British broadcaster Sir David Attenborough awarded Indira Gandhi Peace Prize at online event

The award consists of a monetary prize of Rs 25 lakh along with a citation.

Agencies
Sonia Gandhi described David Attenborough as the world's leading authority on the natural world.
NEW DELHI: Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Monday conferred the Indira Gandhi Peace Prize on British broadcaster David Attenborough at a virtual event. Congress President Sonia Gandhi was also present during the online award function.

She described David Attenborough as one of Nature's "most staunch conscience keepers" for over half a century. David is also the brother of actor Richard Attenborough.

"David is already well known to us all through his prodigious creativity in educating the humankind with brilliant films and books about the natural world. And he has, of late, been the most sensible voice warning us that we, more than anything else, are responsible for the accelerating threat to the environment on our planet," Gandhi said in her speech.


"When environmental protection has become all the more imperative, when climate change and continued loss of bio-diversity is threatening livelihoods and public health, indeed life on earth, there could not have been a more appropriate choice for an award in her name than Sir David Attenborough," she said.

Accepting the award for the year 2019, Attenborough said, "We have to change from being nationalists to being international".

The Indira Gandhi Prize for Peace, Disarmament and Development was instituted in the memory of the former prime minister by a trust in her name in 1986. It consists of a monetary award of Rs 25 lakh along with a citation.
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Accepting the award for the year 2019, David Attenborough said, "We have to change from being nationalists to being international". ​ (Image ​Copyright: © National Portrait Gallery, London​)
Accepting the award for the year 2019, David Attenborough said, "We have to change from being nationalists to being international". (Image Copyright: © National Portrait Gallery, London)

The award is given to individuals or organisations who work towards ensuring international peace and development, ensuring that scientific discoveries are used to further the scope of freedom and better humanity, and creating new international economic order.

Sonia Gandhi said Indira Gandhi despite being born in a political family saw herself as a child of Nature, developing a special affinity for mountains, forests, birds and animals from an early age.

"As prime minister, she became an unwavering champion of environmental protection long before that cause had become popular both in India and abroad. While helping India accelerate the pace of investment and expand its economic infrastructure, she was very sensitive to the imperative of maintaining what she would often call 'ecological balance'. Her political innings were a search for that balance and a journey of educating her colleagues and the people to preserve that balance.

"It is not a surprise, therefore, to find that the legal and institutional framework India now has for protecting its wonderful bio-diversity had been put in place during her tenure as Prime Minister. It bears her personal imprimatur," the Congress chief said.
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Describing David Attenborough as the world's leading authority on the natural world, she said his passion has been inspiring and is also to reiterate what we all acknowledge.

"Age has not dimmed his zeal, neither has humanity's willful disregard for what he says," she said, adding that he has kept going relentlessly, educating, enlightening and sensitising millions of people.
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Nature, Interrupted: 8 Art Installations That Talk Green
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Climate change, depleting water tables, growing carbon footprints. A bunch of artists recently took up the cause of the environment to highlight green concerns.

And the result was an impressive collection of art installations, created by eight artists from across the country, displayed at the Hungarian Information Cultural Centre (HICC) in the Capital.

Here: 'Red Leaf', by ceramic artist Rahul Modak, looks at biodegradable waste in a new light. The dry leaves hint at a new life, while the colour symbolises 'reincarnation'. The tutelage covering a bucolic passageway leads towards an unknown destination, invoking hope.
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Devika Swaroop's 'chal' - which in Hindi means to walk, and is also an informal usage of construction implying work flow - reflects on the condition how haphazard, economic development is causing long-term damage to the environment. Through the installation, she drives home the point that a growing concrete jungle has resulted in a shrinking ecosystem.
Devika Swaroop's 'chal' - which in Hindi means to walk, and is also an informal usage of construction implying work flow - reflects on the condition how haphazard, economic development is causing lon..
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Sculptor Balagopalan used his installation, 'This too shall pass', to delve into the relationship between human beings and nature. He explores an idea of slowness that contradicts the fast, linear mode of experiencing life in urban contexts. In the contemporary world, there is an awareness about the gradual degradation of nature and the need to conserve it for future generations which often is in conflict with the urban, materialistic mode of life.
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Artists Shubhangi and Harinder worked in collaboration on the interactive installation, using foam of gas cylinders, found tree branches. The installation poses questions on the effects of consumerism and the future.
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Anoop Panicker turned to the Himalayan ranges and mythology for inspiration. His work 'Myth and Coexistence' that depicts a web made of cotton ropes between two trees with an image of an ant hill in the centre.
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Through mud, bamboo and cloth, Abhinav Yagnik raises concerns about irresponsible corporate agriculture that is destroying the soil's fertility. The interior of the structure also borrows formal qualities of Acacia auriculiformis fruit. Acacia, a foreign tree, was brought to the Indian subcontinent from Australia in the 1940s. Being from a harsh environment, the tree does not allow the local vegetation in India to thrive.

The installation, a narrow passage with two openings, is made out of locally-sourced biodegradable material. The viewer enters into the passage walks through it, physically experiences the form and structure. Since the passage is narrow, there is discomfort while passing through it.
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