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While Monkeys Roam Free In India, Humans Live In Cages

While Monkeys Roam Free In India, Humans Live In Cages

PACHMARHI — Anil Yadav has lived in the hilltop town of Pachmarhi for the past 16 years, but over the past three he says that the monkey population has expanded beyond control. So much so that humans are now being forced to live in cages.

In India, monkeys are sacred and worshipped by Hindus as they are seen as the living representatives of the cherished god Hanuman. Hindu tradition also calls for feeding monkeys on Tuesdays and Saturdays. But now, people are starting to see them as pests.

"If the doors of the house are open they steal all kinds of food from inside," Yadav told Portal KBR. "They jump on the roof and damage it. They steal clothes and rip out wiring. We cannot grow things like flowers because they come and eat them — they’re really wreaking havoc everywhere!"

Even in Delhi, the capital, the monkey population has grown so large and aggressive that overwhelmed city officials have petitioned India’s Supreme Court to relieve them from monkey control duties.

Back in Pachmarhi, the solution is cages — though for the humans, not the monkeys. People have added wire grills to windows and doors to their homes to prevent these anthropoids intruding. "Though, even with the cages you still need to be on the look out," adds Yadav’s friend Kaushal.

He recalls one time when he was taking a bath and saw a dozen monkeys trying to take his clothes and cell phone. "I had to jump out to chase them away!"

Local forest officials say they are have been flooded with complaints, though rangers say that local residents are part of the problem — leaving food out in the open and throwing scraps on the ground.

Photo: Capitan Giona

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Society

Smile, It May Help You Live Longer

Even more so than laughter, smiling is the human trait par excellence. It’s a real language — but can we learn to understand it? Or to cultivate it? The rewards could be high, and not just to boost morale: Smiling could increase life expectancy.

Closeup of Leonardo da Vinci's

Closeup of Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa

Stefano Lupieri

PARIS — It's something that we tend to forget. So it's nice of anthropologist David Le Breton to remind us that “Deep inside us, we all have a gallery of smiles that have touched us.” Smiles that we keep like little treasures.

It’s amazing to think that this slight movement of the lips and facial muscles, which sometimes lights up an entire face, can resonate so deeply within us and awaken a whole range of emotions — even if it comes from a complete stranger.

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In Le Breton’s pantheon of smiles, there are many examples which are taken from cinema. Like that of the Italian actress Giulietta Masina at the end of the film “La Strada,” directed by her husband, Federico Fellini.

“After being swept away by life, betrayed by the man she loves, she turns to the camera and gives us a deeply moving smile that shows us her determination in the face of adversity,” says Le Breton, a professor at the University of Strasbourg, “We are touched by a moment that is a universal feeling.”

So all we have to do is dig deep into our memories to find little bursts of happiness and empathy that do us so much good.

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