Odisha monk campaigns to save indigenous cow

 Puri (Odisha), March 25: A monk in Odisha has launched a campaign to save the state’s tive cow breeds that are on the brink of extinction. Paramahamsa Prajnda, the spiritual leader of the Kriya Yoga of Praj Mission, has kept over 150 cows of Odisha’s indigenous varieties at his ashrams and urges others, especially farmers, to follow suit. Prajnda, 55, said he stayed three years ago in Rajasthan where such conservation had proved successful. After returning to Odisha, he started collecting tive varieties cows and nurturing them.

“Initially we started with a few. Later the number gradually increased,” said the saffron-robed who has travelled widely around the world to promote Kriya Yoga — a spiritual form of yoga. “The milk we consume today from hybrid cow is type A1 which can contribute to diseases. But the milk of the tive cow is type A2 which is good for health,” Prajnda told IANS, seated in Hariharanda Gurukulam, an ashram near Puri city. Situated in the tural surrounding of forests, about 60 km from Bhubaneswar, the ashram houses over 50 cows and calves, mostly of Odisha’s indigenous varieties as well as over 200 stray cattle.

The milk produced by the cows cater to the daily needs of hundreds of ashram inmates and regular visitors. The Hariharanda Balashram, the Praj Mission’s another religious centre in Kendrapada district, his birthplace, also houses about 85 cows and calves. Spread over about 10 acres, the ashram also runs a residential school which has 500 children, mostly orphans. They get quality education free of charge up to Class 10. The students, staff and other inmates consume milk produced by the ashram cows. The holy man, who has written and translated numerous books on spiritual topics, said the forested areas in the ashram complex provide the domestic animals the tural grazing fields. He said efforts were under way to collect more such cows. “From time immemorial the cow has been the backbone of our agrarian economy,” he told IANS. “The milk, curd, ghee, cow dung and cow urine of the tive cows have medicil properties.” He lamented that their use has been almost lost.

Prajnda has been organising meetings across the state in recent years, motivating farmers to go for and protect the indigenous cow. “Many of them have started preserving the tive varieties,” he said. “We plan to set up six ‘goshala’ (cow shelters) in Odisha to preserve the tive cows and bulls,” he said. The tive cow’s population in Odisha was 13,144,359 in 2003.  (ians)

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