With a loaded quiver slung across his shoulders, bow-string taut with tension, and an arrow primed for release, a young Ram’s maiden assault on a member of the rakshasa (demon) clan, a rakshasi in this case, Thataka, is one of the many moments of ecological glory coded into India’s most revered mythological texts, the Ramayan, claim experts. The epic, whose multiple renditions are known for the proverbial and more obvious battle of good versus evil, according to scholars, also contains embedded narratives about the importance of ecology, nearly two millennia before environmental degradation became a global scourge.