tons in a year. Referring to two letters of Reddy – on April 28 and May 21 – the SS (UBT) leader claimed that in communications to the state government, the PCCF had changed his stance on the issue. Aditya said that in the first letter, Reddy had effectively opposed the government plans for mining activity but in the second letter, he took a somersault, ostensibly due to government pressures or some commercial interests, “the U-turn is disgraceful and detrimental to India’s national interest” – and this abrupt shift in stance must be investigated thoroughly. In view of the contrary stance of the PCCF Reddy, entrusted with protecting the wildlife but failing to defend the NTCA and NBWL, point to serious malfunctioning of the SBWL, and hence it must be dissolved, besides reviewing all its decisions in the past three years, particularly those pertaining to hazardous activities in sensitive areas, demanded Aditya. 444 tigers roam in 11,000 sq.km As per the Status of Tiger Report (2002), and the Maharashtra Economic Survey 2025-2026, the state boasts of 444 tigers prowling in the wild along with other menacing creatures. The state’s total protected wildlife network of 88 Notified Areas of National Parks, Sanctuaries, and Conservation Reserves - including 6 dedicated to the striped big cats – is spread over 11,092 sq. kms as per current data.

The Dolphin Always Returns

There’s a strange kind of joy in waiting by the sea, eyes fixed on the vast blue horizon, holding your breath for that one magical moment when a dolphin breaks through the surface. You don’t know when it’ll come, or even if it will — but you wait anyway. Minutes stretch into hours, the sun dips a little lower, the waves repeat their rhythm, and still, you wait. Because when it does appear, even if only for a second, the reward outweighs the wait.


That fleeting moment stays etched in memory — not because of how long the dolphin stayed, but because it showed up with grace, made its mark, and disappeared before the world could blink. And in that instant, it became unforgettable. That’s exactly what powerful personal branding feels like. Today, in a world where everyone is constantly on, forever speaking, posting, doing, and proving — stillness is seen as absence.


But the most impactful personal brands don’t shout. They emerge. Like the dolphin, they show up with precision, presence, and purpose — just when people have almost stopped expecting it. And that entrance? It’s not noise. It’s impact. The challenge with most personal brands is not visibility — it’s premature visibility. Everyone’s in a rush to be seen before they’re ready, heard before they’ve thought things through, followed before they’ve done anything truly worth following. But a brand that’s memorable, trustworthy, and credible is one that chooses the right moment to emerge. And most importantly, the right way.


This doesn't mean you disappear for years waiting for a perfect moment. It means you become intentional. You build your brand quietly, consistently, internally — you refine your thoughts, evolve your skills, curate your messaging, and then... when the moment is right, you break through the noise. Just like the dolphin, people take notice not because you were everywhere — but because you showed up like no one else.


The biggest brands today — both human and corporate — are not built in the spotlight. They are built in the shadows, with clarity, alignment, and a long-term view. You build a brand like you build trust: not all at once, but with every silent decision when no one is watching. The dolphin doesn't spend its time proving it's in the ocean. It simply appears when it wants to be seen — and when it does, the world pauses.


This is the shift we all need in the way we think about personal branding. It’s no longer about being more visible, it’s about being strategically visible. And there is a massive difference between the two. Your presence must feel earned, not imposed. Your story must carry weight, not noise. And your energy must speak even when you don’t. That’s when your personal brand becomes a legacy, not just a LinkedIn headline. In the boardroom, on stage, in leadership meetings, or online — people remember not the loudest, but the most anchored voice in the room.


That person who isn’t busy trying to prove anything, but is simply there, with clarity, calm, and conviction. The one who waited long enough to know what they wanted to say, and why it mattered. Personal branding isn’t a marketing exercise.


It’s a leadership commitment. One that requires patience, stillness, introspection, and timing. Just like waiting for the dolphin — the wait is never wasted. It builds character. It deepens your narrative. It aligns you with your purpose. And when you finally do emerge, you won’t just be seen — you’ll be remembered. Because the best personal brands aren’t built on urgency. They’re built on unforgettable entrances. And that, my friend, is worth the wait. Maybe it’s time to step back, sharpen your message, and plan your moment.


LinkedIn: Divyaa Advaani Instagram: @suaveu6 YouTube: @suaveu (Suave U by Divyaa Advaani)


(The author is a personal branding expert. She has clients from 14+ countries. Views personal.)

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