The Nilgiris Summer Festival, the most awaited event will begin in another couple of months. I will try to post the schedule of the events in advance in my blog. To give a start to this, the Nilgiri Traditional Food Fair is being held this Saturday, 23rd March at Coonoor.
Article Courtesy: The Hindu dated 22nd March 2013.
Come Saturday, a Nilgiri Traditional Food Fair will be held at Coonoor under the aegis of the Nilgiri Natural History Society.
While
generating interest among food lovers, it has triggered nostalgia among
many others who have over the years witnessed the gradual decline in
the consumption of such items and their consequent disappearance from
the markets and houses particularly those of the Badagas – the largest
indigenous social group in the Nilgiris.
Studies and
interactions with long time residents of the Nilgiris have revealed that
the Nilgiris was a place of high agriculture diversity prior to the
Green Revolution in the 1960s.
The indigenous
communities cultivated a variety of crops like Korali, Samai, Ragi, and
Amaranthus but technologies and the miracle seeds of the green
revolution have done what they were expected to do. Even the traditional
containers are now hard to come by.
The introduction
of commercial crops by the British has changed the cropping pattern on
the Blue Mountains from a diverse food crop system to a mono culture
cash crops scenario. In its wake, dependence on chemical fertilizers and
pesticides has increased.
The cascading effect is
the lack of food security and nutrition, especially among the small and
marginal communities, and reduced the water retention capacity of the
soil among other things. Expressing the opinion that the conservation of
agriculture biodiversity is impossible without the participation of the
indigenous communities, whose knowledge of native seeds surpasses all
the emerging expertise on the subject, Pratim Roy, the Director of the
Kotagiri-based Key Stone Foundation which has promoted the history
society, told The Hindu here on Thursday that between 1966 and 2006, 44 per cent of the millet-cultivated areas were brought under other crops.
The
changes in the agriculture practices in the Nilgiris have led to the
near extinction of several native varieties of crops. Stating that these
crops are of great significance, he said.
According
to Paul Hockings, noted scholar and an authority on the Nilgiris,
Badagas made use of close to 400 species of plants for food, for
traditional rituals and medicines.
It is time to
reflect over the neglect and subsequent disappearance of the vast base
of ethno-botanical knowledge of the traditional Nilgiri Society, Mr. Roy
said that it will not be an exaggeration to say that the role of the
British colonial enterprises in the introducing and commercialising
their vegetables and farming practices historically altered the ‘cuisine
scape’ of the Nilgiri hills.
More than half a dozen
varieties of soup quality mushrooms are not known anymore. Only about
ten varieties of beans can now be identified with great difficulty
whereas there were three times that number during the days of yore. A
hoary blend of instant delicacy like wild berries, roasted amaranthus,
grains, and curd cannot be concocted anymore. The objective of the
proposed festival is to recreate the hospitality and revive millet
farming.
Cheers!
No comments:
Post a Comment
I would love to hear from you! I read each and every comment, and will get back ASAP.