Valley of Flowers
Context: The Valley of Flowers in Uttarakhand was opened for tourist arrivals on June 1.
About Valley of Flowers
- Named By: The valley is named by three British mountaineers led by Frank S Smythe believed to have accidentally discovered the valley in 1931.
- Location: The valley is spread over a 87 sqkm area located in the Chamoli district, Uttarakhand within the Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve.
- It forms one of the two core zones of the Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve.
- Heritage Site: The Valley of Flowers is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
- Habitat: The valley lies completely in the temperate alpine zone encompassing a unique transition zone between the mountain ranges of the Zanskar and Great Himalayas.
- River: The Valley of Flowers is nestled in the Pushpawati river valley
- Religious significance: The Valley is said to be under protection of Nanda Devi ( the patron goddess of Garhwal and Kumaon)
- Nanda Devi is the second highest mountain in India (after Kangchenjunga)
- Tribe: The valley is populated by a local tribe called the Bhotiyas.
- Flower Species: The valley is a meadows of endemic alpine flowers with around 600 species such as orchids, poppies, primulas, marigold, daisies and anemones can be found here.
- The brahmakamal, offered to Nanda Devi is also abundantly found.
- Fauna: Wildlife species like the gray langur, the flying squirrel, the Himalayan weasel, and black bear, the red fox, the lime butterfly, the snow leopard etc are found here.
- Tourism and Trekking: The valley usually stays open for four months i.e. June, July, August, and September.
Composite Backwardness Index of Telangana
Context: Telangana has introduced the Composite Backwardness Index (CBI), to scientifically quantify the backwardness of castes on a scale of ‘0 to 126’ points, independent of their population size.
- Higher the score, the greater the level of backwardness.
About the Composite Backwardness Index
- Prepared By: The index is prepared by a 11-member Expert Working Group set up by the government to analyse and interpret data from Teleangana’s caste survey.
- Aim: The report aims to disentangle caste-based backwardness from general poverty.
- Data Source: The index has surveyed and ranked a total of 245 castes, compiling data from over 3.5 crore residents responding to 74 questions.
- Indicators: The index shortlisted 42 indicators across nine categories, including education, living conditions, land ownership, income, access to technology, and social discrimination.
- Analysis: A statistical significance test was performed across the responses and data analysed through quartile distribution.
- Every caste was placed into one of four buckets based on their aggregate scores.
- Significance:
- It is a first-of-its-kind metric designed and used to objectively evaluate social and economic disparities.
- Measurable Backwardness: The index is holistic in its focus on measuring the real backwardness of a caste.
Kheer Bhawani Mela
Context: Over 5000 of Kashmiri Pandits leave for Kheer Bhawani Mela in Kashmir.
About Kheer Bhawani Mela
- It is an annual Hindu pilgrimage and festival dedicated to Goddess Ragnya Devi, revered particularly by Kashmiri Pandits.
- It is celebrated on Zeisht Ashtami (the eighth day of the bright fortnight of the Hindu month of Jyeshtha – May/June).
Key Shrines Associated
- Tulmulla, Ganderbal (main shrine)
- Tikker, Kupwara
- Laktipora Aishmuqam, Anantnag
- Tripursundri Devsar, Kulgam
- Manzgam, Kulgam
Rituals and Beliefs
- Devotees offer Kheer (rice pudding), milk, flowers, and light earthen lamps at a sacred spring.
- The color of the spring’s water is believed to signal future events:
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- Clear water – auspicious.
- Dark or murky – considered a warning.
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