RJS PBH 'S WORLD EARTH DAY. EARTH DAY SUMMIT EXPOSES DEEP DIVIDES OVER MODERN AGRICULTURE AS EXPERTS WARN OF IMMINENT ECOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC COLLAPSE. Program was Co-organised by NextGen Media World,Noida.
RJS PBH 'S WORLD EARTH DAY
EARTH DAY SUMMIT EXPOSES DEEP DIVIDES OVER MODERN AGRICULTURE AS EXPERTS WARN OF IMMINENT ECOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC COLLAPSE.NEW DELHI -- Amidst an unprecedented global energy crisis triggered by geopolitical conflicts in the Middle East and worsening climate anomalies like El Nino, environmentalists and agricultural experts convened to issue a stark warning regarding the planet's future. The national webinar, organized on Earth Day by RJS PBH Ram Janaki Sansthan Positive Broadcasting House, transformed into a fierce critique of modern agricultural practices and unchecked tourism, revealing deep systemic flaws in how humanity manages natural resources. The summit, hosted by Uday Kumar Manna, founder of RJS PBH, wove together tributes to 1857 freedom fighter Veer Kunwar Singh with an urgent call for a new generation of "positive warriors" to defend the environment.
This program was Co-organised by Anil Kumar Maurya, Director -NextGen Media World & Marketing Event Pvt.Ltd.
The most controversial and defining moments of the summit came from Kan Singh Nirwan, an environmentalist running Jor Ki Dhani in Sikar, Rajasthan. Nirwan launched a blistering systemic critique of modern scientific paradigms, declaring that the separation of earth, cows, and nature is a fatal human error. He argued that India's historical economic dominance, which once accounted for forty-two percent of global GDP, was entirely rooted in a cow-based economy. According to Nirwan, the systematic destruction of this economy began during colonial rule and has been accelerated by modern institutions.
In a statement that sparked immediate debate, Nirwan accused modern agricultural scientists of turning fertile lands barren and veterinary scientists of reducing the sacred cow to a stray animal. He argued that farmers, once considered the greatest sages who nurtured biodiversity, have been transformed into purveyors of poison, forced to buy toxic chemicals that destroy millions of micro-organisms per kilogram. He vehemently condemned the commercialization of agriculture, stating that the true food of the earth is not urea or DAP, but the microscopic life sustained by indigenous cow dung.
This controversy peaked during the interactive Q&A session. When participant R.S. Kushwaha shared his efforts in planting fruit trees and producing vermicompost using earthworms in Ghaziabad, Nirwan directly interjected to correct him. Nirwan stated that the commercial "earthworms" sold to farmers for organic farming are a massive scam. He claimed these are foreign pests that do not possess the characteristics of native earthworms, and that true soil rejuvenation only occurs when native earthworms rise from deep within the earth upon sensing the application of liquid indigenous cow dung. Nirwan advised attendees to dissolve two kilograms of fresh cow dung in twelve liters of water to apply to plants, completely dismissing the commercial vermicompost industry.
The social and infrastructural implications of environmental neglect were vividly detailed by Ansuya Prasad Malasi, Editor of Aniket Weekly in Rudraprayag, Uttarakhand. Speaking from the ecologically fragile Himalayan region, Malasi reported alarming climate anomalies, including unprecedented unseasonal snowfall that has devastated local agriculture and health. Furthermore, he exposed the critical collapse of the region's carrying capacity. With over fifty lakh people entering the Char Dham circuit annually, Malasi distinguished between traditional pilgrims and modern tourists driven by social media. This mass influx has necessitated cutting through massive glaciers to build roads, drastically increasing the risk of landslides and disasters reminiscent of the 2013 tragedy. Malasi also raised an urgent alarm regarding the rampant forest fires consuming hundreds of forests daily in Uttarakhand, criticizing the forest department's narrow focus on reserve forests while ignoring fires in community and agricultural areas. He called for a decentralized, community-driven disaster response mechanism.
R.K. Bishnoi, an environmentalist from Delhi, reinforced the need for circular ecology. Drawing inspiration from the Bishnoi community's historic sacrifices for tree protection, he outlined practical social shifts required from urban citizens. Bishnoi emphasized the need to segregate organic and inorganic waste, utilize public transport to reduce carbon footprints, and cease the use of single-use plastics which "suffocate the earth." He warned that the earth is suffocating from excess carbon dioxide and chemical poisons, urging citizens to reconnect with the soil physically and spiritually, recognizing the scent of healthy, living earth.
The geopolitical backdrop set a somber tone for the proceedings. Uday Kumar Manna opened the session by outlining the cascading economic impacts of the Iran-Israel conflict, which has exacerbated Europe's energy crisis and driven a massive surge in Chinese electric vehicle exports. Closer to home, Manna highlighted how changing weather patterns, erratic rainfall, and rising nighttime temperatures are threatening both public health and agricultural stability in India. He emphasized that governments alone cannot solve a crisis affecting eight billion people, prompting RJS PBH Ram Janaki Sansthan Positive Broadcasting House to pledge 2026 as a year of revolutionary positive resolutions
To combat urban heat and pollution, the summit showcased practical micro-interventions. Uday Kumar Manna, alongside participants like Nisha Chaturvedi from Hyderabad, Sweety Paul, and Uday Shankar Singh Kushwaha, demonstrated extensive terrace and balcony gardens. These urban green spaces, featuring medicinal plants like aloe vera, fruit-bearing trees like sapota and lemon, and vegetables, were presented as essential cooling mechanisms for concrete jungles through the process of transpiration.
Amidst the heavy ecological discussions, significant organizational announcements were made. Uday Kumar Manna announced a massive Independence Day function planned for August 2026 by RJS PBH Ram Janaki Sansthan Positive Broadcasting House in New Delhi, which will see participation from the Indian diaspora and feature the launch of the seventh volume of their book series documenting positive warriors. Additionally, Uday Shankar Singh Kushwaha announced a special memorial webinar scheduled for May 20 to honor his late father.
The summit concluded with a poetic tribute by Rati Choubey from Nagpur, whose poem "Maa Hai Dharti" served as a poignant reminder that the earth does not demand rituals or rallies, but simple, sustainable actions. The overarching theme of the report remains clear: the survival of the planet requires moving beyond performative environmentalism. It demands a radical restructuring of agricultural economics, a halt to the unchecked exploitation of fragile ecosystems like the Himalayas, and a return to indigenous, symbiotic practices that view human beings not as masters of the earth, but as its dependent children.
Akanksha Manna
Head Creative Team- RJS PBH -RJS POSITIVE MEDIA
9811705015.
rjspositivemedia@gmail.com
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