Montreal Gazette

‘Let’s try out at least one Diwali without firecracke­rs’

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• Imagine Christmas without Christmas trees — that’s how some in India are describing a Supreme Court order banning the sale of fireworks in New Delhi, ahead of Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights.

The ruling is an effort to prevent a repeat of last year’s post-Diwali toxic smog in the Indian capital, which plunged the city into an air pollution emergency, forcing authoritie­s to temporaril­y shut down constructi­on sites, a power plant and close schools for three days.

According to The Hindu, a panel of Supreme Court judges said, “Let’s try out at least one Diwali without firecracke­rs.”

The test-run this year, if successful, could result in restricted Diwali fireworks around the country in the future. To many, that signals a radical change in how Diwali has been celebrated for years and threatens the country’s Hindu traditions.

During Diwali, fireworks light up Indian skies, as families stock up on the latest combustive craze — from fiery spinning wheels to colourful rocket showers. In many parts of India, the festivitie­s celebrate the homecoming of the Hindu god Ram after defeating a ten-headed demon king, symbolic of the triumph of good over evil.

Some said the Supreme Court’s ruling was unfair to India’s Hindu majority and went way too far.

“Banning crackers on Diwali is like banning Christmas trees on Christmas and goats on Bakr-Eid. Regulate. Don’t ban. Respect traditions,” Chetan Bhagat wrote on Twitter.

In 2016, post-Diwali pollution levels were so high that many air quality instrument­s could not even measure them. Air quality declines rapidly around Diwali time partly as well because farmers in surroundin­g regions burn crop stubble illegally.

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