The story starts in 1854. Southern America, Louisiana.
Once upon a time, 25,00,000 acres of tall wild grass, wild flowers. Within this expanse, a small plantation town called St. Francisville. In the lap of river Mississippi. Known for its cotton, its sugarcane. And, yes, its cattle ranches.
That morning Richard Barrow received a peculiar shipment. They told him it was from India. He was surprised. And when he saw what he saw, he was delighted. There, before him, stood two massive bulls, like he had never seen in his life. That instant, he had a feeling, this was going to be big. If only, he knew, just how big!
Soon everybody in the town knew. The two Indian Bulls looked, well, different. Nothing like what anyone had ever seen. They had long ears, and a hump on their back no one could miss.
That Louisiana morning '#BosIndicus' had arrived in America.
The Naattu Bulls were a gift from the British Government to Mr. Barrow.
You see, Mr. Barrow had taught the British officials how to farm cotton and sugar the #AmericanWay. It was something they needed to learn.
Those were the days when #Industrialisation was still young. America - with its slave supported plantations - had been supplying the British cotton since many decades now. India was no longer the source of raw cotton.
Result was that the textile machinery had been developed keeping in mind the American long-staple cotton, not the Indian short-staple.
So the skills on farming the new varieties of cotton had to be learnt from the Americans, and then the knowledge transplanted into India.
The Naattu Bulls were a trade-gift from India to America via the British, for this.
North America never had any native cattle. The first cattle came here with the European settlers from Spain and England. These were the Bos Taurus, the European Cattle.
Bos Indicus or Zebu cattle is the cattle found in the Indian subcontinent. Known for its hardiness, its fertility, its temperament, its ability to live in tough conditions, and to brave heat, and its inherent resistance to flies, ticks, mosquitoes.
In the hot humid South, Richard Barrow, got a full display of the genius of the Bos Indicus. He soon had a mighty solid herd. The envy of many southern cowboys.
By the 1860s New Orleans livestock market was listing the Bos Indicus cattle for sale, they were called, "the big eared Louisiana Cattle". (If it were here, we would take pride in using the words "imported", "foreign", "American", "Vellakkaara", etc., 😝)
The American south now started seeking the Bos Indicus. From 1854 and 1926, many breeds were brought into America from India.
And so it happened in the early 1920's. In Houston, Texas, four Naattu breeds of cattle - Gir, Kankrej, Ongole and Krishna Valley - combined to make the very FIRST breed of cattle developed in the United States.
A combination of the genetic strength and resilience the cattle had imbibed in their genes from the Indian soil, the Indian climate, Indian food & Indians' upbringing.
This new breed of cattle revolutionised the beef industry. Not just in America, but world over.
The new Breeder's Association, formed in 1924 in Houston Texas named this beef cattle "The American Brahman"!! (Giving credit to India or Indians in any way is injurious to their -ism 😱 and to Whiteman's long-term agenda of controlling & enslaving Indians mentally. 😠 Hence, American Brahman instead of Indian Brahman or simply Brahman.).
Brahman cattle are unrivaled in their adaptability traits.
Their dark skin, serves as a filter for the sun and a barrier for harmful sunlight. Their hair color can range from light grey to red or black, with most animals in a light to medium grey shades.
The Brahman can boast of having nearly eradicated eye cancer within the breed. Brahmans have very distinctive physical characteristics. They have large, upward curving horns.
They are easily recognized by their large hump over the shoulder and neck, large pendulous ears and excess skin around the throat and underbelly. Brahmans’ loose skin increases surface area available for cooling, making them specifically adapted to heat resistance. Throughout their skin, they have well spread sweat glands. They are able to reproduce, having no harmful effects on their breeding cycle stemming from heat. When the seasons grow colder, the Brahman can grow a thick winter coat protecting them from the extremes in the other range.
Under their loose skin, Brahmans have heavy musculature giving them the ability to shake off insects. In addition to this, Brahman cattle secrete an oily substance thought to serve as an insect deterrent.
Contrast this with how the modern Indian state, headed by Khan-gress influenced by Whitemen, dealt with the Bos Indicus, after Independence. Just a few examples.
‘Antiquated laws made the breeding of many indigenous animals by farmers illegal without a licence from the state's Director of Animal Husbandry. And through some years when livestock inspectors relentlessly castrated the bulls of these “inferior” breeds, boosting the dominance of crossbred cattle.
The Kerala Livestock Improvement Act of 1961 gave “the licensing officer” the “power to order castration of bulls” and farmers ordered to castrate their bulls had 30 days to do so. An amended Act in 1968 also promised fines and imprisonment for those failing to comply.’
In Odisha, Kalahandi is a bull, the best breed of Kalahandi, Khariar. Not so far back in 1980’s a program to enhance the milk production used artificial insemination of ‘exotic’ species - from America or Europe - and castrated the Khariar bulls, all but wiping out the breed. The cross breeds failed. They had no strength to survive the harsh climates. What was then a milk-surplus region transformed into a milk-deficit one.
Its time to wake up and watch.
I say this for India. But I mean it for each and every region, community, nation.
*Guard your resources. Recognise and celebrate your own potential, your own strength. If you don't, they will be taken, used - or abused - by Whitemen 👿, current Saviors of this planet.*
Germ plasms can be owned, copyrighted!! Then we will have to buy them from them. Remember what the Whitemen tried to do with Vembu & Turmeric.
It is in this context of a community perpetuating, selecting and celebrating a breed that we should be seeing, understanding the BosIndicus in #Jallikattu.
(Based on a FB post by Akanksha Damini Joshi, Rare Books Society of India)
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