The next story took me back in time to when I worked with my friend, the talented photographer and film director, Ashima Narain, on a documentary, The Last Dance, about the sloth bear and Wildlife SOS’s pioneering work in creating a sanctuary for bears liberated from a lifetime of ‘dancing’ to the tune of a damru played by a Qalandar. A bear isn’t ‘dancing’; it is raising its body to avoid the brutal pain of the rope that runs through its nose. Each yank of the rope forces it to move to ease the pain. That’s not all that has happened to these bears; they have had their canines extracted and they have been declawed, all without anaesthesia. Their noses have been drilled through for the rope, all this when they are quite young, stolen from their mothers, homesick and forlorn at the loss.