Nilgiris Quotes

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Aunt Dove stepped behind her and looked at her reflection in the cheval glass. “You haven’t been to India, pet, but in the Nilgiri Hills, there’s a flower called a kurinji flower. It doesn’t bloom often. In fact, you can go a dozen years or more without seeing a single blossom. But then, just when you’ve given up hope of ever seeing one, they burst into flower, whole mountainsides at the same time, carpeted in the most astonishing shades of purple. It’s as if God himself shook out a rug of petals and spread it at your feet. It’s unexpected and magnificent, and very much worth the wait.
Deanna Raybourn (Whisper of Jasmine (City of Jasmine, #0.5))
Nanjanad is the biggest, Badaga village in The Nilgiris / India, famous for hospitality, originality, and spirituality.
Dr Sivakumar Gowder
Eknath Easwaran. Gandhi the Man. Nilgiri Press: Novales, California, 1997,
Stephen Cope (The Great Work of Your Life: A Guide for the Journey to Your True Calling)
Is the term for the human species clearly defined? There is no authoritative definition of 'species'. The boundaries between biological populations are, by definition, fluid. If this wasn't the case, evolution could never have taken place – the principle is change, not being static. In particular, the often quoted criterion, that two different species cannot produce 'fertile offspring' is not consistent with reality. Primates produce fertile offspring, often not only between different species (white-handed gibbon and capped gibbon, hamadryas baboons and olive baboons) but also between different defined genera (such as the hanuman langur [Semnopithecus] and the Nilgiri langur [Presbytis]) and, this happens in the wild. The boundary between the 'species' human and other primates is therefore arbitrary from a biological point of view. There is no 'special characteristic feature' that could justify such a boundary. […]
Martin Balluch (The Dog and his Philosopher: A Call for Autonomy and Animal Rights)