Maha Kumbh: A gathering of faith
Devotees….come, wash your sins off! Every 12 years, the Maha Kumbh Mela in Haridwar, on the banks of the Ganga, some 200km from Delhi, affords that opportunity to believers.
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Devotees…come, wash your sins off! Every 12 years, the Maha Kumbh Mela in Haridwar, on the banks of the Ganga affords that opportunity to believers.
With a promise to set one off on a journey of new beginnings, the ritualistic bath in river Ganga is considered morally and physically invigorating, cleansing the accumulated evils.
Maha Kumbh 2010 is attracting huge crowds. Beginning on Makar Sankranti on January 14, it will last through till the end of April. Interspersed in that three-month period are 10 ritualistic shahi snans (royal baths) on celestially significant days when the numbers at the Maha Kumbh can run to several millions. -
According to Hindu mythology, Haridwar is one of the four places where a drop of the nectar of immortality or ‘amrit' fell from the pitcher or ‘kumbh' when Garuda, the divine bird of Lord Vishnu, was spiriting it away from the demons after a pitched battle. (Image Courtesy: Tejas Mehta)
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As dusk falls, aartis are performed in all temples and shrines that line the banks of river Ganga, lighting up the temple town. One witnesses the ringing of bells, the swirling of oil lamps and chanting of mantras in a holy unison of sorts.(Image Courtesy: Tejas Mehta)
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The Ganga aarti is one of the most enchanting sights. Amidst the holy chants, offerings of lamps and flowers are made to the Ganga. Immediately after the ceremony, it is a moving sight to watch hundreds of miniature lamps float along the river. (Image Courtesy: Tejas Mehta)
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In just about half an hour, the aarti, a daily ritual is over, and the crowd starts to disperse. What's left behind are thousands of beautiful diyas floating along the river and devotees taking a holy dip in the, now, dark waters of the Ganga. (Image Courtesy: Tejas Mehta)
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The Maha Kumbh poses a huge organisational challenge to the authorities. There are tens of thousands of policemen, dispersing the crowd over the banks of the river and barricading Har ki Paudi (a mere 150m stretch on the bank of the Ganga considered the holiest of holy places in Haridwar) in order to prevent a stampede. (Image Courtesy: Tejas Mehta)
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The pilgrims comprise families with children in tow, men and women who have ferried their ageing parents for a final teerth (pilgrimage), entire villages who have trudged in uncomfortable buses to get here, the amused foreigners and the grumpy youngsters who have been forced to come here by their eager parents. (Image Courtesy: Tejas Mehta)
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The Maha Kumbh has a sharp message this year - protection of the environment. The pollution of the Ganga will be a major issue at the fair this year - where almost all the spiritual sects and the administration have pledged to protect the river. (Image Courtesy: Tejas Mehta)
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The Kumbh Mela in Haridwar witnesses the maximum gathering of sadhus and devotees. Most of them put in makeshift ashrams at the venue of the Mela of in age-old dharamshalas-- while some of these are huge and ostentatious, others are humble and economical. (Image Courtesy: Tejas Mehta)