City council is set to vote later this month on whether to ban backyard fireworks across London – creating a public debate that’s trained a spotlight on Diwali, a Hindu festival during which fireworks are a key component.
City council is set to vote later this month on whether to ban backyard fireworks across London – creating a public debate that’s trained a spotlight on Diwali, a Hindu festival during which fireworks are a key component. With the city’s 10,000-strong Hindu community pushing back against a total ban, our Norman De Bono delves into the details of the religious event
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“Diwali is the most celebrated festival by Hindus all over the world. It’s about good over evil, light over dark. It’s a cleansing,” said Paresh Soni, executive director of Hindu Legacy, a local advocacy group. “We light up the sky to celebrate our ancestors visiting us and to commit to moving from dark to light.”
Most London families will have a small celebration of a few fireworks when this year’s festival takes place in October, he said. “We’ve been here in London for more than 30 years and asked for nothing, but we’re asking for this: To be respected. It’s an important part of our religious tradition.”
- Diwali is known as the festival of lights and is a widely celebrated Hindu holiday.
- The word Diwali derives from Sanskrit and means “a row of lights.” Festivities include the illumination of lights, candles, firecrackers and clay lamps to symbolize the victory of good over evil, inner light over spiritual darkness and knowledge over ignorance.
- Diwali is a time for gathering with loved ones, celebrating life, and committing to making the right decisions in life.
- Diwali is synchronized with the lunar calendar so the actual dates vary from year to year. Diwali typically falls between October and November.
- Diwali is celebrated by Hindus, Jains, Sikhs, Buddhists, and people of Indian heritage and non-Indian heritage.
- Diwali will be held Oct. 12, 2023.
- Diwali is the third of a five-day festival, during which people will clean the house, make colored patterns on the floor with flowers, powder, rice or sand, go shopping, and make sweet and savory treats, decorate their homes and display clay lamps.
- On the day of Diwali, people dress in new clothes, visit the temple, light lamps around the house, keep all the lights on, eat food and sweets and enjoy fireworks.
- After Diwali, it is the first day of the New Year for many regions and people celebrate by exchanging gifts and best wishes.
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(Source: Hindu Legacy)
City hall is looking at two options for its new fireworks bylaw:
- Option A would allow for consumers to discharge fireworks on Canada Day, Victoria Day and Diwali only. It also would decrease the number of days fireworks can be sold from seven days to five days before the holiday and increase fines for rule-breakers.
- Option B All consumer fireworks and the sale of consumer fireworks in London would be banned and fines increased.
- Under both optionsprofessional fireworks shows, with a city hall permit, would be allowed.
Council’s community and protective services committee voted to endorse Option A with an amendment that all sellers be licensed. It goes to city council Aug 29 for a final decision. If supported, the new bylaw likely will be in effect at year end.
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Ward 7 Coun. Corrine Rahman made the motion supported at the committee to go with Option A, and moved the amendment.
“I’m aware that banning fireworks would not be a ban. Other communities have banned and found that people were able to buy online and in surrounding communities,” Rahman said, adding she considers Option A “a balanced approach.”
The current bylaw is much like Option A, but allows fireworks other than the specified holidays. Past city councils, after rain washed out Canada Day and Victoria Day celebrations, allowed a wider period to use fireworks. This new bylaw would change that.
Fireworks can only be sold now in London under seasonal sales licences, like flowers and roadside produce. City hall often gets complaints some are being sold outside the allowable window, such as at variety stores.
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“We have laid charges against pop-ups that sell early, or display them in the sun. We have seized fireworks,” said Orest Katolyk, city hall’s bylaw boss. “It’s one of those issues where there are a lot of discussion points from culture to nuisance to personal health, pets and animals and environmental damage and people’s rights to use a legal product. The debates are lively.”
Another issue for bylaw enforcement is noise complaints. City hall has taken over noise complaint enforcement from London police. This year it received 1,200 complaints but only seven were fireworks related, said Katolyk.
Those who want a fireworks ban have many reasons.
- Environmental damage. The chemicals used to make the fireworks end up on the ground and in groundwater.
- Safety. They’re explosive and people can be hurt. Fires also are a concern.
- Trauma to those who suffer anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder.
- Loss of sleep when they’re fired late.
- harm to animalsboth pets and wildlife that have been known to seek shelter from explosions.
- There are alternatives such as light or drone shows.
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- Is fun a good reason in the face of such grave concerns? Supporters will say it happens only a few days a year, they offer education to consumers who buy fireworks and businesses that sell them employ people while not-for-profits raise money with the sale.
- If banned, they will still happen in an unlicensed, unregulated way and that will be worse for safety, noise and police concerns.
- Religion and cultural rights. Some celebrations such as Diwali see fireworks as important and a religious right.
- About 70,000 fireworks are sold in London annually.
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