By: Pragati K.B. - Reporting from Bengaluru and Hulikal, India
Published in: *The New York Times*
Date: February 6, 2026
Believed to be 113, she spent decades building an environmental legacy in
India, inspired by her grief at being unable to conceive children.

Saalumarada Thimmakka, an Indian farm laborer who transformed her grief
over being unable to conceive children into one of her country’s most
enduring environmental legacies, planting and tending thousands of trees,
died on Nov. 14 in Bengaluru, also known as Bangalore, the capital of the
southern Indian state of Karnataka. She was believed to be 113.

Umesh B.N., the son she legally adopted when she was 100 and he was 27,
confirmed her death.

Ms. Thimmakka became known as Saalumarada, meaning “row of trees,” a title
that reflected her seven-decade planting endeavor and the moral authority
she came to hold in a nation grappling with rapid development and
environmental loss. After having spent much of her life in obscurity, she
began receiving a torrent of honors and accolades in her 80s.

She did not transform environmental policy — but, to many, she gave the
environmental movement in India a face that people could trust. In a
country where environmental issues are often seen as the work of
city-dwelling elites, technocrats and nongovernmental organizations, she
was credited with representing a shift in thinking about who could have a
hand in protecting the land and the ways in which caring for nature could
be an everyday act.

“The thousands of trees planted by her stand as living symbols of her
dedication and willingness to think beyond herself,” Prime Minister
Narendra Modi of India wrote in a condolence letter to Mr. Umesh. “These
trees will continue to remind generations to come that real change begins
with simple actions and that impact can be gentle, yet profound.”

Ms. Thimmakka said she began planting trees with her husband in 1948 —
roughly 20 years after their marriage, when she was about 36 — as an act of
solace in the face of extreme sorrow. Her inability to have children was
stigmatized within her community and made her an outcast. Taunting from her
mother-in-law and others, she added, had driven her to attempt suicide.

She and her husband, Bikkalu Chikkaiah, transformed despair into a quiet
act of creation, planting and nurturing banyan trees on both sides of a
2.5-mile stretch of road between Hulikal, her husband’s village, and Kudur,
a village over, in Karnataka.

“It was my fate to not have any children,” Ms. Thimmakka told CNN in 2016.
“Because of that, we planned to plant trees and raise them and get
blessings. We have treated the trees as our children.”

Today, that road — once dusty and filled with parched travelers — is a
green corridor lined with hundreds of towering trees that form a sprawling
canopy.

She planted thousands of other types of trees as well, mostly throughout
Karnataka and at locations like schools, hospitals and residential
complexes.

It all began with 10 saplings and Mr. Chikkaiah, who was variously a cattle
herder, quarry worker and agricultural laborer. He arrived one day with
some banyan tree cuttings loaded on a bullock cart and asked his wife to
follow, carrying water. He chose to plant banyan trees — which soon became
the country’s national tree — because they were abundant in the village.

After planting the trees, he built makeshift fences of thorny branches to
protect the saplings from cattle. The couple spent every morning before
work watering the trees, carrying the water for miles in earthenware pots.

“They were so poor that they could not have bought new pots if those
broke,” Ms. Thimmakka’s biographer, Indiramma Beluru, said.

The couple continued tending their trees for about a decade before a local
politician, driving by in his car, noticed them watering and inquired about
their work. After learning their story, he presented them with a medal at
the village fair — the only recognition the couple received during Mr.
Chikkaiah’s lifetime.

“This was the award she cherished the most,” Mr. Umesh said, “because it
came while her husband was still alive.”

In 1994, three years after her husband’s death, a local Kannada-language
daily newspaper ran an article about Ms. Thimmakka and her trees. A year
later, an English-language national daily published a piece headlined
“Thimmakka and her 284 children.”

The number of trees she was able to plant increased substantially after the
attention. Official recognition and awards soon followed, including the
Padma Shri, one of India’s highest civilian honors, in 2019. She was named
environment ambassador of Karnataka in 2022.

She was invited to public functions and speaking engagements; according to
Mr. Umesh, who accompanied her on trips, she was on the road for at least
200 days a year, even until a few years ago. Her home in Bengaluru, where
she had lived for the last 15 years, was filled with plaques, trophies and
garlands.

Ms. Thimmakka was illiterate and never attended school but enjoyed being
among students at events and said she hoped to inspire each person to
nurture at least 10 plants during his or her lifetime. Her oft-repeated
message: “May there be rain, may there be a good harvest, may you never be
a burden on this land. The country will then thrive. That’s all.”

As was customary at the time, Ms. Thimmakka was born with just the one name
and was the second of six children of Chikkarangaiah and Vijiyamma. She was
born in the Karnataka town of Gubbi in 1912, according to her passport. Her
exact birth date was unknown, so it was recorded as Jan. 1 on government
documents.

The family lived in extreme poverty, surviving on cooked roots dug from the
ground. Her father was a debt-bonded laborer who worked at a landowner’s
household to repay a loan, and the children supplemented the family’s
income by collecting leaves used to make disposable plates and bowls, which
they sold in neighboring villages. Ms. Thimmakka later found work in a
quarry, where an accident left her partially blind in her right eye.

Ms. Thimmakka remained impoverished for most of her life, even after
achieving national recognition. She found a form of consolation in Mr.
Umesh. He had long nurtured a hobby of planting trees around his village
school and other open spaces. In 2003, at 18, he read an article about Ms.
Thimmakka and sought her out. Their meeting marked the beginning of a
lasting bond; he now distributes thousands of saplings annually and
organizes tree-planting drives.

In addition to Mr. Umesh, whom she legally adopted in 2012, she is survived
by a brother and sister as well as Mr. Umesh’s son.

In a 2019 documentary <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLAgUOO9rYw> film
called “Saalumarada Thimmakka: The Green Crusader,” schoolchildren are seen
singing, “Trees find shelter under Saalumarada Thimmakka, the wind catches
its breath under Saalumarada Thimmakka.”

Addressing these children, she says, “Every tree I plant are my children. I
am alive in each of them.”
Pragati K.B. is a reporter for The Times based in New Delhi, covering news
from across India.

Reply via email to