Nurungukal……
The
tractor carrying two large tanks of water, collected from a nearby river was
shuttling from morning till late evening. I have been noticing this since last
summer. It is very clear that many wells in the area have gone dry and locals
are forced to depend on this source. One can very well imagine the intensity of
an impending disastrous draught. This apprehension has induced me to offer my
land to dig a pond sponsored by the Block Panchayat. Now the work is
progressing in top gear as they have to finish it before the end of the
financial year. When I heard about the cost, running into a few lakh rupees, I
wondered how much would have been spent to dig a temple pond a few thousand
years ago, considering their size, which in some case extend up to more than an
acre. Such huge infrastructures would have been designed with the sole
intention of harvesting rain water, because a small pond would have met the
demand, considering the population of those days. What a foresight our fathers
had, which the present rulers lack. There are plenty of such man made eco
systems, scattered though out the length and breadth of Kerala. Many sacred
groves and nearby ponds are even today maintained on certain believes and
rituals which help conservation of water and biodiversity. Where as many laws
of recent times lay dormant with out efficacy.
Last year I
had an occasion to visit the well known Sree Rama temple at Thiruvangad. Apart
from the majesty of the temple complex, what attracted me most was the enormity
and perfection of the adjacent pond. It
is a fabulous piece of engineering and human effort. Another piece of
architecture is the pond of Peralassery. The vastness of Panniyur Varahamurthy Temple pond near to Anakkara
fills your mind with divinity and peace. As I was enjoying the serenity of the
crystal clear water column of Thiruvangad pond, my thoughts for a while
wandered into a distant past. Splashing of children, gasping to reach the
shore, in a similar pond [chira ] in my native place Ponnani. And about the fun we used to enjoy in a pond
attached to our ancestral home in the company of a gang of boys and girls,
often competing to touch the other bank first or embark on an errand to fetch a
blossomed water lilly like the legendary Bheema. I seldom witness such frolics
in our social life now, instead encounter lonely souls immersed in meddling
with a gadget incessantly for hours.
It is a sure sign that we are
wandering into an alien culture abandoning one which had values attune with
nature and sustainable living. The so called developments have made much in
roads into our modest and time tested standard of living. Unaware of the
dangers we have lost the way. Let us jointly under stand the mistakes and thrive
to come out for the sake of the survival of our future generations.
Nurungukal……
The
tractor carrying two large tanks of water, collected from a nearby river was
shuttling from morning till late evening. I have been noticing this since last
summer. It is very clear that many wells in the area have gone dry and locals
are forced to depend on this source. One can very well imagine the intensity of
an impending disasterous draught. This apprehension has induced me to offer my
land to dig a pond sponsored by the Block Panchayat. Now the work is
progressing in top gear as they have to finish it before the end of the
financial year. When I heard about the cost, running into a few lakh rupees, I
wondered how much would have been spent to dig a temple pond a few thousand
years ago, considering their size, which in some case extend upto more than an
acre. Such huge infrastructures would have been designed with the sole
intention of harvesting rain water, because a small pond would have met the
demand, considering the population of those days. What a foresight our fathers
had, which the present rulers lack. There are plenty of such man made eco
systems, scatered though out the length and breadth of Kerala. Many sacred
groves and nearby ponds are even today maintained on certain believes and
rituals which help conservation of water and biodiversity. Where as many laws
of recent times lay dormant with out efficacy.
Last year I
had an occasion to visit the well known Sree Rama temple at Thiruvangad. Apart
from the majesty of the temple complex, what attracted me most was the enormity
and perfection of the adjascent pond. It
is a fabulous piece of engeneering and human effort. Another piece of
architechure is the pond of Peralassery. The vastness of Panniyur Varahamurthy Temple pond near to Anakkara
fills your mind with divinity and peace. As I was enjoying the serenity of the
crystal clear water column of Thiruvangad pond, my thoughts for a while
wandered into a distant past. Splashing of children, gasping to reach the
shore, in a similar pond [chira ] in my native place Ponnani. And about the fun we used to enjoy in a pond
atatched to our ancestral home in the company of a gang of boys and girls,
often competing to touch the other bank first or embark on an errand to fetch a
blossomed water lilly like the legendary Bheema. I seldom witness such frolicks
in our social life now, instead encounter lonely souls immersed in medeling
with a gadget incessantly for hours.
It is a sure sign that we are
wandering into an alien culture abandoning one which had values attune with
nature and sustainable living. The so called developments have made much in
roads into our modest and time tested standard of living. Unaware of the
dangers we have lost the way. Let us jointly under stand the mistakes and thrive
to come out for the sake of the survival of our future generations.
Nurungukal……
The
tractor carrying two large tanks of water, collected from a nearby river was
shuttling from morning till late evening. I have been noticing this since last
summer. It is very clear that many wells in the area have gone dry and locals
are forced to depend on this source. One can very well imagine the intensity of
an impending disasterous draught. This apprehension has induced me to offer my
land to dig a pond sponsored by the Block Panchayat. Now the work is
progressing in top gear as they have to finish it before the end of the
financial year. When I heard about the cost, running into a few lakh rupees, I
wondered how much would have been spent to dig a temple pond a few thousand
years ago, considering their size, which in some case extend upto more than an
acre. Such huge infrastructures would have been designed with the sole
intention of harvesting rain water, because a small pond would have met the
demand, considering the population of those days. What a foresight our fathers
had, which the present rulers lack. There are plenty of such man made eco
systems, scatered though out the length and breadth of Kerala. Many sacred
groves and nearby ponds are even today maintained on certain believes and
rituals which help conservation of water and biodiversity. Where as many laws
of recent times lay dormant with out efficacy.
Last year I
had an occasion to visit the well known Sree Rama temple at Thiruvangad. Apart
from the majesty of the temple complex, what attracted me most was the enormity
and perfection of the adjascent pond. It
is a fabulous piece of engeneering and human effort. Another piece of
architechure is the pond of Peralassery. The vastness of Panniyur Varahamurthy Temple pond near to Anakkara
fills your mind with divinity and peace. As I was enjoying the serenity of the
crystal clear water column of Thiruvangad pond, my thoughts for a while
wandered into a distant past. Splashing of children, gasping to reach the
shore, in a similar pond [chira ] in my native place Ponnani. And about the fun we used to enjoy in a pond
atatched to our ancestral home in the company of a gang of boys and girls,
often competing to touch the other bank first or embark on an errand to fetch a
blossomed water lilly like the legendary Bheema. I seldom witness such frolicks
in our social life now, instead encounter lonely souls immersed in medeling
with a gadget incessantly for hours.
It is a sure sign that we are
wandering into an alien culture abandoning one which had values attune with
nature and sustainable living. The so called developments have made much in
roads into our modest and time tested standard of living. Unaware of the
dangers we have lost the way. Let us jointly under stand the mistakes and thrive
to come out for the sake of the survival of our future generations.