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NEW DELHI: Alongside
life-size posters of Hindu
nationalist leaders, Indian
political activists can now
buy lotions, potions and
pills to cure anything from
cancer to hysteria to piles
– all made from cow urine or
dung.
A new goratna (cow products)
stall at the Bharatiya
Janata Party's (BJP)
souvenir shop is rapidly
outselling dry political
tracts, badges, flags and
saffron-and-green plastic
wall clocks with the face of
former prime minister Atal
Behari Vajpayee.
“You won't believe how
quickly some of the products
sold out,” says Manoj Kumar,
who runs the souvenir shop
along with his brother,
Sanjeev, at the BJP
headquarters in a plush
central New Delhi
neighbourhood. “The
constipation medicine is a
hot seller.”
But the biggest seller is a
“multi-utility pill” that
claims to cure anything from
diabetes to piles to
“ladies' diseases”. A
month's supply costs a
little over US$1 (RM3.80).
Another cure-all is
Sanjivani Ark, a liquid
medicine that battles
cancer, hysteria, and
irregular periods, among
other things.
In addition to medicines,
the goratna products range
from cow dung toothpaste, to
detergents, a skin-whitening
cream, baldness and obesity
cures, soap and a cow urine
“antiseptic aftershave”.
Siddarth Singh, a spokesman
for BJP, which has long
campaigned on the sanctity
of the cow, said the stall
aimed to promote village
industry, one of the biggest
employers in India.
"If you go back in the
history of India, this
belongs to our culture.
There's no commercial value
to us. Village industry in
this country needs to be
promoted".
The use of cow products in
India is centuries old. The
five key products – butter,
milk, curd, urine and dung
–are collectively known as
panchgavya and are an
important part of ayurvedic
medicine.
The cow is worshipped by
Hindus, who make up some 82
per cent of India's over 1
billion people. Cow
slaughter is banned in most
parts of the country.
The goratna products,
made by a cooperative in the
northern 'cow belt' state of
Uttar Pradesh, are rapidly
gaining in popularity.
"Once they use it, they are
coming back and they are
bringing their friends and
their family and their
neighbours back with them",
says Kumar.
Singh already uses the
detergent and is thinking of
experimenting further.
"I'm tempted to try
something for the hair ---
let's hope", he grins,
running his fingers through
his thinning crop. – Reuters |