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Indian Believers Roll in Food Scraps of Higher Caste to Cure Their Illnesses

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A century old ritual in India dictates that those considered low-caste Hindus  must roll in the remains of food eaten by members of a higher caste. But it’s  not the ritual itself that’s strange. The strange part is that while social  activists are actually seeking to outlaw the practice, the ‘low-caste’ Hindus  don’t want to stop rolling in the leftovers.

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The ritual, called Madey Snana (Spit Bath) is specific to the state of  Karnataka, during an annual event at the famous 4000-year-old Kukke Subramanya  temple in the coastal district of Mangalore. It is also followed at the Sri  Krishna temple in Udupi town. As a part of the century-old Snana, Dalits  (members of a lower caste) roll over leftover food eaten by Brahmins (the upper  caste) every year, in the belief that all their troubles will disappear and  ailments will be cured. It is practiced every year on the festival of Champa  Shasti or Subramanya Shasti. Last year alone, 25,000 people rolled over the  ‘spit’ of the Brahmins. This happened even as the district administration  watched helplessly after their attempts to ban the practice failed.



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