Let’s Eat With Our Hands

www.handfed.org
Featured Video Play Icon

Eating with your hands is one of the most intimate relationships you will have with your food. It is sensual, environmentally friendly, clean and your food even tastes better.

Mixing rice with different dishes with your fingers makes each mouthful a unique culinary experience.

How-to-eat (1)-page-001 (2)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Many Indians, Bangladeshis Sri Lankans, Nepalis, Filipinos, Indonesians, Cambodians, Ethiopians, Pakistanis and others eat with their hands within the privacy of their homes. However, years of colonization has made us embarrassed of one of the most personal and intimate habits we have – eating with our hands, especially in public – and we are reluctant to use our hands to eat the very food which we love.

Having been brought up partly in a British style Sri Lankan boarding school in Sri Lanka, we were banned from eating with our hands and encouraged to eat with cutlery.

When Oprah Winfrey visited India a while back, she created a media storm by looking down at the Indians for eating with their hands. In Norway, there have been a handful of cases of kids of Indian and Sri Lankan children being taken into care for being fed by their parents’ hands. The social services misinterpreted it as force-feeding – and hence child abuse !

Former Indian President Dr. Radhakrishnan, met with Britain’s Prime Minister Winston Churchill as they sat down for lunch. Before sitting, Dr. Radhakrishnan washed his hands and as the meal was served, he used his hands in eating the meal.

Churchill asked Dr. Radhakrishnan, “Why are you using your hands? Use spoon and fork, it’s more hygienic.” Radhakrishnan’s reply was, “Since nobody has used my hand to eat before, my hand is more hygienic than any spoon you can find.”

Today, the Western world is increasingly accepting of eating different kinds of food with our hands – burgers, chips, pizza, fruit etc. The use of cutlery has reduced dramatically and all too often we eat with just a fork.

Not too long ago, most ate Chinese and Japanese food with a fork. Now, using chopsticks is all the rage. Similarly, it’s time we made the jump and start eating rice and curry with our hands too.

Drop the shame. Enjoy your food.

www.handfed.org is a website dedicated to the joy of eating with your hands. It includes video and downloadable pictorial diagrams of how to eat with your hands, articles, pictures etc.

Share your pics, stories and anecdotes of eating with your hands – be it burgers, rice and curry, fish and chips, dosas or anything else! #handfed
Check out  http://www.handfed.org

#handfed

Please like handfed on Facebook.

Find Jiva Jehanathan Parthipan in Facebook.

Author

jiva parthipan

jiva parthipan

Jiva Parthipan is a director, creative producer and arts/cultural worker based in Sydney, Australia and working internationally with theatre, dance, performance, film and inter-disciplinary art. His work has been seen the U.K. at Tate Modern, ICA - Institute of Contemporary Arts, Saddlers Wells, National Review of Live Arts, IETM- Paris and Dublin, Bone Festival, Claendestino Festival Sweden, and various festivals in Norway, Netherlands and South Africa. He was an associate lecturer in Performance at Central St Martin College for the Arts, London. Jiva was the first male dance dancer to dance with Shobana Jeyasigh dance company which recently celebrated its 25th anniversary.A personal and artistic profile of Jiva was published by Penguin Australia in A COUNTRY TOO FAR - written by Fiona Mc Gregor and edited by booker prize winning Australian author Tom Kenneally. Jiva currently works as an Arts and Cultural worker at STARTTS – in Sydney, initiating, developing and presenting arts and cultural activities with refugees in their own community settings, in partnership with Australian cultural institutions. Recent theatre projects include; LITTTLE BADGHDAD – with Powerhouse Youth Theatre and the Australian Museum, Baulkham Hills African Ladies Troupe in association with Racing Pulse & Belvoir Street Theatre and Riverside Theatre. Opera Australia’s community choirs program - at the Sydney Opera House, Dance Africa Dance annual show and LET IT BE choral project, both at Riverside Theatres in Sydney. In October 2016, STARTTS will work with MCA- Museum of COntemporary Arts and Powerhouse Youth Theatre to produce a major public art event – WOMEN OF FAIRFIELD"

Read More Stores From jiva parthipan...
Connect
Tags: , ,

More In Life