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One early winter morning in 1947,siblings Jim and Maggie Corbett left their beloved home in Nainital. Jim kept their departure quiet because he did not want to upset the locals. He was someone they held in high regard,owed their lives to. A man who had braved the wild jungles of Kumaon and hunted down 33 man-eating tigers,risking his own life to save theirs.
Sixty five years after the Corbetts bid adieu,Jims 137th birth anniversary on July 25 will be celebrated with the release of a 48-page graphic novel based on his life. Titled Jim Corbett- Friend of the Wild (Amar Chitra Katha,Rs 50),the book was launched on Saturday at Gurney House in Nainital Jim and Maggies residence for many years. Gurney House is now a private house owned by Nilanjana Dalmia,who belongs to a well- known business family in Delhi and runs a school in Gurgaon.
Jims graphic biography traces his life during his hunting years from the time he held his first gun at six to his demise in Kenya in 1955. It brings out the dichotomies in Corbetts personality he was a hunter who loved animals, said script writer Tripti Nainwal,who researched him intensively for a year. The book brings out some unheard aspects of Corbetts life how he started going into the jungles with a cushion instead of a gun in his later years when he realised that it was wrong to kill animals. A forgotten aspect of Jims personality is that he was a celebrated writer whose works our children must read, said Reena Puri,editor of Amar Chitra Katha,at the launch event where renowned author and journalist Mrinal Pande was the guest of honour. A number of school children from Nainital thronged the event.
Gurney House is indeed full of memories. For instance,the moment you cross over the threshold,you walk across the skin of a leopard shot by Jim many years ago. Numerous reminders of Jim and Maggie linger in every nook and cranny of this English cottage in the deer antlers adorning the drawing room walls or the crockery lining the shelves,even in Maggies hand embroidered upholstery on chairs. I have tried to restore this home of a legend but without spoiling its charm, says Dalmia.
It is an amar katha alright,with many pictorial memories.
(The reporter was a guest of the Gurney House)
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