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Ancient practices
1.
2. Reuse Keep your world clean and green.
Save trees,Save the environment!!
Clean city,Green city!!
3.
4. •Contaminated and polluted water
• Excess emission of gases/vapors into atmosphere
•Global warming, acid rain, smog, ozone depletion
5. Pollution causes not only physical disabilities but also
psychological and behavioral disorders in people.
Reduced lung functioning
Irritation of eyes, nose, mouth and throat
Asthma attacks
Respiratory symptoms such as coughing and wheezing
Increased respiratory disease such as bronchitis
Reduced energy levels
Headaches and dizziness
Disruption of endocrine, reproductive and immune systems
Neurobehavioral disorders
14. Zings are water harvesting
structures found in Ladakh. They
are small tanks, in which collects
melted glacier water
Agrasen Ki Baoli was an open tank
where rain water was stored in
earlier.
A kund or kundi looks like an
upturned cup nestling in a
saucer. These structures
harvest rainwater for drinking,
and dot the sandier tracts of
the Thar Desert in western
Rajasthan and some areas
in Gujarat.
15. "It is already becoming clear that a
chapter which had a Western
beginning will have to have an Indian
ending if it is not to end in the self-
destruction of the human race. At this
supremely dangerous moment in
history, the only way of salvation for
mankind is the Indian Way.“
Dr Arnold Toynbee (British Historian, 1889-1975)
16. These ancient practices not
only protect our environment
but also help the human beings
to lead a happy and disease
free life. These type of prctices
we can adopt now anf make our
MOTHER EARTH CLEAN AND
BEAUTIFUL PLACE TO
LIVE…….
Hinweis der Redaktion
Purification of the environment and the inner soul
Tulsi’s extracts are used in ayurvedic remedies for common colds, headaches, stomach disorders, inflammation, heart disease, various forms of poisoning, and malaria. Traditionally, tulsi is taken in many forms: as herbal tea, dried powder, fresh leaf, or mixed with ghee . Ficus religiosa is used in traditional medicine for about 50 types of disorders including asthma, diabetes, diarrhea, epilepsy, gastric problems, inflammatory disorders, infectious and sexual disorders. Help of the religion has been taken to discourage people from cutting them. Many other plants and trees which were advantageous were made auspicious e.g. basil plant, myrobalan tree and neem tree etc. A religious instruction was issued to grow the basil plant in the courtyard of the house. People worship it. This plant purifies the surroundings. Taking the leaves of this plant with milk or tea or chewing them as such is advantageous. Basil leaves’ tea cures bad cold in the children. It has many other wonderful medicinal applications.
Natural or Vegetable organic dyes have been around in India since ancient times. Their use can be seen in palaces murals and on textiles of India. These vegetable dyes are eco friendly and last longer than most chemical dyes. In dehydration plant extracts coloring liquor from plants, flowers and vegetable peels like pomegranate, onion, mango, plum etc. These materials are then concentrated and converted into powder form. There are around 500 different variety of plants available in India which give color dyes.
Indians consume milk on a daily basis, and the cow as a provider of milk, is equated to one's mother (hence the expression Gomäta = mother cow). Traditionally, Indians had cows in every household. They were part of the family, with names and personalities. Just like one would not hurt/eat their pets, the Indians did not hurt the cows and respected them. The cow has a special role in the Hindu mythologies; Kamadhenu is a wish-fulfilling cow. A cow is also depicted as vehicle of several deities The cow was possibly revered because the largely pastoral Vedic people and subsequent generations relied heavily on it for dairy products and for tilling the fields, and on cow dung as a source of fuel, fertilizer , and psilocybin mushrooms which naturally grow out of the animal's own excrement. Universally, Hindus still use cow dung for various purposes; the burning of cow dung creates an insecticide to repel mosquitoes, and ash formed from cow dung is used as a fertilizer. Thus, the cow’s status as a 'caretaker' led to identifying it as an almost maternal figure (hence the term gau mata ).
Unlike their Western counterparts using papyrus scrolls, ancient Indians quoted down their knowledge on palm leaves or ‘ bhoorja-patra ‘ that were available in abundance in their tropical land. Palm leaves are water and moisture resistant, sturdy and once dried, cannot be eaten by bugs for centuries. Moreover, each plant offers thousands of leaves and each leaf can be cut into tens of ‘pages’, depending on size. In most cases, each page was kept rectangular and measured just few inches in length. Being ultimately thin in their cross-section each book stacked hundreds of pages and hence provided the ancient scholars with plenty of one-spot physical material at hand to textualize their thoughts or knowledge, a rare thing in those times otherwise! Most of the South Asian literature, sacred texts and other compositions between 10th and 13th century AD have been recorded in these palm-leaf books. A peacock feather and black soot from lamps were often used as pen and ink, respectively.
It is indeed astonishing to realize that at the dawn of civilisation, the humans understood the significance and importance of water. Johads are small earthen check dams that capture and conserve rainwater, improving percolation and groundwater recharge. Starting 1984, the last sixteen years have seen the revival of some 3000 johads spread across more than 650 villages in Alwar district, Rajasthan. Bhitada village , Jhabua district of Madhya pradesh developed the unique pat system. This system was devised according to the peculiarities of the terrain to divert water from swift-flowing hill streams into irrigation channels called pats. The diversion bunds across the stream are made by piling up stones and then lining them with teak leaves and mud to make them leakproof. The pat channel has to negotiate small nullahs that join the stream off and on, and also sheer cliffs before reaching the fields. These sections invariably get washed away during the monsoons. Stone aqueducts have to be built to span the intervening nullahs. Naada / Bandha Naada/bandha are found in the Mewar region of the Thar desert. It is a stone check dam, constructed across a stream or gully, to capture monsoon runoff on a stretch of land. Submerged in water, the land becomes fertile as silt deposits on it and the soil retains substantial amounts of water.. Kunds / Kundis A kund or kundi looks like an upturned cup nestling in a saucer. These structures harvest rainwater for drinking, and dot the sandier tracts of the Thar Desert in western Rajasthan and some areas in Gujarat.