Harun Or Rashid Dudu: A medicinal village has been identified as 24 grams of Garo Hills area of ​​Jhenaigati upazila on the border of Sherpur district. Nearly 5000 Bengali-tribe tribes of the border villages have been nursing nursery and sapling for day and night to change their destiny. Local sources said that on Garo hills there were hundreds of medicinal plants, including Amalaki, Bahira, Hartaki, Sathamula and Nim. Due to climate change, nature and man-made disasters, these medicinal plants were almost extinct from Garo Hills. SBC has been working since the year 2008 to bring back the extinction of the nearly extinct trees and to bring back the traditions of Garo Hills and to improve the lives of the neglected tribal-Bengalis of the hills. They also consolidate the Garo Hills by bringing back the medicinal plants extinct in the Garo Hills along with the development of the poor, landless, marginalized, particularly the tribal population by saving the diversity of the local initiative and making the movement of the local tribal-Bengalis in the locality. According to the SBC sources, since 2008, they have been providing medicinal plantation and seedling technology training through 37 peasant peers in 24 villages of Union Kangsha, Nalkura, Dhanashail and Gauripur, along with pahari villages in Jhenaigati upazila. As a result, these villages have now become known as Phududhi Village. Especially in the hills of Nakshi village, the coaches of the village, Garo Palli, have been nursed with medicinal plants in each house. From these nurseries, tribals of these villages-Bengalis have earned their agricultural and day-laborers as well as additional income. Among these medicinal plants are amlaqi, hartakki, virera, niyam, vedi virgin, churnata, yadmanthu, hundredth, etc. (Most of the trees mentioned in Garo language). Locals of Garo Hills reported that, on one occasion, 90 percent of the people living in the hills were the garo, coaches, hajong and made of tribal tribes. In addition to these tribes, now the existence of numerous Bengalis has been built at the Garo Hills. However, when the people lived only in the tribal areas, they would have avoided any diseases of their disease, with their medicinal plants and herbaceous plants in the Kaviraji Vidyaji. At that time there were many famous Kavirajs among the tribals, but after the extinction of the medicinal plants in the hills, these Kaviyars left their parents' job. Many people have crossed the border again to India to keep their poetry profession right. However, some descendants of some Kaviraj are now starting the Kaviraji again in the hills due to the medicinal plants. Krishnanath Koch, the coach of Rengtia village, said that it is beneficial to plant various medicinal plants at home, especially nursery plants. Now we are selling saplings from nurseries again. After every 2/3 days of every aloe vera tree, 80 to 100 pages are sold at Tk 3 each. This page is sold every summer in the summer. Ram Shing Raxa, the Kaviraj of Garo Para in the same village, said that my father-in-law has become a poet. As a disciple, I am also doing poetry. Now it is my advantage to cultivate a lot of kabiraji trees on the hill. No longer have to go to India or any other hill-forest. Ishak Bangali of the same village said that there are more than 10 medicinal plants and plants in his nurseries and homes. Not only in my home. There are different types of medicinal plants in our village every home. Apart from our own medicinal plants, along with the Kaviraj and various Binati (Monohar) traders from different districts of the country, these trees are taking the trees. Golam Hossain, owner of Rakib Multipurpose Organic Farm Farm of North Rantiaia village, said that on my 4 acre land, there are 2 thousand medicinal plants in 4000 plants established by Organic Fertilizers only. Sbc Executive Director said, "We are working on the project of motivating the project through the peasant Moitri Committee by creating a scheme of medicinal plants to maintain the tradition of Garo Hills and to improve the lives of the poor people, while working with the undeclared tribes of the hills." In the last two years, the linguist Rabi Chandra Hajong of Madhupur of Tangail district has planted medicinal plant saplings widely. Tawakucha Bit Officer of Ranttia Range said that along with social forestry, planting of medicinal plants is being planted.