• About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
Monday, January 26, 2026
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
Epaper
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER
No Result
View All Result
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
No Result
View All Result
Home OPINION

The Temptation and Trauma of Fireworks

Adeela Hameed by Adeela Hameed
December 15, 2020
in OPINION
A A
0
The Temptation and Trauma of Fireworks
FacebookTwitterWhatsapp

Not just sacred and formidable, fire is also alluringly entertaining in its various avatars. One of its avatars is fireworks. Used extensively during festivals like Diwali, Christmas, Eid, or in weddings and other celebrations, fireworks are a sight to behold. Even our valley residents extensively make use of firecrackers in almost all social functions, especially weddings, to highlight the happy day.

However, given their high soot content, the air pollution index receives quite a huge blow every year during these events. What adds fuel to fire is how cheap these are sold. Another important aspect that portrays their hazardous nature is how unsafe these are during use. Incidents of fires starting in the Valley because of unchecked celebratory firecracker bursting are one too many to pen down.

More News

Seasonal Departments of Kashmir

PRAGATI and the Reorientation of India’s Infrastructure Governance

Snowfall and the Return of Hope in Kashmir

Load More

Let us go into detail about the onset of firecrackers in India, and how their availability and consumption changed over time.

Fireworks in Medieval India

The primary ingredient of fireworks is gunpowder, which also has a long history in India. A historical conjecture is that the gunpowder technology, along with the first pyrotechnical mixtures for entertainment, was brought by the Arabs to India from China. Firework shows existed in many medieval Indian kingdoms during festivals, events, and special occasions like weddings, as a form of royal entertainment. From the descriptions of crackers and fireworks in medieval India, what’s apparent is not just their grand nature, but that they were quite expensive. Thus, fireworks were commissioned mainly by the rulers for either personal or citizen entertainment, or by the economically endowed of the community.

Fireworks in Modern India

It was in Kolkata that the first fireworks factory in India was set up in the 19th century. Benefiting from the restrictions of imports of firecrackers after independence, Sivakasi in Tamil Nadu emerged as India’s Firecracker hub.

Unlike in the colonial and medieval eras, with an increase in India’s population and economic prosperity of the Indian middle class — particularly in the last 30 years — and with surplus supply arriving from the country’s flourishing domestic industry, the use of firecrackers grew by leaps and bounds.

Though what also made a quantum leap was pollution!

Chemistry of Fireworks

Pyrotechnic bursts are responsible for colors in firecrackers. These bursts consist of five basic ingredients:

     Color producing compounds: Specific compounds produce intense colors when burnt. Some of these used in fireworks are strontium, calcium, sodium and barium as salts while copper, aluminum, magnesium are used as metals.

     Fuel: Gunpowder — a mixture of potassium nitrate, sulfur, and charcoal — is used as fuel. It allows firecrackers to burn.

     Oxidizer: Provides oxygen to power fuel combustion. Includes nitrates, chlorates, and perchlorates.

     Chlorine donor: It helps strengthen some colors. In certain fireworks, oxidizers act as chlorine donors.

     Binder: It holds the mix together. Includes usually, dextrin — a type of starch — and water.

The closest thing to a representative equation of a firecracker burst is depicted below (charcoal is referred to by its empirical formula):

6 KNO3 + C7H4O + 2 S → K2CO3 + K2SO4 + K2S + 4 CO2 + 2 CO + 2 H2O + 3 N2

Noise Pollution and Reduction in Air Quality from Bursting of Firecrackers

An AQI from 0 to 50 is considered good; 51 to 100 is satisfactory; between 101 to 200 is moderate while 201 to 300 and 301 to 400 is considered poor and very poor, respectively.AQI from 401 to 500 is severe and above 500 is hazardous.

Extensive and excessive use of fireworks in India, during Diwali or other celebrations, results in degradation of air quality and an increase in levels of noise pollution. This year, due to COVID-19, many restrictions had been put by the government. Despite strict regulation on timings, set between 8 p.m. and 10 p.m., firecrackers were still burst across India — more in the northern regions — from 6.30 p.m. onwards and even well beyond midnight.

Higher the AQI, more dangerous it is!

In spite of continuously reminding and making our population aware of the ill-effects of bursting fireworks, this issue still remains. Unchecked marketing of such products has further escalated health problems related to the bursting of firecrackers.

Banning fireworks should not be looked at as an anti-religious agenda — as most people usually associate it with — rather as a matter of human health and safety.

Previous Post

DDC ELECTIONS: STEP TOWORDS GRASS ROOT DEMOCRACY

Next Post

Cartoon

Adeela Hameed

Adeela Hameed

Related Posts

Seasonal Departments of Kashmir

January 26, 2026

Kashmir is perhaps the only place in India where entire government departments behave like seasonal shops – they open briefly...

Read moreDetails

PRAGATI and the Reorientation of India’s Infrastructure Governance

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
January 24, 2026

India’s recent progress in infrastructure development is often described through numbers— kilometres of highways built, airports operationalised, or capital expenditure...

Read moreDetails

Snowfall and the Return of Hope in Kashmir

Snowfall Shuts Jammu–Srinagar Highway, 17 Flights Cancelled at Srinagar Airport
January 24, 2026

The long dry spell in Kashmir did not only wound our orchards, rivers, and forests, it quietly entered our hearts...

Read moreDetails

Agricultural Innovation in Kashmir: The rise of new ecosystem

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
January 23, 2026

Even as the once-dominant agriculture sector’s image remained long confined to traditional farming, people for decades largely associated farming in...

Read moreDetails

The Changing Face of Democracy in the Age of Algorithms

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
January 22, 2026

Democracy has never been a static idea. It has evolved with time, technology, and social change. From handwritten ballots to...

Read moreDetails

New Year, New Momentum: Modi’s 2025 Reforms Power India’s Next Leap

PM Modi inaugurates Jammu railway division
January 21, 2026

The New Year brings renewed confidence and optimism to India’s commerce and industry landscape. Decisive steps taken in 2025 are...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Cartoon

Cartoon

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
E-Mailus: kashmirimages123@gmail.com

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.

No Result
View All Result
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.