Indians are perhaps the masters of making the most out of anything that is available to them. Recusing and repurposing articles has been a common practice seen across the country.
A similar example was seen in a Gurudwara’s langar khana where a volunteer was distributing lassi/buttermilk in a unique way with very little human labor, maintaining social distancing.
In a video that has been making the rounds on the internet, a young boy is seen moving with a huge steel drum attached to a cart fixed with four wheels. The bottom-right side of the drum has a tap that dispenses the lassi in the empty katoris of the lines of devotees seated to have their meals on the floor of the gurudwara. As the boy moves the device, which is operated with cycle brakes and pulls the brakes, the liquid pours out of the tap with no physical contact.
This video was initially shared by a person named Vikram Kalra and was reshared by the Facebook handle of GurudwaraConnect. Later on, the same video was then shared on Twitter by an official of Amazon India, Amit Agarwal on Engineer’s Day. He shared it wishing the engineers a very happy engineers day.
To engineering innovations!
Happy Engineers Day! pic.twitter.com/kAIKsYrG56— Amit Agarwal (@AmitAgarwal) September 16, 2020
Netizens have immensely lauded the technique. The video has been viewed for over 51.2k times by now with 408 Retweets, 39 Quote Tweets, and 2.7K Likes.
Super Innovative.
— Vishal Mehta (@vshalrmehta) September 16, 2020
Super Innovative.
— Vishal Mehta (@vshalrmehta) September 16, 2020
A netizen even claimed to have visited the Gurudwara which is at Leh, Ladakh.
Yes. I have deen this in Gurudwara at Leh.
— Sandeep Gandhi (@Sandeep_Gandhi) September 16, 2020
This is a great innovation to check the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. May Wahe Guru bless the inventor.