Telangana
Hyderabad’s Annual Fish Prasadam Distribution Begins Today
Hyderabad: Tens of thousands of respiratory patients from across India converged at the Nampally Exhibition Grounds today for the state’s massive, annual “Fish Prasadam” distribution event. The 179-year-old traditional practice, overseen by the Bathini Goud family, commenced to mark the auspicious onset of the Mrigasira Karthi monsoon phase.
Organized continuously since 1845, the family administers a secret yellow herbal paste stuffed inside the mouth of a live, 5-to-7 cm murrel fingerling fish. The patient then swallows the live fish whole.
Believers hold that the active movement of the live fish sliding down the throat clears persistent phlegm congestion and effectively relieves chronic asthma symptoms over time. For strict vegetarians, the family provides the same herbal paste mixture combined with jaggery (bellam) instead of the live fish.
To streamline the overwhelming influx of interstate travelers, the Telangana State Government mobilized extensive inter-departmental operations. Telangana Minister for Minorities Welfare Mohammed Azharuddin and Transport Minister Ponnam Prabhakar personally inspected the venue layout to establish elaborate security barricades, drinking water stalls, and round-the-clock emergency medical camps.
The State Fisheries Department set up dedicated counters to systematically distribute over 1.2 lakh live fish seeds to the venue. Meanwhile, the Hyderabad Metro Rail increased train frequencies on its Red Line toward the Nampally and Gandhi Bhavan stations to keep traffic congestion at a minimum.
The Scientific DisconnectWhile the festival attracts immense faith and loyalty from repeat visitors who return annually for the prescribed 3-year treatment cycle, it remains highly scrutinized. Traditional rationalist groups and the Indian Medical Association (IMA) frequently appeal to the courts regarding the event.
Medical professionals label the treatment as unscientific and push for a full chemical disclosure of the herbal ingredients, though the Bathini family fiercely guards the recipe, claiming that publicizing it would break a sacred vow and strip the medicine of its cure potential.