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Sacred Ecological Revival — Heartfulness Initiative

Reviving the Sacred Glory
of Vraj Kshetra

The divine playground of Lord Krishna — where Chaitanya, Haridas and Mirabai walked in ecstatic love — is in collapse. Its forests stripped, its holy Kunds turned toxic. This is the urgent call to restore Vraj before it is too late.

Live Impact Dashboard — Phase 1
20K
Community Reached
10% of 2 Lakh Target
12.4K
Saplings Pledged
24.8% of 50K goal
472
Volunteers Enrolled
9.4% of 5K goal
3
Kunds in Restoration
Phase 1 of 12 Kunds
12
Sacred Forest (Vans)
ancient forests at risk
80%+
Kunds Polluted
toxic, unfit for puja
5K+
Daily Pilgrims
unable to worship safely
0
Clean Kunds
not one safe for bathing
The Vraj Heritage

Where Krishna Played,
Where Saints Attained
the Divine

Vraj Kshetra — Mathura, Vrindavan, Govardhan, Barsana — is not merely geography. It is the living canvas of Lord Krishna's divine leelas, where centuries of mystics walked these forests in ecstatic love.

  • Chaitanya Mahaprabhu
    The Bengal saint who roamed Vrindavan's forests in divine intoxication, weeping at every grove and kund, experiencing the highest states of Radha-Krishna bhakti.
  • Swami Haridas
    Nidhivan's eternal dweller whose midnight bhajans are said to have drawn Krishna and Radha to dance under the sacred Tamala trees — trees now endangered.
  • Mirabai
    The Rajput princess who renounced royalty to wander these sacred paths, singing immortal bhajans — the very paths now buried under plastic and construction waste.
Sacred Geography
Vraj encompasses 12 Sacred Forest (Vans) and over 150 holy Kunds across the Mathura-Vrindavan-Govardhan-Barsana belt — each a living chapter of the Bhagavata Purana, each in urgent ecological peril.
Radha Krishna — the divine love that defines Vraj
Sacred Art of Vraj
Radha Krishna
The eternal divine love at the heart of Vraj Kshetra
The 12 Sacred Forests

The Twelve Sacred Forests (Vans) of Vraj

Each Van is a chapter of divine history — today, most face critical ecological collapse from deforestation, urban encroachment, and unregulated pollution.

Critical
Mahavan
Critical
Vrindavan
Moderate
Madhavan
Moderate
Kumudvan
Critical
Kamyavan
Moderate
Khadiruvan
Stable
Vrihavan
Critical
Bhadravan
Moderate
Sheshsayi
Stable
Loharvan
Critical
Mahidharpur
Moderate
Belvan
The Current Crisis

A Holy Land in Ecological Collapse

The degradation of Vraj is not gradual — it is catastrophic. Saints arriving today struggle to perform the very rituals that have defined this land for millennia.

Vanishing sacred forests of Vraj
Vanishing Forests

The Sacred Forest (Vans) Are Disappearing

Over 70% of Vraj's indigenous tree cover has been stripped away by illegal logging, construction encroachment, and industrial expansion. The Kadamba, Parijata, and Tamala trees — under whose canopy Krishna danced and Chaitanya meditated — now face local extinction. Sacred groves are unrecognizable garbage heaps.

70%
Tree Cover Lost
8 of 12
Sacred Forest (Vans) Critical
Sacred water turned toxic black
Choked Kunds

Sacred Waters Turned Toxic Black

Hundreds of holy Kunds — where pilgrims have bathed for thousands of years — now carry dangerously high concentrations of heavy metals, industrial effluents, and untreated sewage. Even Radha Kund, the most sacred water body in Vraj, fails basic water-quality safety standards. Foul odors have made parikrama nearly impossible.

80%+
Kunds Polluted
8ft
Avg Silt Depth
Impact on Saints & Pilgrims

When Devotees Cannot Pray in the Land of Krishna

Revered saints who make annual pilgrimages to Vraj now report being unable to complete traditional rituals. The sacred act of bathing in a holy Kund — uninterrupted for 5,000 years — is today medically dangerous. Parikramas of sacred forests pass through garbage heaps and construction sites. The atmosphere of divine silence that drew generations of mystics to meditate here is replaced by noise, stench, and despair. This is why Vraj Vaibhav Abhiyan cannot wait.

The Heartfulness Track Record

We Have Done This Before — At Kanha.

At Kanha Shanti Vanam, Heartfulness transformed completely barren, drought-prone rocky terrain into one of India's most remarkable self-sustaining ecosystems — in under a decade.

Kanha Shanti Vanam — Before: 2015 Kanha Shanti Vanam — Before: 2015

Rocky, parched, drought-prone land at Kanha Shanti Vanam, Hyderabad. Zero canopy. Temperatures 5°C above average. No wildlife. No water retention. Written off as non-arable.

Kanha Shanti Vanam lush rainforest after Kanha Shanti Vanam — After: 2024

The same land today: a thriving 5-acre mini-rainforest with 1,500+ plant species, 200+ bird species, self-sustaining water bodies and rare, threatened flora — all restored in under a decade.

1,500+
Plant Species Cultivated at Kanha Shanti Vanam
5 Acres
Mini-Rainforest from Completely Barren Rock
9 Years
Desert to Self-Sustaining Ecosystem
200+
Bird Species Now Call Kanha Home

We used Miyawaki dense reforestation, traditional seed-ball techniques, natural water harvesting, and scientific soil bioremediation. We will bring every method to Vraj — adapted to its sacred indigenous flora: Kadamba, Parijata, Tamala, Bel, Ashoka.

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Sacred Sites

Restore Site by Site

Each Van and Kund has a unique spiritual history, a specific pollution challenge, and a targeted restoration plan. Find a site that calls to your heart — and act.

Sacred Forests (Vans)

Critical
Vrindavan

The Forest of Krishna's divine play. 60% tree cover lost to urban expansion and heavy tourism plastic waste. Goal: 8,000 Kadamba and Tamala saplings this season with monkey-proof fencing.

Critical
Mahavan

Krishna's birthplace forest. Severe construction encroachment and illegal landfill dumping fragmenting the woodland. Phase 1 goal: 5,000 indigenous saplings and deep-set waste removal.

Critical
Kamyavan

Forest of divine sport. Single-use plastic pollution severe and sacred springs heavily silted with non-biodegradable trash. Requires immediate comprehensive cleanup + 3,000 endemic trees.

Critical
Khadiruvan

The historic forest of Acacia groves. Native tree cover lost to illegal felling and soil damaged by plastic burning. Goal: Complete replanting of Acacia catechu and community-led waste management.

Critical
Bhadravan

Northern frontier forest bordered by industrial zone. Extreme air, soil, and hazardous chemical contamination halting natural plant growth. Bioremediation required to detoxify soil before any planting can begin.

Critical
Belvan

The sacred grove of Bilva trees. Root systems suffocated by agricultural chemicals and unchecked tourist littering. Goal: Deep soil conditioning, organic composting setup, and immediate native Bael tree revival.

Moderate
Kumudvan

The lotus forest, now depleted. Severe groundwater extraction has left sacred lotus ponds completely dry and filled with wind-blown plastic. Target: Full water catchment restoration + 2,000 aquatic species.

Moderate
Madhavan

The forest of Madhura Krishna. Deforestation at 40% with ancient banyan groves endangered by expanding roads and tourist litter. Restoration drive active to wall off vulnerable roots from trash.

Moderate
Vrihavan

The vast historic woodland zone. Fragmented by rural expansion and localized plastic accumulation that harms young flora. Goal: Implementation of protective tree-guards and targeted anti-plastic cleanup drives.

Moderate
Sheshsayi

Sacred grove of Lord Vishnu's rest. Threatened by heavy seasonal tourist garbage and drying natural water catchments. Goal: Installation of waste segregation bins and deep desilting of holy water bodies.

Moderate
Loharvan

The iron-purifying sacred grove. Suffers from topsoil erosion and increasing roadside littering due to proximity to rural transit highways. Goal: Creation of a protective roadside green belt barrier and local cleaning initiatives.

Stable
Mahidharpur

The high-ground protective forest. Well-preserved due to isolated geography, but threatened by creeping plastic waste from adjacent highways. Goal: Maintenance of existing natural tree canopy and regular volunteer-led trash patrols.

Holy Water Bodies (Kunds)

Severely Polluted
Radha Kund

The most sacred kund of Vraj. Kartik bathing brings 50,000 pilgrims. Water now tests positive for heavy metals and coliform bacteria.

Severely Polluted
Shyam Kund

Twin to Radha Kund. Silt depth now 8 feet. Desilting plus bioremediation plan is a Phase 1 priority.

Severely Polluted
Govardhan Kunds

Ring of 9 sacred kunds around Govardhan Hill. Plastic and construction debris throughout. All require immediate desilting.

High Pollution
Mansi Ganga

Govardhan's sacred lake. Untreated sewage inflow. Plan: sewage interception, full desilting, shoreline revegetation.

High Pollution
Pavana Sarovar

The purifying lake of Nanda's village. Encircled by construction waste dumps. Sacred ghats are unrecognizable.

Moderate
Lalita Kund

Lalita Sakhi's sacred pond. Partially shaded. Moderate restoration potential — Phase 2 priority with high spiritual significance.

Seva — Get Involved

Your Hands. Your Heart. Vraj Needs Both.

On-Ground Seva

Come to Vraj. Plant trees. Clean Kunds. Join parikrama drives. No prior experience required — only willingness and devotion.

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IN +91
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Tree Plantation
Kund Clean-up
Event Support
Parikrama Drive
Materials Logistics
Please select at least one seva type.
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Skill-Based Seva

Water treatment engineers, botanists, content creators — your professional expertise can heal Vraj from anywhere in the world.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Your Questions, Answered

Everything you need to know about Vraj Vaibhav Abhiyan and how you can help.

What is Vraj Vaibhav Abhiyan?+
Vraj Vaibhav Abhiyan is a sacred ecological and cultural revival initiative led by Heartfulness. Our mission is to restore the 12 sacred forests (Vans) and the holy water bodies (Kunds) of Vraj Kshetra — the divine playground of Lord Krishna spanning Mathura, Vrindavan, Govardhan and Barsana — through scientific reforestation, water body restoration, and community-led seva drives.
Why is this restoration urgent?+
Over 70% of Vraj's indigenous tree cover has been lost to urbanisation and encroachment. More than 80% of the sacred Kunds — where pilgrims have bathed for thousands of years — are now severely polluted with industrial effluents, plastic, and untreated sewage. Saints and devotees today find themselves unable to perform age-old rituals due to foul odours and toxic conditions. Without urgent intervention, irreplaceable spiritual and ecological heritage will be lost permanently.
What is Heartfulness's track record in ecological restoration?+
Heartfulness has successfully transformed the completely barren, rocky terrain at Kanha Shanti Vanam (Hyderabad) into a thriving 5-acre mini-rainforest hosting 1,500+ plant species and 200+ bird species — in under a decade. We used Miyawaki dense reforestation, traditional seed-ball techniques, and scientific soil bioremediation. We are bringing every one of these proven methods to Vraj, adapted to its sacred indigenous flora including Kadamba, Parijata, Tamala, Bel and Ashoka.
Can I volunteer even if I live outside India?+
Absolutely. We welcome both on-ground and remote volunteers from around the world. If you can travel to Vraj, you can join tree plantation drives, Kund clean-up camps, and parikrama seva drives. If you are based abroad, you can contribute your professional skills — water treatment expertise, botanical knowledge, content creation, IT, fundraising coordination and more — from wherever you are.
What are the 12 Sacred Forest (Vans) and why do they matter?+
The 12 Vans (sacred forests) of Vraj — including Vrindavan, Mahavan, Kamyavan, Madhavan, Kumudvan and others — are the living canvas of Lord Krishna's divine leelas described in the Bhagavata Purana. For centuries, saints like Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Swami Haridas and Mirabai meditated and experienced the highest states of divine love in these forests. Today, most are critically degraded — stripped of their indigenous trees, encroached upon by construction, and choked with waste.
What is a Kund, and which ones are being restored first?+
A Kund is a sacred water body — a tank or lake — considered holy in Vaishnava tradition. Radha Kund and Shyam Kund are the most revered, where millions of pilgrims gather especially during Kartik season. Both now contain dangerously high levels of heavy metals and coliform bacteria. Our Phase 1 restoration targets Radha Kund, Shyam Kund, and the Govardhan Kunds through desilting, sewage interception, and bioremediation.
Is Vraj Vaibhav Abhiyan affiliated with any religious body?+
Vraj Vaibhav Abhiyan is led by Heartfulness, a global non-profit organisation focused on meditation, wellbeing, and ecological consciousness. While the initiative is deeply inspired by the spiritual heritage of Vraj, it is open to volunteers and supporters of all faiths and backgrounds. The restoration work is scientific, community-driven, and guided purely by love for this sacred land and its ecological future.
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