Sandalwood applications go beyond religious and medicinal values
The natural resource has often been regulated for various political and economic reasons
image for illustrative purpose
It was 1792 when Tipu Sultan declared Indian sandalwood a royal tree and designated it as a protected species. Later, British colonial forces — who had already exploited other sandalwood species throughout the Pacific Islands — placed Indian sandalwood under their protection, while they harvested the tree for trade with China
Conserving or protecting natural resources, like landscapes or products, can involve limiting people's access or use. When natural resources are connected to cultural, religious or spiritual practices, conservation needs to consider both biological and cultural diversity.
Indian or red sandalwood (Santalum album), highly valued for its wood and oil, is a natural resource with significant economic and cultural value. The fragrant wood is used for carvings, furniture and in buildings, while the oil distilled from its heartwood has perfume, incense and medicinal applications.
We spoke to a chemist, an environmental historian and an environment and society researcher, on why cultural preservation is the key for sustainable management of natural resources like sandalwood.
Cultural and medical applications: Danny Hettiarachchi is a chemist and adjunct research fellow at the University of Western Australia. It is wood of particular significance to him because of his personal cultural connections. Hettiarachchi researches sandalwood cultivation and its applications. Not only is sandalwood historically significant to Asian, African and Middle Eastern cultural practices as a perfume, incense or medicine, but it gained popularity in the West for its properties that made it an ideal perfume fixative.
“Sandalwood is one of the best vehicles or fixatives in perfumes. It has been there from some of the earliest perfumes created in western or modern perfume styles,” says Hettiarachchi.
History of endangerment: Ezra Rashkow is an environmental and South Asian historian at Montclair State University in the U.S. His research considers historical environmental conservation policies as they relate to the endangerment of natural and cultural resources.
Rashkow describes sandalwood as a natural resource that has often been regulated for various political and economic reasons.
“As early as the 1790s, really, in India, under the ruler of what's now the Mysore region in Karnataka state, I believe it was 1792 when Tipu Sultan declared Indian sandalwood a royal tree and designated it as a protected species,” he says. Later, British colonial forces — who had already exploited other sandalwood species throughout the Pacific Islands — placed Indian sandalwood under their protection, while they harvested the tree for trade with China.
“Sandalwood finds an extremely important place in early colonial world history because sandalwood was one of the very few commodities that the Chinese were willing to trade for gold and silver,” Rashkow explains.
The demand for sandalwood, along with its overharvesting to meet the rising demand, resulted in very few sandalwood trees remaining in India. Because it is a hemiparasitic tree, cultivating it has been challenging until recently. Sandalwood's availability is also complicated by a fungus that causes spike disease and deforestation, as well as the fact that it can take up to 20 years for a tree to reach maturity.
Intertwining nature and culture Nature became separated from culture beginning with the Renaissance period, and this has increased throughout the Industrial era.
Jules Pretty, professor of environment and society at the University of Essex in the United Kingdom, studies human-environment relations.
“Nature and culture, they are the same. They have always been the same in human history until a kind of separation of nature and people (came along) with agriculture, cities, modern economies, and so forth.”
Pretty describes sandalwood as a perfect example through which to explore the relationships between nature and culture.
“A lot of people value sandalwood. It's closely intertwined into cultures and people feel as though it's a central part of their lives,” says Pretty, adding that lessons about sustainability can be learned from the management of sandalwood.
“It is a sacred tree in many communities in south India, for example. Because it has that kind of characterization, that value of being sacred, it's looked after in a particular kind of way, which again, gets us back to thinking about sustainability,” is Pretty’s elucidation.