<p><br />The cover story dated June 7 ‘Can vegetarians save the world’ is directionless. The authors should have provided some solution to the problem rather than highlighting the problem itself. I would also like to add that all vegetarians are not Hitlers.<br /><br />JP<br />Doddaballapur,<br />Bangalore rural</p>.<p>Your Sunday Herald articles are very good and some of them are important as they have an impact on us and the world around us. <br /><br />H N Ramakrishna<br />Indiranagar<br />Bangalore</p>.<p>Oh! what a waste of intellectual capacity. Ishrat and Kalpana exhibit the same level of intellectual purposelessness as Arundhati Roy does, in her endless rants for every cause worthy of a scream. It is surprising how the armchair idealogues of India write eloquent English articles that theorise and interconnect unrelated issues. I fail to understand what Dr Pachauri’s well-intended advise has to do with genocidal tendencies of vegetarians!<br /><br />Deepak Alse<br />Bangalore</p>.<p>The article appears to bring into focus the issue of hunger and depravation as a major cause of concern and not something to debate on eating of meat. <br /><br />Basith M Mehkri<br />Bangalore</p>.<p>It was an excellent cover story regarding vegetarianism and the planet, however, the issue got lost somewhere amidst all that fury and resentment. I enjoyed reading Ms Smitha Bhat’s brilliant short story, ‘The Curfew', the lead book review on Zoe Ferraris’ The Night of the Mi’Raj and other articles.<br /><br />Vasumathi Krishnasami<br />Bangalore</p>
<p><br />The cover story dated June 7 ‘Can vegetarians save the world’ is directionless. The authors should have provided some solution to the problem rather than highlighting the problem itself. I would also like to add that all vegetarians are not Hitlers.<br /><br />JP<br />Doddaballapur,<br />Bangalore rural</p>.<p>Your Sunday Herald articles are very good and some of them are important as they have an impact on us and the world around us. <br /><br />H N Ramakrishna<br />Indiranagar<br />Bangalore</p>.<p>Oh! what a waste of intellectual capacity. Ishrat and Kalpana exhibit the same level of intellectual purposelessness as Arundhati Roy does, in her endless rants for every cause worthy of a scream. It is surprising how the armchair idealogues of India write eloquent English articles that theorise and interconnect unrelated issues. I fail to understand what Dr Pachauri’s well-intended advise has to do with genocidal tendencies of vegetarians!<br /><br />Deepak Alse<br />Bangalore</p>.<p>The article appears to bring into focus the issue of hunger and depravation as a major cause of concern and not something to debate on eating of meat. <br /><br />Basith M Mehkri<br />Bangalore</p>.<p>It was an excellent cover story regarding vegetarianism and the planet, however, the issue got lost somewhere amidst all that fury and resentment. I enjoyed reading Ms Smitha Bhat’s brilliant short story, ‘The Curfew', the lead book review on Zoe Ferraris’ The Night of the Mi’Raj and other articles.<br /><br />Vasumathi Krishnasami<br />Bangalore</p>