Editor – A couple of  years ago a friend from Delhi sent some beautiful pictures of Jodhpur’s  Mehrangarh Fort for uploading. On seeing the pictures another friend told me  that he was leaving for Jodhpur the next day to give a talk at the Aravali  Institute of Management. He said the Director of the Institute was an old friend;  they had studied together at IIM A. One thing led to another and I met the  Director Varun Arya a few months later. I felt as if had known him for years,  in fact he knew my wife. Small world! Varun kept me abreast of the Institute’s  activities through mail. 
In  2011 Varun and others went on a fast unto death in protest against demand for  money by local authorities for registering land. I admired Varun’s effort.  Fortunately the Government relented and agreed to his request. 
A  couple of months I received a mail from Varun on the amazing transformation of  wasteland in Jodhpur district into an oasis of greenery and water. Water and  soil conservation, effective change in rural India are subjects that are very  close to my heart. I requested Varun to document their work by showing pictures  of land before and after. You can see pictures in PDF file link below. But  first read Varun’s story.
Varun Arya wrote “To build our  campus, six years back we had purchased 236 bighas (around 94.4 acres) of  private extremely high salinity wasteland in Jodhpur District on which nothing  could grow, nothing could be constructed and there was no water in/around the  land. During the last six years, this land has been painstakingly transformed  by us and it now has 3 kms long six feet high boundary wall with barbed wire  fencing, 15 lakes having around 6 crore litres of water with migratory birds  visiting, two bridges, over 6000 trees grown up to 15 feet, 60 solar lights,  three huge lawns of around 2.5 acres each, six smaller lawns, a temple on the  natural mound surrounded by 1500 plants, eight rooms including two guest rooms  with attached bathrooms, five classrooms for a proposed village school and  vegetables grown organically.
Last year we had our 9th Annual Convocation at the above site attended by  around 1000 persons, in which we had erected 70 Swiss tents each with attached  bathroom and cold/hot running water. Over 200 persons who came from outside  Jodhpur and stayed in these tents including CEOs and other distinguished  persons really liked the stay and the environment terming it as truly  exclusive, unique and unforgettable. For details about site (at Aravali Nagar, Village Kaparda, Tehsil Bilara, District Jodhpur)
http://www.1stholistic.com/reading/prose/A2007/power-of-vision-and-might.htm.
You can visit our site http://www.aravali.org
The  author is Director, Aravili Institute of Management, Jodhpur. He is a proud alumnus of  IIT Delhi (1976-81 batch) and IIM Ahmedabad (1981-83 batch) and was the  President of IIT Delhi Alumni Association and Secretary of IIM Ahmedabad Alumni  Association. After 16 years in  senior  positions leading corporates, the last of which with American multinational  DuPont, for the last around 12 years he started work on dream project of  establishing and shaping up a world-class educational complex, envisioned to be  a model of no compromise, in an out of way place like Jodhpur in his home state  of Rajasthan. His id is aryav@sancharnet.in.
To see pictures  in pdf link
Editor – The purpose of  sharing this experience is to show you what good intent and determination can  do in a desert area. Barren land has fifteen lakes today. Think of the impact  on water levels.  
At  a time where land acquisition by corporate and builders has resulted in  protests nationwide I wonder why corporates, power plants do not acquire larger  areas of wasteland instead. Idle land is put to good use and productive land is  saved. The latter shall help increase food production and hopefully reduce  prices. 
It  is not my intent to solicit students for the Institute or professionals for its  management courses. 
Varun’s work is  a great example of the ‘Power of Dreaming’. 
Also read:
Traditional  forms of Water Harvesting