<p>One of my fondest memories about Republic Day through my school years isn’t of flag hoisting or the march past, or even the cultural programme of which I was a significant invisible part of, but the packet of goodies that was doled out to us at the end. A white box that had one <span class="italic">samosa</span>, one <span class="italic">kachori </span>or patties, and the piece de resistance, two, perfectly shaped <span class="italic">boondi ke laddoo</span>. No matter which school I went to, the<span class="italic"> laddoos</span> were a constant. Fascinatingly, I wasn’t alone in connecting boondi ka laddoo with Republic Day, every other person I know vouches for a similar emotion when it comes to Republic Day.</p>.<p>Clearly, whosoever chose the <span class="italic">boondi ka laddoo</span> and made it an essential part of the celebration did a swell job at making the sweet connect — and how. Which makes one wonder: how did <span class="italic">boondi ka laddoo</span> of all its peers become the chosen one? Or was there a historical event that made it stand out? The answer to the puzzle is a little more winding than the easiness of eating the <span class="italic">laddoo</span>. Historically, and by a personal account of historian RV Smith, the association of <span class="italic">laddoos</span> with this day came with the first Republic Day celebration which, while didn’t have the grandeur of the one today, was remarkable in the number of restaurants that participated in making the day grand. While the Gurudwaras served<span class="italic"> langars</span> and Karims and others served food free to lakhs of those who came to Red Fort to witness this significant day, the sweet toothing was left to the iconic Ghantewala. The 225-year-old sweetmeat shop did so by distributing special <span class="italic">desi ghee wale boondi ke laddoo</span> to anyone passing their way. That laid the foundation of the long association between the <span class="italic">laddoo</span> and Republic Day, which schools across India followed suit.</p>.<p>The taste and omnipresence of <span class="italic">boondi ka laddoo, </span>however<span class="italic">,</span> is only a part of the story of why it became the edible chapter of such a significant day; the other is the history too. Food lore has it that when it came to revolutions, it wasn’t just the <span class="italic">chapathi</span> movement that caused much heartburn to the British rulers who couldn’t figure out the message of thousands of flatbreads passing boundaries;<span class="italic"> laddoos</span> too caused a similar anxiety between 1900 and 1930s when the revolutionaries used these not just as their power meals but also to send encrypted messages to one another. <em>L</em><span class="italic">addoos</span>, especially <span class="italic">boondi laddoos</span>, were nicknamed bombs and often used to send coded messages, especially about the delivery of ammunition, laying out of traps, and such. When not playing coders, <span class="italic">laddoos</span> were also used to propagate the cause of nationalism and a free country. Be it the creation of <span class="italic">Thaggu ke laddoo</span>, which was created by Ram Avtar Pandey who, inspired by Mahatama Gandhi’s sermon on how sugar was harming the country, decided to rename his <span class="italic">laddoo</span> as it was made with British Mill processed sugar because that was cheap. Or the <span class="italic">halwais</span> of Varanasi who created a series of sweets including the Jawahar laddoo, a large bonbon specked with colourful bits of dried fruits and nuts, to popularise the leaders and their common dream of having a free, unified country. These sweet advocates, many of which were versions of a popular <span class="italic">laddoo</span> variety, worked as a double whammy for the people of The Crown, who found penalising a sweet indulgence born out of a <span class="italic">halwai</span>’s muse impossible to penalise. Such was the scare that when the police intercepted a telegram stating “Bengali Sweets Dispatched” for the then prominent lawyer and statesman Sri Chettur Sankaran Nair, they went into red alert just to finally realise that the “sweets” that arrived were <span class="italic">rasgullas</span> from Calcutta (now Kolkata) and not bombs. It was the year 1930 — when the Quit India movement was at its peak. And <span class="italic">laddoos</span> were code names for bombs.</p>
<p>One of my fondest memories about Republic Day through my school years isn’t of flag hoisting or the march past, or even the cultural programme of which I was a significant invisible part of, but the packet of goodies that was doled out to us at the end. A white box that had one <span class="italic">samosa</span>, one <span class="italic">kachori </span>or patties, and the piece de resistance, two, perfectly shaped <span class="italic">boondi ke laddoo</span>. No matter which school I went to, the<span class="italic"> laddoos</span> were a constant. Fascinatingly, I wasn’t alone in connecting boondi ka laddoo with Republic Day, every other person I know vouches for a similar emotion when it comes to Republic Day.</p>.<p>Clearly, whosoever chose the <span class="italic">boondi ka laddoo</span> and made it an essential part of the celebration did a swell job at making the sweet connect — and how. Which makes one wonder: how did <span class="italic">boondi ka laddoo</span> of all its peers become the chosen one? Or was there a historical event that made it stand out? The answer to the puzzle is a little more winding than the easiness of eating the <span class="italic">laddoo</span>. Historically, and by a personal account of historian RV Smith, the association of <span class="italic">laddoos</span> with this day came with the first Republic Day celebration which, while didn’t have the grandeur of the one today, was remarkable in the number of restaurants that participated in making the day grand. While the Gurudwaras served<span class="italic"> langars</span> and Karims and others served food free to lakhs of those who came to Red Fort to witness this significant day, the sweet toothing was left to the iconic Ghantewala. The 225-year-old sweetmeat shop did so by distributing special <span class="italic">desi ghee wale boondi ke laddoo</span> to anyone passing their way. That laid the foundation of the long association between the <span class="italic">laddoo</span> and Republic Day, which schools across India followed suit.</p>.<p>The taste and omnipresence of <span class="italic">boondi ka laddoo, </span>however<span class="italic">,</span> is only a part of the story of why it became the edible chapter of such a significant day; the other is the history too. Food lore has it that when it came to revolutions, it wasn’t just the <span class="italic">chapathi</span> movement that caused much heartburn to the British rulers who couldn’t figure out the message of thousands of flatbreads passing boundaries;<span class="italic"> laddoos</span> too caused a similar anxiety between 1900 and 1930s when the revolutionaries used these not just as their power meals but also to send encrypted messages to one another. <em>L</em><span class="italic">addoos</span>, especially <span class="italic">boondi laddoos</span>, were nicknamed bombs and often used to send coded messages, especially about the delivery of ammunition, laying out of traps, and such. When not playing coders, <span class="italic">laddoos</span> were also used to propagate the cause of nationalism and a free country. Be it the creation of <span class="italic">Thaggu ke laddoo</span>, which was created by Ram Avtar Pandey who, inspired by Mahatama Gandhi’s sermon on how sugar was harming the country, decided to rename his <span class="italic">laddoo</span> as it was made with British Mill processed sugar because that was cheap. Or the <span class="italic">halwais</span> of Varanasi who created a series of sweets including the Jawahar laddoo, a large bonbon specked with colourful bits of dried fruits and nuts, to popularise the leaders and their common dream of having a free, unified country. These sweet advocates, many of which were versions of a popular <span class="italic">laddoo</span> variety, worked as a double whammy for the people of The Crown, who found penalising a sweet indulgence born out of a <span class="italic">halwai</span>’s muse impossible to penalise. Such was the scare that when the police intercepted a telegram stating “Bengali Sweets Dispatched” for the then prominent lawyer and statesman Sri Chettur Sankaran Nair, they went into red alert just to finally realise that the “sweets” that arrived were <span class="italic">rasgullas</span> from Calcutta (now Kolkata) and not bombs. It was the year 1930 — when the Quit India movement was at its peak. And <span class="italic">laddoos</span> were code names for bombs.</p>