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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, March 10, 2001 |
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'Natural' Holi flops
By Lakshmi Balakrishnan
NEW DELHI, MARCH 9.
Would you rather have red sandalwood or dry red hibiscus smeared
on your face or go for the customary carcinogenic mercury
sulphite this Holi? The Delhi Ministry of Environment had left
the choice to Delhiites. And strangely enough, most of those who
opted for the first will spend the festival ``naturally'', but
without colour.
The Delhi Government's ``Khelo Holi Naturally'' campaign had a
lot of parents seeing red in the Capital today. Finding the
``resplendent reds'' , ``sunny yellows'' and ``magnificent
magentas'' was not an easy task for most. Simply put, the
campaign seemed to be more on paper than in practice.
And those who took the Environment Ministry's ads that directed
them towards Dilli Haat seriously returned disappointed. The
``out of stock'' board was what greeted most at Dilli Haat and
booklets on preparing herbal colours at home was all that was
available.
``My daughter dragged me all the way from my office to this place
as she wanted to play only with natural colours. The Government
should not have publicised so much if they did not have the
necessary stocks,'' rued Ms Singh, a bank official.
Being manufactured and sold by Navdanya, a Delhi-based NGO, the
day saw families coming from as far as Meerut to buy the colours,
but returning empty-handed. Many of the organisation's members
were of the view that the Delhi Government had gone overboard
with its campaign.
``The Environment Ministry had told us about the pamphlets that
it was bringing out. We were not even aware of the newspaper ads
till some customers told us. We were obviously not prepared for
such a heavy demand,'' a Navdanya member said.
Being sold since March 3, Navdanya officials say the colours
have been selling like hot cakes despite their high price. But
despite Navdanya working overtime to produce extra packets, lack
of planning has resulted in the supply being well short of
demand.
Although natural colours are available in some upmarket areas
like Khan Market, not many seemed to be aware. And even those who
were, did not seem sure about the authenticity of these colours,
and not without reason.
`` Most natural colours are a shade lighter than the synthetic
ones. And to give them a touch of that popular shade, a little
chemical is added at times. Very few colours are cent per cent
natural,'' said Mukesh Goel, the owner of Kirti Creations, a Khan
Market shop that has been selling vegetable and organic colours.
The absence of an authorised laboratory that can certify these
products only adds to the problem. ``I had tried to approach a
dermatologist to certify my product, but without success,'' added
Goel.
And so high has the demand for natural colours been that some
shopkeepers were seen trying to sell even industrial dyes as
herbal ones. And with no real brands to look for, picking out the
genuine packet gave consumers a hard time.
Like the anti-cracker and green drive campaigns, this one too, is
more or less spearheaded by children. And in the end, they were
the ones that were left most disappointed. `` I guess I will not
celebrate Holi this time. No way will I use synthetic colours and
with my exams going on, I don't really have the time to prepare
it at home,'' said 10-year-old Bonita Singh, a student of Modern
School, Vasant Vihar.
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Section : Other States Previous : A bit of 'Chori Chori', a bit of 'Chupke Chupke' Next : MLAs await windfall | |
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