English, asked by snehanarayan713, 5 months ago

write a summary of these passsage
On the left bank of the Ganga, where it emerges from the Himalayan the foothills,
there is a long stretch of heavy forest. There are villages on the fringe of the forest,
inhabited by bamboo cutters and farmers, but there are a few signs of commerce and
pilgrimage. Hunters however, have found the area an ideal hunting ground during the last
seventy years, and as a result the animals are not as numerous as they used to be. The
trees too have been disappearing slowly and as the forest recedes, the animals lose their
food and shelter and move further on into the foothills. Slowly they are being denied the
right to live.
Only the elephants can cross the river. And two years ago when a large area of the
forest was cleared to make a way for a refugee resettlements camp a herd of elephants
finding their favourite food, the green shoots of the bamboo, in short supply - waded
across the rivers. They crashed through the suburbs of Haridwar, knocked down a factory
wall pulled down several tin roofs, held up a train and left a trail of devastation in their
wake until they found a new home in a new forest which was still untouched. Here, they
settled down a new life - but an unsettled, wary life. They did not know when man would
appear again, with tractors, bulldozers and dynamite.​

Answers

Answered by ayushkg998
0

Answer:

write a summary of these passsage

On the left bank of the Ganga, where it emerges from the Himalayan the foothills,

there is a long stretch of heavy forest. There are villages on the fringe of the forest,

inhabited by bamboo cutters and farmers, but there are a few signs of commerce and

pilgrimage. Hunters however, have found the area an ideal hunting ground during the last

seventy years, and as a result the animals are not as numerous as they used to be. The

trees too have been disappearing slowly and as the forest recedes, the animals lose their

food and shelter and move further on into the foothills. Slowly they are being denied the

right to live.

Only the elephants can cross the river. And two years ago when a large area of the

forest was cleared to make a way for a refugee resettlements camp a herd of elephants

finding their favourite food, the green shoots of the bamboo, in short supply - waded

across the rivers. They crashed through the suburbs of Haridwar, knocked down a factory

wall pulled down several tin roofs, held up a train and left a trail of devastation in their

wake until they found a new home in a new forest which was still untouched. Here, they

settled down a new life - but an unsettled, wary life. They did not know when man would

appear again, with tractors, bulldozers and dynamite.

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