Business Standard

The Holi state of mind

-

fact that we never agreed on the scope of his duties — he felt that his job was to over-water the lawn after he’d had a good long snooze on it, while I believed otherwise — we got along well. In the run up to Holi, his less-than-stellar work ethic took a sharp nosedive. For instance, he once reported for duty with red alta-painted feet and a suspicious­ly high-pitched giggle. It transpired that he had gone to drop his wife to her parents’ home over the weekend. “In my community,” he said, cackling insanely, “around Holi, sons-inlaw are considered fair game for all sorts of pranks!” So apparently, he’d been given milk laced with bhang, cannabis, and after he was high as a kite, his younger sisters-in-law had painted his feet red like those of a bride. He slept off the effects of cannabis in a nice shady nook in my garden, much to my irritation.

The prevalent local belief about bhang used to be that it was the only intoxicant not proscribed by Hinduism. Locals tended to have, therefore, a rather tolerant view of it. Cannabis shoots spring up everywhere around this time of the year, especially on the banks of the Ganges. Thanks to a loophole in the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotrop­ic Substances Act, 1985, which bans the consumptio­n of cannabis buds and resin ( hashish and hash oil) but not leaves of ‘wild’ cannabis plants, bhang is a legitimate — and legal — part of Holi celebratio­ns in Mirzapur and around.

While I believed people had the right to eat/drink whatever they like, I was loath to let Lalji do it on my dime. When I said as much, Lalji would tell me long, meandering stories about the significan­ce of bhang in Hinduism, like it was his sacred duty or something, to consume it. One morning, he told me that apparently, when the cosmic ocean was churned by the gods and demons to obtain amrit (the elixir of immortalit­y), marijuana plants grew wherever its droplets fell on earth. Another time, he said that when Shiva drank the poison from the churned ocean, his throat turned blue and he was in agony. His consort Parvati quickly rustled up some bhang, mentioned by the Vedas as being a divine panacea, which relieved his pain. But of course, for people like him, bhang consumptio­n was unabashedl­y non-medicinal. “In the month of Phagun, bhangplant­s grow wild on the banks of the holy mother Ganges and the fields are bursting with new growth,” said he. “They remind us to celebrate the month of Holi.”

Those days are long gone, and Holi is just one day in my life today. But it seems like yesterday that the pretty star-like leaves of the bhang plant would brighten Lalji’s day — and make me fume. Funnily enough, I miss them.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India