Fable, folklore and movies have all drawn on twins. In Kodinji, they are an abundant mystery.
***
Kodinji's twins were relatively unknown till about 2001, when the Government Mappila Upper Primary School opened and the early rolls were found to have more than a dozen twins with similar sounding names like Sahla-Suhaila, Tazna-Fazna and Lubana-Lubama. At present, the school has at least a dozen pairs of twins and even a set of triplets attending the morning and afternoon sessions. The other schools here, too, have a high number of twins.
"The national average is 8.1 twins per 1,000 live births. But here, I would say it's a minimum of 45 per 1,000 live births," says Dr K. Sribiju, who is a dermatologist but, being here, has also taken to collating and analysing data on twins. "We are yet to conduct a door-to-door survey. I'm sure there are more than 250 pairs of twins, ranging in age from just a few weeks to 85-plus years."
Experts who probed a similar phenomenon in a tribe in Nigeria zeroed in on high levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in the tribeswomen as an explanation for the high occurrence of twins. But medical and other experts are yet to investigate Kodinji's explosion of twins.
Most of the twins belong to poor families, and this puts a heavy burden on their parents. Land-holdings have fragmented over the years, leaving no more than 10 to 20 cents to each family. Most of the men are daily wage-earners. Bushara Mohammed Kutty, 30, who lives near the Government Mappila School, has a set of fraternal nine-year-old triplets—Jasna, Fasna and Husna. Her uncle has twin sons. "The more the merrier—provided you have the wherewithal," she says. "But I hope some Good Samaritan will help us out. My husband is the sole breadwinner. He's away in Mumbai, engaged in a small business. I can't make both ends meet".
Yousuf, an autorickshaw driver, and his wife Asya have two sets of twins among their six children. "The first and the second were single births, and then there were two pairs of twins in succession," he says. The youngest twins are three months old. "I can't afford a loss of even one day's work if I have to feed them all. Will this story about us help us in any way?" he asks.
But Kodinji's twins are also a source of fun, games and confusion. A recent incident involved TAKA president P. Bhaskaran's identical twin boys, Anu and Abhi. During the school board examination, an invigilator, who wasn't from the area, accused Anu of moving from one hall to another to write his exam, when in fact it was Abhi sitting in the second hall. Bhaskaran also recalls how his twins enjoyed fooling emigration staff at airports by exchanging their passports—but that was before the days of biometric ID proof.
What makes the twinning in Kodinji even more curious is that it is not community-specific. Because the majority of the village population is Muslim, there are more Muslim twins, but Hindu families here too have an unusually high number of twins. Locals also make a strange claim—that couples from other places who have moved to the village after marriage have also produced twins.
Could it be something peculiar to the local diet? Locals insist there's nothing unique or distinctive about what they eat and drink. Dr Sribiju also rules out some unknown pollutant in the area as the trigger, for most of the twins are born normal and healthy. But he says it could be some other factor in the environment, that yet remains to be identified. It will take the combined efforts of geneticists, doctors, environmental scientists and anthropologists to uncover the mystery. Meanwhile, this quiet little village is basking in media attention it has received from across the world, bringing it widespread fame.