India's Soothing Summer Drink: Bael Sherbet

Bael Sherbet:

India's Soothing Summer Drink 

Summer scorches but compensates with many savoury fruits – mango, watermelon, muskmelon, lychee, and the humble bael; the last one is not a table fruit and demands a little work before it can be savoured. Bael fruit has much nutritional and medicinal value.[i]


(Image Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Recently, I bought from Bittan Market a big ripe bael for eighty rupees. Broke the shell, scooped out the soft kernel with a spoon, soaked it in a bowl with two glasses of water. After a while, kneaded the stuff, used a sieve to separate the seeds, rind, strings, and collected the thick pulp, enough to make eight glasses of sherbet. Put a few spoons of pulp in a glass, added a little more water, black salt, ground pepper, roasted ground jeera, and crushed cardamoms. No sugar, jaggery, or honey; best to savour the gift of nature without extra sugar. Put it in deep freezer for 15 mins. Garnished it with pudina leaves from my terrace pot. Result: a cooling, refreshing, delicious summer drink with loads of health benefits.

Whenever I see bael, it brings in a rush of memories of childhood in my little village in western Odisha where upon a private fallow land across our school stood a well-grown tree that bore a luxuriant crop every year, and was available to all since the land-owner took only a few and left the remaining fruits for others. We saw the green fruits grow bigger and turn yellow with patches of brown as they ripened soaking in the hot sun and cooking the pulp ever so slowly to perfection, a shining golden hue with an appetising aroma and the taste of nature-packed herbal candy.

My classmates - Gurudev Kumar, Shankarshan Majhi, and Mahadev Podh – all a few years older than me and more knowledgeable about matters seldom waited for the fruit to ripen and drop. They fetched a long bamboo pole with a hook and yanked off a few mature ones, kindled a fire and roasted the fruits. When done, the fruits burst like crackers and the roasted pulp was scooped out with a piece of the shell. It was amazingly delicious.

Much, much later did I learn that Ayurveda has been using since ancient times every part of the bael tree as medicine; the fruit to treat contrarian ailments – the unripe fruit for diarrhoea and dysentery, and the ripe fruit for constipation.

But who were the anonymous master strategists who smartly assigned ‘sacred’ status to the bael tree, declaring it Lord Shiva’s favourite to ensure well-being of the devotees and immortality for this medicinal tree?** The same wise masters who elevated Tulasi, a humble wild grass (‘Tulsi Tulsi sab kahen Tulsi van ka ghas, ho gayee kirpa Ram ki ban gaya Tulsidas’) to a goddess, to be revered in every house and worshipped thrice daily (tri-sandhya)? Who ordained that Lakshmi is pleased when offered the majestic lotus, the flower available only if abundant, healthy ponds and lakes are nurtured?

But they did not rest after such smart sacred alignment. They composed hymns in praise of these precious trees and plants – Bilvastakam, Bilva Upanishad, Tulasi Stotram, Tulasi Upanishad, Padma Purana (the lotus emerged from the navel of Lord Vishnu), and many others.

Bilvastakam*

Bilvastakam (Praise of Bilva Tree in Eight Stanzas), a Sanskrit stotra, is unique in many respects. It is not in praise of Shiva, but a paean to the sacred bilva tree.  It recommends for the devotee a very simple, zero-cost method of worshipping Shiva.

Aegle marmelos, commonly known as bael, bil, stone apple, wood apple is a species of tree native to the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia.

What does the stotra say in praise of the tree?

In the sacred Bilva tree resides the Trinity – Brahma in its root, Vishnu at its centre (trunk), and Shiva at the top; it is born with Lakshmi’s blessings (literally, a produce of Mother Earth), and is dear to Shiva.

Mere darshan (sighting) and/or sparsh (touching) of this sacred tree extinguishes all sins, and offering a stem with three bilva leaves (bael leaves are trifoliate) to Shiva extinguishes even the most heinous sins.

An offering of a bael stem with three leaves - symbolising the three gunas that constitute the universe (Satva, Rajas, and Tamas), the three-eyed Lord Shiva, and his trishul (trident) with three spear-heads – extinguishes the sins of three lives, the past, the present, and the future.

Religious merit acquired through offering a stem of bael leaves to Shiva is equivalent to

·      gifting Shaligram to numerous Vipras (brahmins), or the great merit derived from performing Soma Yagya;

·      gifting a thousand Dantikoti (tusker elephants), a hundred Vajapeya (a special yagya), and a million Kanya-dana (offering the hands of a daughter in marriage, considered a maha-dana, or a great gift);

·      permanent residence in Kashi kshetra with daily darshan of Kala Bhairaba, or darshan of Madhava (Vishnu) at Prayag.

Lastly, the stotra mentions, as required by convention, the phalashruti or the benefits that accrue from recitation of this stotra. Recitation of this sacred Bilvastaka before Shiva extinguishes all sins, and the devotee is transported to Shiva Loka.

Adi Shakara, who composed this stotra was a gifted poet, and the use of hyperbole as a poetic device in this composition was deliberate. The poet’s intent is to assure the devout that piety is not earned through elaborate rituals (fasts, vratas, yagyas), or by giving expensive gifts to the gods or to the priests and brahmins. Simple and sincere devotion suffices to receive divine benediction.

***

*Some sources (Shlokam.org, sanskritdocuments.org) attribute Bilvastakam to Adi Shankaracharya; but others (Shankaracharya.org, Shri Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham) do not list this stotra as one composed by the Saint-Poet. Also, there are different versions of this stotra, one with eight stanzas which makes it an ashtakam, and another with 14 stanzas!

Renditions of this stotra by Madhavi Madhukar Jha, Ramesh Bhai Ojha, and others are available in You Tube.

**Bael tree is also called Kalpavriksha, and its fruit Sriphal. Some believe that the 'Sri' in SriShailam,one of the Dvadasha Jyotirlingas, refers to the abundance of bael trees on the mountain.



[i] A summary of the many nutritional and medicinal values of bael is available at:  Production_Protection_and_Processing_of_Bael.pdf (icar.gov.in)

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