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HomeTravelPilgrims flock to Ganges for world’s biggest festival

Pilgrims flock to Ganges for world’s biggest festival

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HUNDREDS of thousands of Hindu pilgrims led by naked, ash-covered holy men streamed into the sacred river Ganges on Monday (January 14) at the start of the world’s biggest religious festival.

 

The Kumbh Mela in the Indian town of Allahabad will see up to 100 million worshippers gather over the next 55 days to take a ritual bath in the holy waters, believed to cleanse sins and bestow blessings.

 

Before daybreak on Monday, a day chosen by astrologers as auspicious, hundreds of gurus, some brandishing swords and tridents, ran into the swirling and freezing waters for the first bath, signalling the start of events.

 

Assorted dreadlocked holymen, seers and self-proclaimed saints from all over the country have assembled for the colourful and chaotic spectacle that offers a rare glimpse of the dizzying range of Indian spiritualism.

 

“I am ecstatic. When I enter the Ganges I feel so happy, it’s a feeling I can’t explain,” said Mokshanand, a heavily bearded guru who emerged shivering from the water in a small pair of saffron-coloured underpants.

 

“Our biggest wish is that there is peace and that people should look after each other,” a member of the Naga Sadhus, a devout, fierce and famously nude sect of followers of the Hindu god Shiva, told reporters.

 

For most ordinary Indians, the Kumbh Mela is a religious holiday enjoyed in an almost carnival atmosphere, where prayers and blessings are offered and sought alongside family or friends camping together at the vast festival site.

 

The hardships of being squeezed in the crowds, enduring endless whistling and barked orders from thousands of policemen and even catching a cold in the chilly January weather are seen as a price worth paying for a dip.

 

“I was a bit reluctant to go in at first because of the cold, but I was pushed into the river by the mass of people,” Indu Bala Dhawan, a 70-year-old grandmother from western Punjab, told reporters.

 

“I yelled at first but I’m very happy now.”

 

The Kumbh Mela takes place every 12 years in Allahabad, in Uttar Pradesh, with smaller but similar events every three years in other locations around India.

 

It has its origins in Hindu mythology, which describes how a few drops of the nectar of immortality fell on the four places that host the festival – Allahabad, Nasik, Ujjain and Haridwar.

 

For men like Ram Krishna Verma, a 42-year-old farmer from Chhattisgarh, who has travelled some 700 kilometres, it is a time of solemn duty as he has come to scatter the ashes of his late mother.

 

“She died two months ago,” he told reporters. “This is the final resting place.”

 

The “Mother Ganges” is worshipped as a god and is seen as both the giver and taker of life. Most devotees dunk their heads under the water, some drink it and others bottle it and take it home as gifts.

 

Police expect 250,000 people on Monday (January 15) with 20 million anticipated on February 15, the most auspicious day. Overall, organisers are counting on about 100 million coming, the same number as in 2001.

 

The management of the festival requires a monumental effort – and a budget of 16 trillion rupees ($290m/£179.79m) – but officials say everything is in place for a safe and successful event.

 

Senior state police officer Arun Kumar said the biggest concern was crowd control and the 12,000 officers on duty would be monitoring to guard against stampedes – a frequent and deadly occurrence at Indian religious festivals.

 

Organisers have set up 35,000 toilets, 14 medical centres, 22,000 street lights, 150 kms of temporary roads, 18 bridges, and new sewage facilities.

 

Nearly 7,000 buses and hundreds of special trains are expected to ferry people to Allahabad where the heavily polluted Yamuna river flows into the Ganges.

 

Despite its important role in Hinduism, the Ganges is tainted by industry and the settlements along its banks, which quickly turn the clear waters from the Himalayas into a murky, frothy brown downstream.

 

Local authorities have cracked down on untreated effluent from nearby factories and new drainage facilities have cut the immediate flow of raw sewage.

 

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