Harvest Hymn — Class 8 English (Poorvi)
"The land is fertile because of the toil of countless farmers; their hands have written every harvest."
1. About the Chapter
A poem celebrating the harvest — the annual fruition of farming labour. Continues Unit 4's environmental theme by celebrating the bond between farmers, soil, and crop.
Themes
- Gratitude for harvest
- Farmer's hard work
- Rhythm of seasons
- Connection between human and earth
- Spirituality of agriculture
2. The Hymn (Conceptual)
A 'hymn' is a song of praise. 'Harvest Hymn' = song of praise FOR the harvest.
Indian agriculture has many such hymns:
- Vedic hymns to earth (Bhumi Sukta)
- Folk songs sung during harvest in every state
- Festivals: Baisakhi (Punjab), Pongal (TN), Onam (Kerala), Bihu (Assam), Makar Sankranti (across India), Lohri (Punjab)
3. The Indian Agricultural Cycle
Kharif (Monsoon Crops)
- Sowed June-July (with monsoon)
- Harvested October-November
- Examples: rice, jowar, bajra, maize, soybean, cotton
Rabi (Winter Crops)
- Sowed October-November
- Harvested March-April
- Examples: wheat, barley, mustard, gram
Zaid (Summer Crops)
- Sowed April-May
- Harvested June
- Examples: watermelon, cucumber, sugarcane
4. Harvest Festivals of India
| Festival | State | Crop |
|---|---|---|
| Baisakhi | Punjab | Wheat harvest (April 13) |
| Pongal | Tamil Nadu | Rice harvest (January) |
| Onam | Kerala | Rice harvest (August-September) |
| Bihu | Assam | Three Bihus across year |
| Makar Sankranti | India-wide | Sun's northward journey (January) |
| Lohri | Punjab/Haryana | Winter end (January 13) |
| Nuakhai | Odisha | New rice (August-September) |
| Vaisakhi | Punjab/Haryana | Same as Baisakhi |
These celebrate the year's HARDEST WORK paying off — the food that sustains life.
5. India's Farmers
Statistics
- 50%+ of India's workforce in agriculture
- Most are SMALL farmers (< 2 hectares)
- 70% of cultivated land depends on monsoon
- 200+ million people directly dependent
Challenges
- Monsoon uncertainty (climate change)
- Falling water tables
- Soil degradation
- Low prices for crops
- Farmer distress
Reforms
- MSP (Minimum Support Price)
- PM Kisan (cash transfer)
- Crop insurance
- E-NAM (online market)
- Soil Health Card scheme
Hero Farmers
- M.S. Swaminathan — Father of Green Revolution
- Verghese Kurien — White Revolution
- Norman Borlaug — global Green Revolution (worked in India)
6. Themes of 'Harvest Hymn'
Gratitude
For sun, rain, soil, and seed.
Labour Honoured
Farmers' work is sacred.
Cyclic Time
Seasons return; harvests return; life continues.
Earth as Mother
'Bhumi Mata' — providing for all her children.
Community Celebration
Harvest is collective; whole village rejoices.
7. Activities
- Read the poem aloud with rhythm
- Discuss harvest festivals in students' families
- Research one festival in depth
- Visit a farm (if possible) or talk to a farmer
- Write a thank-you note to farmers
8. Vocabulary
- HARVEST: gathering of mature crops
- HYMN: song of praise
- SOW: plant seeds
- REAP: cut and gather
- MONSOON: seasonal rains
- FERTILE: productive (soil)
- FALLOW: rested land between crops
- GRANARY: place to store grain
- AGRARIAN: relating to agriculture
9. Conclusion
The 'Harvest Hymn' celebrates the rhythm that sustains all civilisation — the cycle of planting and reaping. Behind every meal lies months of farmer labour, prayer to the rain gods, anxiety over weather, and joy at successful harvest.
India's harvest festivals (Baisakhi, Pongal, Onam, Bihu, Lohri, Makar Sankranti) remind us to:
- THANK the farmers
- HONOUR the earth
- CELEBRATE the seasons
- REMEMBER that food is sacred
Next time you eat rice or wheat, think of the harvest hymn — and silently thank the farmer whose toil filled your plate.
Annadata Sukhi Bhava — May the food-giver be happy.
