Some people claim that putting a turmeric mask on their skin or eating turmeric will help fight stubborn pimples — perhaps because of Spice’ss spice’s reported antibacterial and anti-inflammatory properties. Unfortuthere’s there’s no hard science to back this up.Khandoba’sandoba‘s newer temple in Jejuri, where devotees shower turmeric powder (Bhandara) on each other
In 2019, the European Medicines Agency concluded that turmeric herbal teas or other forms taken by mouth could relieve mild digestive problems, such as feelings of fullness and flatulence, based on their long-standing traditional use.
Turmeric grows wild in the forests of South and Southeast Asia, where it is collected for use in classical Indian medicine (Siddha or Ayurveda). In Eastern India, the plant is used as one of the nine components of nabapatrika along with young plantain or banana plant, taro leaves, barley (jayanti), wood apple (bilva), pomegranate (marimba), Saraca indica, Manaka (Arum), or manakochu, and rice paddy. The Haldi ceremony called gaye holud in Bengal (li”erally “yellow on “he body”) is a ceremony observed during wedding celebrations of people of Indian culture throughout the Indian subcontinent.
In Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, dried turmeric tubers tied with string are used to create a Thali necklace as part of the Tamil-Telugu marriage ritual. In western and coastal India, during weddings of the Marathi and Konkani people, Kannada Brahmins, turmeric tubers are tied with strings by the couple to their wrists during a ceremony called Kankana Bandhana.
Turmeric is a poor fabric dye, as it is not lightfast, but it is commonly used in Indian clothing, such as saris and Bmonks’t monks’ robes. During the late Edo period (1603–1867), turmeric was used to dilute or substitute more expensive safflower dyestuff to produce beni itajime shibori. Friedrich Ratzel reported in The History of Mankind in 1896 that in Micronesia, turmeric powder was appliedto embellishf the body, clothing, utensils, and ceremonial uses. Native Hawaiians who introduced it to Hawaii (Hawaiian: ʻōlena) make a bright yellow dye out of it.