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You've Got Dung! Amazon Is Delivering Cow Pies In India

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Shahzaz ud din

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You've Got Dung! Amazon Is Delivering Cow Pies In India

January 6, 201612:32 PM ET
DEEPAK SINGH


img_1369-edit_custom-49062773c1d1b13f5041a2c761599fedcf4789a0-s1500-c85.jpg


Dung patties dry on the wall of a coal-fired brick oven. They're rolled into cakes, then stuck on the wall with the smack of a hand, leaving an imprint.
John W. Poole/NPR

When I was a child growing up in India, once every year my father took my two siblings, my mother and me to the village where he grew up. He thought it was important for us kids to see rural living and to learn how basic life could be. He often said, "City folks are lucky to have cooking gas cylinders. You'll see how food is cooked in the village."

His village, Dev Gaon, is about 60 miles from Lucknow — the city where I was born and bred. We usually rode a government-operated bus for about two hours to get there. The last stretch had to be traveled in a cart pulled by two bullocks. The only cushioning was a thin layer of hay. It was very uncomfortable. My mother hated it, but my siblings and I loved it. It was a different kind of experience for us. A lot changed in the last 10 miles. The road was just mud, flanked by sugarcane fields. Brick houses gave way to mud houses.
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When we arrived at my grandmother's mud house, we saw her waiting in the large front yard. She sat us down on her veranda. One half of the veranda was her kitchen. She had a U-shaped stove that was made of mud and nothing else. She grabbed a stack of dried cow dung cakes from a much larger pile sitting in one corner of the courtyard and set them in her kitchen. She threw a few of them, along with chopped wood, into the stove to start the fire. The earthy and pungent aroma of burning cow dung stayed in my nose long after the food was cooked.

Still life with cow dung cakes.
John W. Poole/NPR

The dried cow dung cakes came from the cows she owned. As a kid, I stood and watched how her helpers, other women from the village, collected the dung from the barn, mixed it with hay and rolled it into large balls. They smacked each cake on one of the walls, using their bare hands, which left an imprint. It took about three days for the cow dung to dry. It had to be dry enough to be used as fuel. It felt light, rough to touch and smelled like manure.

This was in my ancestral village, but even in the city of Lucknow, I have seen cow dung drying on walls in some streets and in some areas, I have seen people using it to cook. That's not a good thing. Cow dung cakes can create a lot of smoke and pollution. The World Health Organization issued a report in 2014 saying that indoor air pollution "is the world's largest single environmental risk." In India, a major source is the use of solid fuels like wood, coal and cow dung in clay or brick ovens.

I remember my grandmother getting into a coughing fit while getting the fire ready in her stove. She had a large house and a lot of open space to cook in her village, but people live in small spaces in cities.

In most urban areas in India, cow dung is not the preferred method of cooking, but in the Hindu religion it is used in fires for religious rituals such as the purification of a house or a house-warming ceremony. Since cows are considered to be holy by Hindus, their dung is also sacred.

I learned that cow dung cakes can now be ordered on the Indian Amazon website. Out of curiosity, I ordered 6 pieces. It cost me 236 rupees, about $4. I called the local office of Amazon and spoke to Jaideep, who was very courteous and happy to answer my questions. He said, "Sir, this is a new product that Amazon is selling and they are getting a lot of orders from folks in urban areas where it is not so easy to find cow dung cakes." When I asked him what people wanted it for, he said, "They use it for religious purposes only."

I had never imagined one day I would order cow poop online — poop that I had once seen my grandma collect from her barn and dry on her wall. I am eagerly waiting to receive my six pieces of round-shaped cow dung cakes in the mail. I wonder what would my grandma think of it if she were still alive.

https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsa...t-dung-amazon-is-delivering-cow-pies-in-india

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Gobhar is used in pak also . It is easily stored when dried.usually its bound with hay.
Not just in Asia. It is used in france too along with many countries across africa asia and Europe
some burger babies don't know anything about gober, they just like to cry when there is gas load shedding, Gober is still widely used in rural areas of Pakistan and its way better and easier than chopping down trees.
 
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some burger babies don't know anything about gober, they just like to cry when there is gas load shedding, Gober is still widely used in rural areas of Pakistan and its way better and easier than chopping down trees.
I am 44 abd spent a part of my childhood in rural india. It is a way of life and nothing to be ashamed of. I seriously doubt its that polluting also because its all organic.anyways cest la vie
 
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I am 44 abd spent a part of my childhood in rural india. It is a way of life and nothing to be ashamed of. I seriously doubt its that polluting also because its all organic.anyways cest la vie

well i am 27 and i remember during my childhood everybody in our village used dung patties and i especially remember my grandmother making them, most people these days use gas cylinders but some people still use dung patties...and i agree with you anybody who is ashamed of their own culture have inferiority complex.
 
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How do they store it :lol: and who works in the department :lol:

Making buffalo dung pathhies same as shown in op picture is common practice even in villages all over punjab pakistan, perhaps to some extent in other provinces also. The dried pathhies are then used as fuel for burning. I remember I used to burn the pathhies in my childhood to turn them into burning ash and then fire the Huqqa of my grandfather.

huqqa1.jpg
 
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I am 44 abd spent a part of my childhood in rural india. It is a way of life and nothing to be ashamed of. I seriously doubt its that polluting also because its all organic.anyways cest la vie
and what about cow dung plaster on your floors and in your kitchens and cow piss on you heads and faces.
 
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Food cooked in fire using cow dung is very tasty...we still use it in my area...also washing your face in ko mathas urine before sunrise on every friday and leaving it for one hour without washing gives relief from balck magic...not permanent but you will get small relief... and your face will become bright better than any makeup....sprinkling the urine all over the house also wards off evil spirits...if living in city then replace cow mathas urine with sea water...same effect.
 
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