Why Drying and Pickling Halt in a Mourning Year

According to Dharmasastra texts such as the Manusmrti, Parasara Smrti, and Grhya Sutras, when a close relative dies, the family enters a period of asauca (ritual impurity). This can last from 10 days (dasaha) to a full year (sutaka), depending on relationship and custom.

During this period, the family avoids samskaras (sacred acts), mangalakaryas (auspicious undertakings), and long-term preservative activities like pickling and drying vegetables.

The idea is that death represents incompletion and rupture in family karma, and hence no new storing, preserving, or future oriented work should be done until ritual purification and sraddha rites are performed.

In Kashmiri Pandit households, drying vegetables (wangan hachh, Aali hachh, tamatar hachh, etc.) and preparing pickles (anchar) are not just culinary practices, but acts of preserving prosperity through the winter. Drying is tied to continuity of life (keeping food alive in a dormant form through harsh times).

Pickling is tied to transformation and longevity. Engaging in these symbolic acts while a soul of the family is still unsettled (before annual sraddha) was seen as inauspicious, as it might obstruct the departed soul’s journey or invite stagnation in family prosperity.

Parasara Smrti (11.30–32) explicitly says: “During impurity caused by death, one must not perform acts of preservation (nidhana), collection, or new undertakings.”

Manusmrti (5.83) prescribes that “when a death occurs, the house is impure, and the family should refrain from sacred rites, festivities, and works of storage until purification.”

The Grhya Sutras of the Kathaka (followed in Kashmir) link food preservation with punya (merit) and therefore prohibit it during asauca.

Following these pan-Indic injunctions, Kashmiri Pandits localised the practice:

For one full year after death, no dried vegetables or pickles are prepared in the house. Only after the Varsika Sraddha (first death anniversary), when the soul is ritually settled with ancestors (pitrloka), does the household resume these acts of continuity and preservation.

In Kashmir Saiva tradition, ahara (food) is not mere sustenance, but a vehicle of prana. Preparing stored foods during mourning was believed to bind the prana of the departed soul, delaying its onward journey. Abstaining reflects tyaga (renunciation) and anugraha (grace) for the departed.

Kashmiri Pandits abstain from drying vegetables and preparing pickles in the year of a family death because ancient scriptures (Smrtis and Grhya Sutras) prohibit preservative and auspicious works during asauca. The acts of food preservation symbolise continuity, prosperity, and long life, which must pause until the departed soul finds its rightful place among the ancestors.

Chander M. Bhat was born in Murran, South Kashmir, and served as Assistant Director Postal Services in the Department of Posts, Government of India. He is the author of eighteen books spanning philately, history and Kashmiri culture. His life's work is the documentation of Kashmiri Pandit heritage: 661 shrines and temples across the valley, and 595 villages recorded across six volumes in his series OAL… THE NEST. He has received the Tika Lal Taploo Award for contribution to Kashmiri culture, two gold medals for philatelic excellence, and honours including the Sri Sharda Stabadi Samman (2022).

1 Comment

  • Neena

    as of now, neither those rituals are followed nor our community believes in all that; nevethelesss, its need of the hour

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