Narendra Bisht
Kitchen confidential Manan and Aparajita, the schoolkids who’ve embraced veganism
Food: vegans
Sylph O’ The Green
Veganism is the new food mantra for the hip and happening

The Vegan View

  • Say no to meat because the animals are bred in unsanitary conditions. Cattle legs are often cut off during transportation, to fit more in.
  • Say no to dairy because it’s unethical; it can involve injecting cattle with hormones to increase milk production
  • A meat-free diet lowers blood pressure, cholesterol, the risk of strokes, chances of obesity
  • Eating meat contributes to pollution, uses more land, water and energy, leads to deforestation

***

For all the time he spends on his computer, 15-year-old Manan Kohli isn’t your ordinary teenager. Rather than googling the latest playstation videogame, this class XI boy from Delhi’s Modern School is more likely to be browsing the internet for updates on veganism, or connecting with other vegans on Facebook. If your reaction is “vegan, what’s that?”, perhaps you need to google too. This strict form of vegetarianism, which forbids not just meat but all animal produce—such as eggs and dairy products (and honey, silk and leather as well)—has captured the imagination of young people the world over, Indians included, rather to the dismay of their less than new-agey parents. For Manan it was the death of his pet dog three years ago that plunged him into this abstemious world, his views decisively shaped by the shocking videos on cruelty towards animals he encountered on the internet. When he turned vegetarian, his parents were worried. “I thought they would be proud of me—but they were far from supportive,” he recalls. When he decided to embrace veganism, they hit the roof. Even Lord Krishna drank milk, they argued with their rebellious son. But while he may pay lip service to their anxieties about him getting adequate nutrition, Manan is holding firm.

There are a growing number of other young urban Indians out there who have turned their back not just on childhood favourites like butter chicken and fish curry, but also dal makhni, ghee-spattered rotis and creamy shahi paneer. All of 23, Sneha Poojary, a Mangalorean living in Mumbai, was reared on a seafood diet—but you wouldn’t think so from the courage of her vegan convictions. “Being vegetarian isn’t enough, consuming milk contributes to the unethical farming of cattle,” says this avid organiser of vegan pot-luck dinners, busy building a vegan community in Mumbai through blogs and social networking sites. When in campaign mode, she can hold forth at length on the cruelties involved in dairy and poultry farming.

Lurking behind the allure of veganism for young people are a host of factors, ranging from animal love to health concerns, advice from spiritual gurus and the fad appeal of star-studded environmental and animal rights campaigns like PETA’s latest, which has actress Lara Dutta covered only in lettuce; or Pamela Anderson’s eye-catching ‘All Animals Have the Same Parts’ advertisement which has her posing in a bikini, her body parts tagged as if by a butcher. Says Manish Jain of Vegan Education Centre, Indore, who receives five to 10 calls a month from young people curious to know more about veganism, “With globalisation and outreach through various media, especially the internet, I see meat-eaters becoming more aware of the source of their food and the suffering attached to it.” There are no confirmed figures on the number of vegans in India, but Jain estimates that four out of five converts are below the age of 30.


Himani and her husband Ashi get down to a preparing their vegan dinner (Photograph by Apoorva Salkade)

Some have turned it into a ‘couple thing’. When Mumbai-based animal rights activist Himani Shetty became vegetarian, her husband Ashi Anand, who works in finance, followed suit. Later, when she decided to turn vegan, he supported her fully. Drawn, like many others, towards vegetarianism and veganism by a love of animals, Himani says she rarely misses the life she’s left behind: “It took me a few months to give it all up, but it’s been several years now, and I haven’t wanted to go back to eating meat, save for one time when I went to Goa and was tempted into ordering seafood, but couldn’t touch it when it reached our table.” For her husband, the conversion happened overnight, says Himani, when the couple was watching a documentary called Planet Earth on Discovery channel. “He just connected with it,” she recalls.

 
 
Dining out is looking up for vegans. There’s soya milkshakes, cheese-free pizzas, even vegetarian Peking Duck on offer.
 
 
Similarly, Sujoy D’Souza, now in his early thirties, turned vegetarian more than six years ago with his wife Karol, who he met in Canada. He was already uncomfortable, he says, with the weight he had put on after adopting a meat-heavy diet while living in the West, and Karol’s vegetarian ways proved decisive for him. After giving up meat, his energy levels shot up, says Sujoy: “A good two hours of badminton on weekends didn’t tire me out any longer.” When the couple moved to Bangalore a few years ago, they found themselves increasingly influenced by campaigns against dairy-farming and decided to turn vegan. As a result, their two-year-old daughter Nikita doesn’t even know what ice-cream is. “We freeze mango pulp and that’s the only ice-cream she knows,” laughs Karol. The idea of a young child growing up without milk would horrify many parents, but not them. “We ground black seed (kalonji) for immunity and sesame seed for calcium and sprinkled it over Nikita’s food,” says Karol. “We even make soya and almond milk at home”.

Even someone as young as Manan knows he is missing out on important vitamin B12—obtained from meat and milk products—and takes supplements to compensate. Still, adapting to life without meat, especially while eating out, and milk products, can take getting used to. “I used to carry a list of ingredients I didn’t want to consume and hand it over to the waiter when I dined out with my family, but my parents asked me to stop,” says Manan ruefully. Others went looking for imported vegan options such as soy sausages and burgers from Fry’s, a South African firm that makes veggie products that are similar to meat in taste, appearance, texture and nutrition. Karol found a Bangalore bakery that made vegan cakes, but was stumped by the paneer-for-veggies rule followed by most airlines, until she learnt to take along snacks on flights.

Dining out, however, is looking up for vegetarians and vegans. Cafe Coffee Day, a chain frequented by young people, has launched a vegan shake (using soy milk and coffee), a popular Mumbai pizzeria has a vegan (i.e. cheese-free) offering on the menu, Delhi eatery Yum Yum Tree’s wheat protein-based mock meat is a hit with diners, including its Vegetarian Peking Duck.


Eat your ethics A cheese-free pizza for Mumbai-based vegan campaigner Sneha (Photograph by Dinesh Parab)

For some, however, the easiest way to adapt is learning to cook. Vasantha Rayalu, a 22-year-old iitian from Hyderabad who turned vegetarian more than a decade ago, and vegan recently, is adept at fixing a meal of aloo gobi when he doesn’t feel like stepping out for south Indian tiffin. Himani, a self-confessed foodie, swears by her shepherd’s pie, which substitutes soya beans for minced meat, while Sneha stands by her vegan gulab jamuns. Even young Manan experiments with vegan cakes and pasta.

Even so, parents—his and others’—are inclined to shake their heads in disapproval at what they see as an extremely restrictive diet. Diet guru and medical doctor Shikha Sharma thinks many of their fears are unfounded. “Any evolved society has to become vegetarian eventually,” she says. “It’s a good, healthy trend, and nutrition can be obtained through items like raagi, sesame seeds, nuts and oilseeds. Children too can do without milk once they are weaned off their mother’s milk.” However, Dr Randeep Guleria of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences treads a more cautious line: “Meat and milk products give us relatively better quality protein and in some cases being vegan can lead to severe deficiencies.” He stresses the importance of B 12 supplements, especially in the case of children who are still growing.

Some children, though, are getting backing for their cause from an unlikely quarter—their own grandparents. Pressed by her mother and father to at least eat fish, 15-year-old Delhi girl Aparajita Amar won support from her vegetarian grandparents, living examples of the health benefits of giving up flesh. Sneha, meanwhile, has managed to get her parents on her side, after their initial hesitation. “Their own health reports have been far better after they began eating less meat. But I doubt if they can give it up completely—it’s too built into their system,” says Sneha. Many young people, coming from families that have consumed flesh, milk and ghee for generations, could say the same. But clearly, it’s ideas that consume them, rather than meat and fish, butter, milk and ghee.

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COLLAPSE COMMENTS :
HAVE YOUR SAY
Jul 31, 2010 08:36 PM
1
Read, "Eat to live" - a vegan diet by nutritionist Dr. Fuhrman.
Gul Ramani
duesseldorf, Germany
Aug 01, 2010 05:06 AM
2
Great article! It's inspiring to see people choosing the compassionate vegan diet. I like what Sneha Poojary has to say about the vegan diet. Google, "Supreme Master TV SOS" for more information on cost of meat eating and climate related issues. A vegan diet is life saving and can immediately halt the current rate of global warming.
Be Veg, Go Green 2 Save the Planet!
Tirtha Raman
Minnesota, United States
Aug 01, 2010 06:54 AM
3
Glad to read Indian media promoting such & playing positive & right role.
next will be VEGANOUS

Metta to all beings.
Gope - Earthling
Ningbo, China
Aug 01, 2010 05:11 PM
4
for those non vegans they may watch movie Earthlings & thinking like Dr Randeep kindly visit http://www.notmilk.com/

metta to all
Gope - Earthling
Ningbo, China
Aug 02, 2010 08:26 AM
5
For Vegans- watch your Vitamin B12, B6, and minerals iron and zinc levels. Unless supplemented, vegan-ism may lead to deficiency of important nutrients.
priya
meerut, India
Aug 02, 2010 01:38 PM
6
Great article ... except for that amazingly silly line about people
cutting the legs off cattle. Has this ever happened? Once? Twice?
To pretend this a regular occurrence is telling lies and gives
vegans a bad name ... especially under the subtitle "The Vegan View". If this was said by the subjects of the article, then I would expect a good journalist to have either asked
for proof that this is a regular occurrence, and if none was
forthcoming, to leave it out. Perhaps it was deliberately left in
as a smear to make vegans look silly? Similarly, I would
ask Dr Randeep for evidence of anybody who has ever been sick
purely because of the quality of plant protein.
Geoff Russell
Adelaide, Australia
Aug 02, 2010 03:45 PM
7
I myself became a vegetarian for the last 7 years or more.
My experience is that in the first few months you may feel you became weak and that shall be true considering the fact that your body has to adjust to this change.

After that you would feel very healthy and also some of the ailments would disappear , this includes muscle pains and headaches. You feel lightweighted and feel very happy.
I do not touch eggs and before I eat a slice bread I would carefully read the list of ingredients ,if it contains eggs I would not touch the bread.
However I do not think one should stop drinking milk also. I drink milk as well as buttermilk.

Vegetarianism is good ,definetely helps grow forests and conserves ecological balance.
We grow animals and grow more of them only to kill them to eat(goats,sheep,hen,pigs,prawns,fish and so on
) .In this manner of rearing and breeding animals in large scale would in turn consume enormous amounts of plants and grass leading to deforestation.
And also this non-veg eating leads extreme cruelty to animals . It is not like plucking a vegetable or a fruit from a plant or tree. There is a lot of difference.

Vegetarians should eat more of dal ,peanuts,cashewnut and fruits. Protein supplement is required once you stop eating animals or fish.
bowenpalle venuraja gopal rao.
warangal, india
Aug 02, 2010 04:14 PM
8
It is not just the ethics of veganism that are appealing but an intelligent vegan diet is very attractive healthwise.
Gul Ramani
duesseldorf, Germany
Aug 02, 2010 06:32 PM
9
I didnt understand the ethics part of it. There are unethical practices in agriculture as well (pesticides, BT, genetic modifications, etc). New fads?!
Rajesh Chary
Mumbai, India
Aug 02, 2010 07:02 PM
10
Practising Vegetarianism is good but not practising is not bad either. It is a way of life. Too much of anything is extereme. Knowledge is the antidote to fear. Whatever is there in this whole world is for humans to consume, enjoy and preserve. It is a vicious cycle made by God. If you disturb these, the results will be very dangerous. If animals are not slaughtered, then the whole vegetation will vanish. In our national parks, carniverous animals are transfered to places where deer and other animals are more in number and vise versa. In the same way, if humans don't die, then the whole world will explode with population. So every creature has a role to play and depart or die.
m a razzak
Hyderabad, India
Aug 02, 2010 09:01 PM
11
For the one's who feel... that going vegan needs to have protein supplement... which is a total MYTH...

veg/fruits/lentils/dal/cereals gives all the protein & calcium that is needed.. unfortunately people have no idea about it... as veg protien has been ignored and meat and milk has been promoted at its best...by the livestock industries..

and about b12.. its a vitamin obtained from bacteria in the soil.. but as there are pesticides used for plants to grow..the b12 diminishes..
i know so many non-vegetarians who are b12 deficient as well, even animals bred for meat are also lacking it... due to the pesticide filled plants.. which increases the toxin levels for the humans who consume it...
Methycobal or Nurokind is a B12 tablet for all (vegans as well as non vegans)..

it takes 16 kgs of grains to produce 1 kg of meat...

on one hand millions are dying of hunger and on the other hand millions are obese... is this we call as ecological balance? 90% of amazon forest cleared for livestock farming...

honestly its not about being a perfectionist.... its about minimizing misery...

for more info.. visit: www.indianvegan.com or
www.sharan-india.org
Vidya
Mumbai, India
Aug 02, 2010 09:04 PM
12
For the one's who feel... that going vegan needs to have protein supplement... which is a total MYTH...

veg/fruits/lentils/dal/cereals gives all the protein & calcium that is needed.. unfortunately people have no idea about it... as veg protien has been ignored and meat and milk has been promoted at its best...by the livestock industries..

and about b12.. its a vitamin obtained from bacteria in the soil.. but as there are pesticides used for plants to grow..the b12 diminishes..
i know so many non-vegetarians who are b12 deficient as well, even animals bred for meat are also lacking it... due to the pesticide filled plants.. which increases the toxin levels for the humans who consume it...
Methycobal or Nurokind is a B12 tablet for all (vegans as well as non vegans)..

it takes 16 kgs of grains to produce 1 kg of meat...

on one hand millions are dying of hunger and on the other hand millions are obese... is this we call as ecological balance? 90% of amazon forest cleared for livestock farming...

honestly its not about being a perfectionist.... its about minimizing misery...

for more info.. visit: www.indianvegan.com or
www.sharan-india.org
Vidya
Mumbai, India
Aug 02, 2010 09:05 PM
13
Indians were the original vegans. Jainism, an Indian ethic/religion, essentially is vegan in its diet and attitude. Very surprising that the article does not say a word about this.
Varun Shekhar
Toronto, CANADA
Aug 03, 2010 11:48 AM
14
Indians were the original vegans. Jainism, an Indian ethic/religion, essentially is vegan in its diet and attitude. Very surprising that the article does not say a word about this.

Varun Shekhar
Toronto, CANADA

You are 100% correct.
Indians are original vegans and Jainism perticularly Vardhamana Mahavira, propagated vegetarianism much more than any prophet or God incarnation in the whole of human civilization.

An animal food contains more of NH3 waste products (ammonia or byproducts of ammonia)which can cause many nerve related deseases,increase of urea in blood, pigmentation on the skin making you look older etc.,. A practitioner of Yogasana shall never eat non-veg food including eggs.

A Yoga asana practice along with diet of eggs and non-veg food can cause more damage than a non-practitioner because these NH3 wastages reach much deeper in to the tissues than otherwise.

A Protein is created by chain of amino-acids about 24 of them in a chain formation. A protien from vegetables like pulses or peanuts may contain only 23 amino acids in the protein formation chain. Except that there is abosolutely no difference. The belief that eating meat only builds muscles is not correct.

Indians are by nature vegetarians compared to any other civilization.
Lord Shiva could be the oldest God known to man.
But Lord Shiva sits in a cave in meditation. He is also very strict vegetarian and most delicious food for him is popped corn mixed with jaggery and also fruits. So, this proves that by the time , Lord Shiva appeared on the scene, or human beings had seen him in their divine visions, by applying the logic as it were, People of this ancient religion must be practitioners of vegetarianism even when they were wearing animal skin and were living in caves !!!

Veganism may be a modern term, nopw encampassing the entire world perticuarly younger generations but is also the most ancient one , which we are rediscovering.
bowenpalle venuraja gopal rao.
warangal, india
Aug 05, 2010 01:48 PM
15
Thank you, Outlook for publishing this article.
There is no need for humans to consume animal products. Many of the greatest sportspersons of the world are vegans: Carl Lewis, Brendan Brazier, John Salley, Adam Myerson, ...
It is inspiring to know that many young people are opting for a compassionate, healthy and planet friendly lifestyle.
Arun
Bangalore, India
Aug 06, 2010 02:59 PM
16
There are many celebraties who are closet vegans or near vegans even Obama seems to be one of them.
The animal products lobby is still very powerful. In a world of obese people it is only a matter of time that like cigarette smoking consuming excess meat would
become a no, no.
Gul Ramani
duesseldorf, Germany
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