Forum of Environmental Journalists https://youtu.be/QrCYFuD2oHM?t=402
Gurbir Singh, Secretary Bombay Press Club: https://youtube.com/embed/QrCYFuD2oHM?start=221&end=395
Keya Acharya, FEJI remembers Darryl: https://youtube.com/embed/QrCYFuD2oHM?start=562&end=685
https://youtu.be/QrCYFuD2oHM?t=868
Darryl D'Monte will be remembered for contributions to environmental movement, support to young journalists https://www.firstpost.com/india/darryl-dmonte-will-be-remembered-for-contributions-to-environmental-movement-support-to-young-journalists-6281921.html
Rajni Bakshi March 18, 2019
Soon after leaving The Indian Express, Darryl received the prestigious Homi Bhabha Fellowship, which allowed him to dedicate two years to intense research and the formulation of a critique of the development model that India was following. ‘Temples or Tombs’ went on to inform, inspire and influence a wide range of activist groups. This book nourished the political soil from which rose the slogan "vinash nahin vikas chahiye" (we want development, not destruction) — made famous by the Narmada Bachao Andolan in the late 1980s and mid 1990s...
In times of communal violence, be it in 1984 in Delhi or 1992-93 in Mumbai, Darryl insisted on viewing the violence only through the lens of human rights – never ever did he look through any political lens of making excuses for the violence, or even asking who threw the first stone.
In 1993, in the politically charged atmosphere, when the Indian middle classes first began to be polarised on communal lines, I went to him with a rather demanding proposal. By then, Darryl was resident editor of the Mumbai edition of The Times of India. That year was to mark the centenary of Swami Vivekananda’s famous address at the Congress of World Religions in Chicago....we agreed on a 6-part series which was published in the Sunday section of The Times of India accompanied by beautiful illustrations. Above all, I thank and honour Darryl for supporting and encouraging my curiosity and restless questioning as a fledgling journalist. It was Darryl who, all the way back in 1981, told me about an initiative called Lokayan – dialogue of the people.