Thursday, March 30, 2006

On saffron

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Today's feature article in Wikipedia is on Saffron, or kesavaram केसवरम. Saffron is derived from the stigma of the saffron crocus. It's fitting that today's article is on Saffron, as the crocus is a harbinger of spring.

In India, saffron is a specialty of Kashmir:
Theories explaining saffron's arrival in South Asia conflict. Traditional Kashmiri and Chinese accounts date its arrival anywhere between 900–2500 years ago. Meanwhile, historians studying ancient Persian records date the arrival to sometime prior to 500 BC, attributing it to either Persian transplantation of saffron corms to stock new gardens and parks or to a Persian invasion and colonization of Kashmir. Phoenicians then marketed Kashmiri saffron as a dye and a treatment for melancholy.[26] From there, saffron use in foods and dyes spread throughout South Asia. For example, Buddhist monks in India adopted saffron-coloured robes after the Buddha Siddhartha Gautama's death.

and
... Another premium saffron is the Kashmiri "Mongra" or "Lacha" saffron (Crocus sativus 'Cashmirianus'), which is among the most difficult and expensive for non-Indian consumers to obtain. It is even hard for Indian consumers to obtain, as most stores in India sell the cheaper Spanish saffron. This is due to repeated droughts, blights, and crop failures in Kashmir, combined with an Indian export ban. Kashmiri saffron is recognisable by its extremely dark maroon-purple hue, among the world's darkest, which suggests the saffron's strong flavour, aroma, and colourative effect.


The saffron crocus

Muslim cleric held over Varanasi blasts

From the Press Trust of India (PTI) via expressindia:
Muslim cleric held over Varanasi blasts

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Varanasi bomb blast victim leaves behind his eyes for others

From NewKarala.com, Varanasi bomb blast victim leaves behind his eyes for others. Ritesh succumbed to the injuries that he suffered in the Varanasi bomb blasts. Before dying, he pledged to donate his eyes. On March 28, doctors at Benares Hindu University transplanted his eyes to a girl, Nandini, and Devraji, an old woman.

Too often, the stories we get about India are about the cruelties and indifference in Indian society. That's why I post articles like this and the work of the bomb squad to defuse other bombs laid in Varanasi that show heroism.

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Deepa Mehta ... again

From The Australian, March 29, 2006, the article Plight of widows causes shock waves focuses on filmmaker Deepa Mehta, who resumed the shoot for Water 4 years after Hindu protesters destroyed the film set in Varanasi.

Deepa Mehta is yet another of those celebrities who trash India and are lionized as taboo breakers in western media. Others of her ilk include Arundhati Roy and Mira Nair (OK, I liked Mississippi Masala, but Kama Sutra was frankly pornography, despite good production values).

Friday, March 24, 2006

On ahimsa

Hinduism is often believed to be synonymous with ahimsa (अहिंसा); in fact, this article on Ahimsa from Wikipedia says it's at the core of Hinduism and cites the influence of the Bhagavad-Gita (भागवद् गीता) on Gandhi.

Michael Danino notes in his article The Gita in Today's World that:
To the West, there is either brute force or pacifism, either violence or non-violence ; to the Gita the truth is neither one nor the other, but the conscious use of force to protect dharma.
I would argue, however, that this duality is not (or perhaps no longer) exclusive to the West.

Danino concludes with this statement from Sri Aurobindo:
We will use only soul-force and never destroy by war or any even defensive employment of physical violence? Good, though until soul-force is effective, the Asuric force [from Asura असुर, or power-hungry being] in men and nations tramples down, breaks, slaughters, burns, pollutes, as we see it doing today, but then at its ease and unhindered, and you have perhaps caused as much destruction of life by your abstinence as others by resort to violence.