Indian education minister believes cows exhale oxygen

Cows are revered by Hindus and slaughtering them is illegal in most Indian states


News Desk January 16, 2017
Rescued cattle are seen at a "goushala", or cow shelter, run by Bharatiya Gou Rakshan Parishad, an arm of the Hindu nationalist group Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), at Aangaon village in Maharashtra February 20, 2015. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade/Files

It is a known scientific fact that cows, much like any other animal, inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide. However, an Indian education minister believes cows exhale oxygen.

Vasudev Devnani, the education minister of India's state of Rajasthan, said, cows are of "significant importance" because they are the only of its kind with the ability to inhale and exhale oxygen.

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"There is a need to understand the scientific significance of the cow and ensure that the message reaches all people,” Devnani said on Saturday during a programme organised at the Hingonia Cow Rehabilitation Centre.

Devnani also claimed that diseases such as cold and cough are healed if one goes near a cow. He added that cow dung has ample quantity of Vitamin B, which allows it to soak radioactivity.

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Cows are revered by Hindus and slaughtering them is illegal in most Indian states. Several states also bar the sale and possession of beef, and there has been a recent upsurge in attacks by vigilantes from the Hindu right on people suspected of killing cows. The government has been accused of failing to rein in Hindu hardliners, while its ministers have at times appeared to be inflaming the debate.

In July last year, two Muslim women were beaten up at a railway station in central India on suspicion of carrying beef. The two women were subsequently arrested, but tests found that the meat was actually buffalo.

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The incident came days after a group of low-caste Hindu men were beaten by vigilantes in the western state of Gujarat on suspicion of killing a cow — a charge they denied. The men said they were taking the dead cow to be skinned — a task commonly given to low-caste villagers in India, where the animals roam freely.

This article originally appeared on Hindustan Times.

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