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Plants in Meitei culture

Many plants () play a significant role in Meitei cuisine, festivals, folklore and folktales, literature, mythology and Sanamahism, the indigenous religion of Manipur.

Sacred botanical totems

Plants used in rites and rituals

Safflowers and () and irises () are used as decorations during the Sajibu Cheiraoba (Lunar Near Year) celebrations. The iris represents love, life and death. It is frequently mentioned in the Meitei folktales and folk songs. In honor of the iris, the Government of Manipur holds an annual Kombirei Festival, with the aim of to preserving the natural habitats of Manupuri flowers like the kombirei.

Real plants mentioned in old texts

Cape jasmine

Giving reference to Meitei King Khagemba and the Manipur Kingdom, the beauty and grace of Lei Kabok flower, also called (, cape jasmine), is described by Meitei King Charairongba, in his book, the "Leiron", as follows:

Real plants mentioned in folklore

Colocasia/Taro plantation folktale

In Meitei mythology and Meitei folklore of , plants are mentioned. In the Meitei folktale of the , an old aged lonely couple, who have no youths in their family, were deceived by some trickster monkeys, regarding the planting of the Colocasia/Taro plants in a very different unusual style of plantation. The old couple agreed to do the monkeys' advices, peeling off the best tubers of the plants, then boiling them in a pot until softened and after cooling them off, wrapping them in banana leaves and putting them inside the soils of the grounds. In the middle of the night, the monkeys secretly came into the farm and ate all the well cooked plants. After their eating, they (monkeys) planted some inedible giant wild plants in the place where the old couple had placed the cooked plant tubers. In the morning, the old couple were amazed to see the plants getting fully grown up just after one day of planting the tubers. They were unaware of the tricks of the monkeys. So, the old couple cooked and ate the inedible wild Taro plants. As a reaction of eating the wild plants, they suffered from the unbearable tingling sensation in their throats.

Perspective of Mother nature

The narrative poem ' describes how the seventh-century King Luwang Ningthou Punshiba once told his men to cut down a tree in the forest in order to build a beautiful royal boat (). His servants found a suitable tree growing on the slope of a mountain and by the side of a river. They performed traditional customary rites and rituals before chopping down the tree the following day.

During the night, Mother Nature began to weep, fearful of losing her dear child, the tree, and she lamented:

See also

References