10 ways to celebrate a green Diwali this year
It's not just about avoiding firecrackers and cutting down on sweets -- here's how you can still have fun and make the most of the festive season!
The festival of lights -- Deepavali, or Diwali -- celebrates the victory of good over evil.
The lighting of diyas on a dark, moonless night signifies the end of all things negative.
This festival, if celebrated in the traditional sense, has little to do with fireworks. So instead of polluting the environment with them, go ahead and celebrate a 'Green Diwali'.
Here are 10 creative ways for you to make it an eco-friendly affair this year.
Do not use electric lights to illuminate your home. Instead, opt for diyas (earthen lamps) and candles.
This will not only reduce the amount of electricity being consumed, the flickering diyas will look prettier too.
If you must use electric illumination, opt for LED lights. They use at least 80 per cent lesser energy than the regular ones and also come in various hues too.
Although there are a number of environment-friendly crackers that have begun to flood the market and are definitely less polluting than others, this Diwali give the fireworks a complete miss.
Instead...
Get all the children of the community to go for a nature walk the evening before and collect dry leaves, grass, twigs etc. Then celebrate this festival of lights by lighting a bonfire on the terrace or in an open space and serve homemade sweets and sherbet.
Fill up balloons with glitter or small pieces of coloured paper and spend the evening bursting them, either with your family at home or with a lot of friends.
You could even have the kids blowing up brown paper bags and bursting them by jumping on them. The cheerful sound will be enough to usher in Diwali.
In earlier times, rangolis were made to feed the birds. This Diwali, go back to doing that.
Instead of using artificial colours, make your rangoli with spices and other food items as follows:
For white, use rice powder
Yellow: Pulses or turmeric
Brown: Cloves or cinnamon
Green: Cardamom (chhoti elaichi) or fennel (saunf)
Red: Dried chilly or even kumkum, if you wish
You can even make a rangoli out of fresh flowers -- their fragrance is sure to create the perfect festive ambience.
You can decorate the doorway with garlands of marigold and jasmine and set up vases of roses and lilies. They will enhance the beauty of your house way better than the paper streamers and artificial lights would have.
If you must paint your home during Diwali, then use eco-friendly paint.
Besides, here are a few ideas to decorate your home without having to paint it at all.
Twist colourful saris and dupattas to create streamers. Or paint old newspapers and hang them up as wall decorations.
Use brocade saris or gold embroidered dupattas as drapes and curtains instead of going on a shopping spree.
Use your child's leftover craft materials like tissues, sandwich or rice paper to make paper lanterns (kandeel). You could use match sticks to form the spokes.
Save on electricity and stop using the doorbell for a few days. Instead, hang a bell at the door entrance and let all visitors ring that instead. It will definitely add to the puja feeling.
Bandanwars or traditional door hangings are the first thing that welcomes every guest. Make these with leftover papers or bright coloured cloth and then add glitter or paper flowers to them.
Don't throw away any fused incandescent bulbs. Instead, turn them into small flower vases by placing an orchid in the centre as a decorative accessory. You can also paint them different colours and hang them from the ceiling.
Use organic incense sticks and fresh flowers to create that heady fragrance that one associates with a puja. Do away with the synthetic room fresheners.
Although innumerable options are available commercially, many of them come with artificial colours and way too much sugar.
So this Diwali make your own sweets instead, using only natural products like milk, chickpea flour (besan), coconut, jaggery, dry fruits, sugar etc and keep them both nutritious and unadulterated.
Some of the choicest Diwali sweets you can try making at home would be:
Laddoos made of besan and rava (semolina)
Barfi made of coconut and milk
Kheer made of milk, rice and jiggery
Shakkarpare made of flour, ghee and sugar
Gajar ka halwa made of carrots and milk
Instead of buying expensive crockery for all your parties this festive season, go traditional and stay eco-friendly. Use banana leaves and small earthen glasses to serve the guests.
Organise community competitions both for adults and for the children. Some options:
Rangoli competition
Flower arrangement competition
Sweet-making competition
Paper lantern competition for kids
Organise music programmes, puppet shows, talent shows and other cultural events
Throw a dance party. All you need is a music player and you will have all the sound you need without crackers. It will also be less expensive.
If you are shopping for gifts, don't buy any wrapping paper; save on it and stop trees from being cut.
Instead, wrap your gifts with painted newspaper / make your own gift bags with newspaper / use pieces of cloth lying about in the house, which you can embroider or handpaint, or even jute.
As for the gifts, instead of buying them, this year make them at home. Some options:
Bake cookies or cakes
Make homemade sweets
Make candles of different shapes and colours
Paint a picture
Create an artwork by using pieces of bright coloured cloth on a canvas
A potted paper plant or a bouquet of paper flowers
Try your hand at pottery and make a small decorative vase
If you do want to go ahead and buy your gifts, then:
Opt for organic cosmetics, plants (or seeds), dry fruit, art work, wind chimes etc.
Gift likenesses of Lord Ganesha and Goddess Lakshmi to your near and dear ones -- the traditional silver coins are in accordance with a green Diwali.
You can even draw pictures of Lord Ganesha and Goddess Lakshmi on wet mud with the help of an old pen, or even a matchstick. Let this dry in the sun and then paint it using natural vegetable and fruit colours. Another option is to take a dry leaf and paint on it, or stick pictures of Lord Ganesha and Goddess Lakshmi underneath. You can also use betel or a square piece of banana leaf and paint the picture of Lord Ganesha and Goddess Lakshmi with kumkum on it.
Make your own Diwali cards this year.
Cut out pictures and stick them on craft paper to make your very own customised rangoli drawing on the card.
Use kumkum and haldi to create Goddess Lakshmi's footprints on your card.
You can even use ribbons, bindis, old clips and pieces of cloth to design your card with bright colours.
If making cards is not your forte, go tech savvy. This year just tweet, Facebook or simply SMS your wishes. Spread the word.