- Rajeev KR
- TNNUpdated: Jan 26, 2023, 21:51 IST IST
Falling rubber prices have left the state’s farmers in the lurch. Some of them are taking up the cultivation of agarwood, which is used to make a perfume that is central to Arabic culture
Oud’s enchanting fragrance has wafted around the world for millennia and its trade has thrived since ancient times. Now, many farmers in ‘God’s Own Country’, smitten by the allure of the ‘wood of the Gods’, are increasingly taking to growing the Aquilaria malaccensis tree — native to Assam and Southeast Asia — for its precious dark fragrant resinous wood, which has been valued across various civilisations for its spiritual and medicinal uses.
Oud or agarwood is no ordinary fragrant wood. It has a mythic reputation with a revered mention in seminal texts on Hinduism, Christianity, Buddhism and Islam, ranging from multiple references in the Mahabharata to the Song of Songs of the Old Testament and from Buddhist birth stories to Hadiths in Islam.
Oud or agarwood is no ordinary fragrant wood. It has a mythic reputation with a revered mention in seminal texts on Hinduism, Christianity, Buddhism and Islam, ranging from multiple references in the Mahabharata to the Song of Songs of the Old Testament and from Buddhist birth stories to Hadiths in Islam.