Kerala – From ‘Land of Coconuts’ to a Landscape in Crisis
The word Kerala is believed to originate from kera (coconut) and alam (land) , reflecting a landscape once defined by endless rows of coconut palms. These trees stood along coastlines, riverbanks, homesteads, and field edges, silently shaping the ecological and cultural rhythm of the land. Coconut palms were never merely crops; they were protectors of soil, providers of livelihoods, companions in ritual life, and natural moderators of microclimate. For centuries, coconuts formed the backbone of Kerala’s daily life. Every part of the tree had purpose: the leaves for thatched roofs and ceremonial decorations, the trunk for housing and boats, the husk for ropes and brushes, the shell for utensils and lamps, and the meat and water as essential elements of diet, medicine, and spirituality. Today, this living landscape is quietly disappearing. The slow collapse of coconut palms across Kerala is not a sudden calamity, but a prolonged ecological unravelling shaped by climate change, wate...