In a meeting held on December 23rd in Houston, Texas, the FASS Executive committee members have discussed and determined that Jadav Payeng is a prime and deserving candidate to be nominated as a CNN Hero. As such the members have decided to promote Jadav Payeng as a CNN Hero.

One can nominate a person as a CNN Hero by filling in the application form online (per link noted below). FASS also request all in Northeast India to individually nominate Jadav Payeng for this honor.

CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute is an award-winning television special created by CNN to honor individuals who make extraordinary contributions to humanitarian aid and make a difference in their communities. The program was started in 2007.

As of 2015 the program was hosted by Anderson Cooper. Nominees are introduced during the fall of each year and the audience is encouraged to vote online for the CNN Hero of the Year.

Ten recipients are honored and each receive USD$50,000. The top recipient is chosen as the CNN Hero of the Year and receives an additional USD$250,000 to continue their work. During the broadcast celebrating their achievements, the honorees are introduced by celebrities who actively support their charity work.

FASS feels strongly that Jadav Payeng deserves this honor more than anybody else and it is the duty of all North East Indian to try to promote the process, Assam Times reported.

Jadav Payeng (born 1963) is an Assamese environmental activist and forestry worker from Jorhat, Assam.

In 1979, when the whole of Assam was engaged in a political struggle called, ‘Assam Agitation’ to save Assam, the young Jadav Payeng, then a student of class IX, started planting trees in one of the barren sand bars (sapori) on the river Brahmaputra in order to save reptiles and other animals who were dying. And that is what he did for the next 40 years till today.

For many years, his work went unnoticed. Then a local journalist, Jitu Kalita of Jorhat discovered what he was doing and brought his great work to light.

In fact, what Jadav Payeng started 40 years ago, decades later transformed into a lush forest, the biggest man made forest, about 1,360 acres, bigger than the size of the Central Park in New York.

The forest is now known as Molai Forest – named after him. The Molai forest now houses five Royal Bengal tigers, over a hundred deer, wild boar, more than a hundred vultures, several species of birds, including pelicans, three or four greater one-horned rhinoceroses, besides of course, the snakes, who were at the genesis of this extraordinary story.

A herd of 115 elephants visits regularly for 3-4 months. “In 35 years, the Royal Bengal tigers have feasted on 85 of my cows, 95 buffaloes and 10 pigs,” Payeng says matter-of-factly, then adds jokingly, “They (the tigers) do not know farming, you see.”

Today Jadav Payeng is becoming a house hold name in the North East and in India.

In 2015, he was honored with Padma Shri, one of the highest civilian awards in India. The world has noticed and is recognizing his work. For his remarkable solo undertaking, the Jawaharlal Nehru University invited Payeng on Earth Day and honored him with the title of the ‘Forest Man of India’ in 2012. Later that year, the then President APJ Abdul Kalam felicitated him with a cash award in Mumbai. The same year, he was among the 900 experts who gathered at the seventh global conference of the International Forum for Sustainable Development at Evian in France. Sanctuary Asia bestowed on him the Wildlife Service Award.

His work of plantation of trees in the Brahmaputra sand bars has also has contributed to the control of the erosion problem of the river Brahmaputra which has wrought immense flood and devastation problem in the state of Assam. He has been inspiring many people. In 2015, FASS (Friends of Assam and Seven Sisters) an international NGO Headquarted in Houston Texas initiated a project called “Greening of the Brahmaputra Basin’, in collaboration with Jadav Payeng with the goal of planting trees in all the barren sand bars of the river Brahmaputra. It is hoped that besides having a great environmental impact this process will control greatly the flood and erosion problem of the Brahmaputra valley.

In order to nominate Jadav Payeng for the CNN Hero, one may go to the link http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cnn.heroes/2016/nominations/index.html