This Halloween, you can smell the tree of the devil in Goa

With Halloween around the corner, revellers might be planning their most ghoulish attire, but in Goa, you should be aware of this tree, too
OTHER-WORLDLY FRAGRANCE: The fragrance of the Devil’s Tree is hard to miss at this time of year in Goa.
OTHER-WORLDLY FRAGRANCE: The fragrance of the Devil’s Tree is hard to miss at this time of year in Goa.Photo: Gomantak Times
Published on
Updated on

These days, the air at night has a strong jasmine-like fragrance, wafting up in the twilight and misty night. What the ‘devil’ could its source possibly be?

The overpowering fragrance last night reminded me of it when I was going for a meeting of my school alumni association to plan for the upcoming football tournament, quiz and Christmas dance.

Indeed, the fragrance emanated from the Satan’s Tree or Devil’s Tree, Alstonia scholaris, and its vernacular names in India are Shaitan ka pedd (in Hindi) and Satonn or Soitanachem zadd (in the Konkani language).

OTHER-WORLDLY FRAGRANCE: The fragrance of the Devil’s Tree is hard to miss at this time of year in Goa.
Think trees don't bloom in Goa during the monsoons? Think again

ABOUT DEVIL’S TREE

In India and Sri Lanka, the light-weight wood of the tree is used to make coffins so that it is easier to carry the dead for burial.

Its unmistakable fragrance can leave asthmatics gasping for breath during the starry nights from Dussehra to Christmas. We are in that period right now.

VISION IN WHITE: The white bunches of flowers of the Devil’s Tree resemble ixora.
VISION IN WHITE: The white bunches of flowers of the Devil’s Tree resemble ixora.Photo: Miguel Braganza

The white bunches of flowers, that resemble ixora or pentas bunches, add an eerie feel on moonlit nights in dark forested areas.

The fragrance of the nocturnal blooming flowers is only experienced at night – the dark period that we associate with the devil and ghosts. Death reminds us of the devil like no other event in life can.

The tribals of the Bastar region refuse to go near the tree at night, perhaps, because some of them might have been rendered breathless by respiratory allergies. Hence, the name ‘Devil’s Tree’ has stuck to it.

OTHER-WORLDLY FRAGRANCE: The fragrance of the Devil’s Tree is hard to miss at this time of year in Goa.
‘Matti’ isn’t the only 'Terminalia' tree in Goa

They say that the devil is in the details. The tree species, Alstonia scholars, is native to southern China, tropical Asia and Australasia and is known for its towering height. That gives a lot of wood, as timber, for making planks.

After winning the ‘Battle of Plassey’ at a place that got its name from the Palash tree, Butea monosperma, the British East India Company and the British colony of India established its roots in Bengal and the adjoining Indo-Gangetic plains.

The wood of the Alstonia was used to make classroom furniture and blackboards as also the sheath for lead pencils.

HIGH & MIGHTY: The wood of the Alstonia scholars is used to make planks.
HIGH & MIGHTY: The wood of the Alstonia scholars is used to make planks.Photo: Miguel Braganza

Europeans know it as the Scholar’s Tree, and Indians often saw the devil in the English education system that produced assembly-line workers and clerks for the colonialists. So, either way, the names are appropriate.

This name was in vogue even before the Vishwa-Bharati University began the tradition of offering one Alstonia leaf to each student at the annual convocation ceremony.

The tradition, since its institution in 1901, has been attributed to Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), who was the first Asian to receive the Nobel Prize.

OTHER-WORLDLY FRAGRANCE: The fragrance of the Devil’s Tree is hard to miss at this time of year in Goa.
Common roadside trees that you can expect to see in Goa

Although it produces four shoots in each flush of growth, the tree generally grows to a height of about 40 m tall, with a single trunk that is branched only at the crown.

The leaves of the easy-to-grow Alstonia tree are glossy, and the tree is attractive even when without flowers.

This majestic tree can be found all over Goa, and two of them have been cut in the last few days in front of Mall de Goa (Porvorim) to widen the road in preparation for the elevated road, or viaduct, that is now under construction from Guirim to the Atal Sethu bridge.

Curious? If you want to smell the fragrance of the tree, head for the Head Post Office in the Sao Tome area of Panjim, and the Shah Jahan region of Kala Academy in Campal, Panjim – but only at night.

(The author is the former Chairman of the GCCI Agriculture Committee, CEO of Planter's Choice Pvt Ltd, Additional Director of OFAI and Garden Superintendent of Goa University, and has edited 18 books for Goa & Konkan)

Your Gateway to Goa, India

The Gomantak Times app is the best way to stay informed on anything happening in Goa. From breaking news to the top 10 restaurants to visit, GT helps you navigate your time in Goa.

Download the Gomantak Times app on your Android or IOS device.

Related Stories

No stories found.
Goa News on Gomantak Times
www.gomantaktimes.com