In the emerald stillness of Kashmir’s Dachigam National Park—where pine forests murmur with birdsong and snow-fed streams weave through serene valleys—a quiet revolution is taking root. This is no uprising of politics or protest, but one of purpose and devotion. Amid the whispering woods and alpine silence, a small band of unsung heroes—wildlife guardians, naturalists, and conservationists—have committed their lives to safeguarding the delicate splendor of one of India’s richest biodiversity havens.
Leading this league of extraordinary earth-keepers is Nazir Malik, the ‘Jungle Man of Kashmir,’ whose journey began not with formal degrees but with wide-eyed wonder. “While other kids played with marbles, I watched birds in my mother’s courtyard,” he recalls. Today, at 63, Nazir walks the woods of Dachigam as if tracing lines in his own palm—each chirp, scent, and rustle etched into memory. With over four decades in the Forest Department, Nazir’s knowledge borders on mystical. He can identify birds by song and plants by scent, and his love for the hangul—the endangered Kashmir stag—is nothing short of spiritual. He has refused promotions to stay rooted in Dachigam, where every leaf holds a memory and every trail carries his imprint. His retirement in April 2020 marked the end of an era, but not the end of his story. In many ways, Nazir is Dachigam—a living archive of its untamed poetry.
For Nazir Malik, Dachigam is more than a workplace—it is a lifelong love affair. A seasoned forester with the soul of a poet, Nazir has walked these trails since boyhood. Today, he roams the woods like a guardian spirit, each visit to the park infused with reverence and wonder. His voice rises with pride when he speaks of the hangul, the Kashmir stag—Dachigam’s crown jewel and the only place on earth this rare deer still finds refuge. It softens when he recalls intimate encounters with the Himalayan black bear, his personal favorite, and falls to a hush when he speaks of the mounting threats looming over the forest.
Nazir's knowledge of Dachigam is encyclopedic. He knows its birdsong as intimately as its blooms, and shares his wisdom freely, his childlike awe making every story magnetic. He has turned down promotions—choosing the forest over career ascension—so deep runs his devotion. “To walk with Nazir through Dachigam is to fall under its spell. You don’t just leave inspired—you leave transformed, a disciple of the wild, aching to return,” Aaqib Amin Bhat, an avid trekker and wildlife liver says.
While Nazir embodies the heart of the forest, forest officers like Tahir Shawl, Irfan Rasool, Intesar Suhail, Rashid Naqash have been his strategic mind. As field officer, Tahir was the sentinel standing between Dachigam’s delicate ecosystem and the encroachments of a changing world. His conservation résumé reads like a Himalayan epic—snow leopard rescues in Ladakh, black-necked cranes on Tibetan plateaus, and now, spearheading efforts to protect the hangul from habitat loss and human conflict. Tahir’s commitment has often taken him beyond the call of duty. In one unforgettable incident, he personally rescued an injured snow leopard from a frenzied crowd, sheltering it in his home until it recovered. Under his watch, conservation is not just policy—it’s personal. “We’re not just protecting animals,” he says. “We’re preserving the soul of Kashmir.”
Tahir’s courage is as storied as his résumé. Once, when a critically injured snow leopard was mobbed by a crowd, he rescued the terrified animal himself, sheltering it in his home until it was fit to return to the wild. That same determination now fuels his fight to preserve Dachigam’s fragile ecosystem. Under his watch, the park is not merely surviving—it’s being defended, passionately and persistently.
Breaking stereotypes and rewriting rulebooks is Aaliya Mir, a woman whose name now rings across the Himalayan foothills as the Snake Whisperer of Kashmir. As the first woman from Jammu & Kashmir to win a wildlife conservation award, and the driving force behind Wildlife SOS in the region, Aaliya has rescued leopards from rooftops, bears from villages, and countless snakes from certain death.
Her journey was ignited by tragedy—witnessing a black bear bludgeoned by a fearful mob. “That bear changed my life,” she says. Today, she leads daring rescues, often mid-celebration or in the dead of night, while also teaching children that even the most feared creatures deserve respect. Her fight isn’t just for animals—it’s for empathy, for education, and for every girl who dares to dream differently in a patriarchal society.
Aaliya’s journey started with a tragedy — a black bear fatally attacked by a frightened mob. That moment sparked a fire within her that still fuels her mission. From a science graduate and teacher to Wildlife SOS’s formidable Program Head and Education Officer, Aaliya has become the region’s go-to expert in resolving human-animal conflicts — particularly those involving reptiles. And yes, she loves snakes.
“Rescues are my favorite part of the job,” Aaliya admits, eyes lit with a kind of reverence. “To save a life — there’s nothing more fulfilling.” “For this position I would give credit to my father, my mother and especially my husband, a vet himself, who have supposed me on every front to deal with any exigency and take my dream of conservation ahead,” she said.
Since her first snake rescue in 2014 — a dramatic operation involving an Eastern Cliff Racer — Aaliya has led hundreds of missions, often rushing to calls in the middle of weddings or festivals. But her work isn’t just about saving animals — it’s about changing mindsets. Through tireless awareness campaigns across schools and communities, she challenges deep-rooted myths about snakes, encourages empathy for bears and leopards, and emphasizes that education is the first step to conservation. Yet, it hasn’t been easy.
A woman working in a traditionally male-dominated space, Aaliya faced skepticism at every turn. “People would look at me and think, ‘She’s just a woman, what can she do?’” she recalls. But she let her work speak louder than any prejudice. Today, enforcement agencies trust her, villagers call her before panicking, and children remember her stories long after she leaves their classrooms.
In a world grappling with climate change and biodiversity loss, Aaliya’s message is simple yet urgent: “Be kind. Respect every living being. Even a microbe has a purpose.”
Through her unflinching commitment and deep empathy, Aaliya Mir is not just rescuing animals — she’s rescuing the very idea of coexistence. And in the wild, that’s the kind of hero we need.
These frontliners are joined by passionate peers like Nazir Benazir, Qasim Wani, Abdul Rehman Mir, among other conservation stalwarts. Together, they form an invisible battalion—working under the canopy of anonymity, often with minimal resources, yet with boundless resolve.
In the mist-laden foothills of the Zabarwan range, nestled in the Theed, Harwan area of Srinagar, lives a man whose soul is deeply intertwined with the forest. Muhammad Yaqoob Baba, 47, remembers his earliest days not in a classroom or city street, but behind the lens of his father’s vintage Rolleiflex camera—standing just outside the famed Nishat Garden, where his family once ran a bustling photo studio.
But for Baba, the meticulously laid Mughal gardens were never the real draw. His heart, even then, belonged to the untamed woods just beyond the manicured hedges. "I am born in jungle. I strongly feel I belong there," he tells Outlook Traveller, his voice carrying the conviction of a life deeply rooted in nature.
Baba's journey from a curious boy with a camera to a respected wildlife photographer and conservationist has been anything but conventional. What started as innocent pursuits—chasing blue magpies in his garden—evolved into a full-fledged calling. Today, he runs Ranger Productions, a dedicated wildlife documentation and conservation studio. His days are spent not just capturing the majestic creatures of Kashmir’s forests, but also rescuing them, rehabilitating them, and advocating fiercely for their protection.
“Books never fascinated me,” he says. “But going into the woods always gave me a feeling of freedom, of belonging.” He credits much of this passion to his late mother, who instilled in him a reverence for nature. “She introduced us to the wilderness, and even now, I feel her presence most strongly when I am out there. The forest smells like her, comforts like her—it never lets me feel alone.”
Baba's work has crossed borders. He served as an additional cinematographer and line producer for the BBC’s acclaimed wildlife series On the Brink, and collaborated with Cosmic Global Media on India’s Wandering Lions. These prestigious projects brought global recognition to his craft, but Baba remains firmly grounded in his mission back home.
“There’s very little awareness about wildlife rights in Kashmir,” he explains. “And that makes conservation difficult.” Still, he’s undeterred. Often, his Instagram page turns into a hotline for local rescue operations. Recently, he saved a wounded Himalayan Monal from Uri—a majestic, colorful bird native to the region. Instead of pressing charges against the man who had kept the injured bird, Baba saw the human tragedy behind the act. “He was in a terrible condition, having met with an accident. So, I paid him Rs 13,000 out of my own pocket and rescued the bird,” he recounts. After a short rehabilitation period, the Monal was released back into the wild, in the protected expanse of Dachigam National Park.
Such stories are not rare in Baba's life. His conservation journey has seen him not only behind the lens but often in the trenches—volunteering with the Forest Department, spreading awareness in remote villages, and using film as a bridge between people and nature.
For Baba, the forest isn’t just a workplace—it’s family. “If I don’t go into the woods regularly, I begin to feel sad. That’s where I find healing. That’s where I start my conversations—with nature, with my mother, with myself.”
Dachigam’s story is one of transformation—from royal hunting preserve of Maharaja Hari Singh to a protected national park in 1981, spanning 141 square kilometers of alpine grandeur and temperate woodland. Its inhabitants are as diverse as they are iconic: the elusive leopard, yellow-throated marten, Himalayan weasel, and mouse hare all call it home. But none are as celebrated as the hangul and the Himalayan black bear.
In fact, Dachigam boasts one of the densest populations of black bears in the country. A 2015 study estimated over 100 bears in the park and surrounding fields. Come autumn, these shaggy behemoths descend to Lower Dachigam, gorging on acorns, walnuts, hazelnuts, and chestnuts, preparing for a long winter’s slumber from December to March.
But this idyll is not without its scars. Shrinking habitats have pushed bears into agricultural lands, sparking human-wildlife conflict. Yet, thanks to the unyielding efforts of the forest department, encroachment is being challenged, and awareness is growing.
In Dachigam, even the smallest details astonish—a spider’s web shimmering in the waning light, a deer’s hoofprint on a soft trail, a burst of birdsong in the silence of dawn. These are the moments that Tahir Shawl and Nazir Malik have fought to preserve—not just for themselves, but for generations yet to come. Because in this valley of valleys, there is a forest where time slows, where stories are written in leaf and stone, and where two men have made it their life’s mission to ensure that nature’s voice is never silenced.
On April 30, 2020, the forests of Dachigam fell a little quieter. Nazir Malik—affectionately known as the Jungle Man of Kashmir—retired from the Wildlife Department after a lifetime of unmatched dedication to one of India’s most fragile and beautiful ecosystems. For decades, Nazir walked the trails of Dachigam National Park not as a visitor, but as a vigilant guardian, a storyteller, a friend to the wild. From the whispering pines of Upper Dachigam to the bear-haunted glades of the lower valley, there is no corner of the park untouched by his footsteps or unshaped by his care. Nazir’s bond with Dachigam was profound. He turned down promotions that would have taken him away from the forest, choosing instead to remain in service of the land he loved. His encyclopedic knowledge of flora and fauna, his awe-inspiring encounters with the elusive hangul and the Himalayan black bear, and his willingness to share all he knew with infectious enthusiasm made him not just a forester—but a living embodiment of the forest itself. Through his tireless work, Nazir Malik inspired countless others to cherish and protect the natural world. His legacy is not only written in the trees and trails of Dachigam but lives on in every conservationist, student, and forest lover he touched.
Senior IFS officer and Chief Conservator of Forests, Kashmir, Irfan Rasool, summed it up in his way, saying that “Kashmir’s wilderness endures not because of grand declarations, but because of silent warriors who love too deeply to walk away. Their legacy is not carved in stone, but written in the wind, the trees, and the heartbeat of the wild they’ve sworn to defend. “In the silence of the forest, their love speaks loudest,” he smilingly signs off.
Nazir Ganaie is a Srinagar-based journalist, filmmaker, and Editor of Presspact, covering politics, rural affairs, wildlife, and culture