A congregation of deities in Himachal
February 27th, 2011 - 11:54 am ICT by IANSBy Vishal Gulati
Mandi (Himachal Pradesh), Feb 27 (IANS) It will be a divine gathering! More than 200 gods and goddesses will ‘congregate’ here next week to participate in the centuries-old Mahashivratri Fair.The week-long Mahashivratri Fair, one of the biggest traditional and religious festivals of the country, begins in Mandi March 3 — the day the festival is celebrated in the northern states - at the temple of Bhutnath, dedicated to Lord Shiva. The celebration of the festival dates back to 1526 when the town was founded during the rule of Ajbar Sen.
Sen had invited all the local deities to celebrate the founding of the new town. Since then, the assembly of deities during Mahashivratri has become an annual tradition.
“Over 215 gods and goddesses will participate in the week-long Mahashivratri festival,” Deputy Commissioner Amandeep Garg, who is also chief organiser of the fair, told IANS.
He said special arrangements have been made by the administration during the stay of the gods and goddesses at the Paddal ground in the town. They would start arriving March 1 and stay till the festival is over.
Prem Sharma, director of the state department of language, art and culture, said like the week-long Kullu Dussehra, which is celebrated in Kullu town, Mandi’s Mahashivratri also sees a congregation of the divine and the temporal.
Mandi, also known as ‘Chotti Kashi’ of Himachal Pradesh, is dotted by more than 60 temples. Prominent among them are those of Bhutnath, Triloki Nath, Jagannath, Tarna Devi and Jalpa Devi.
The rulers of Mandi state were devotees of Lord Shiva.
It is believed that ruler Ajbar Sen (1499-1534) saw in his dreams a cow offering milk to the image of Lord Shiva. His dreams turned into reality when he himself saw the cow offering its milk to the idol.
He then constructed a temple there in 1526 — the Bhutnath temple.
Simultaneously, the foundation of Mandi town was also laid and he shifted his capital here.
The actual fair begins the day after Mahashivratri. Every day the deities move in a colourful procession amid beating of drums and playing of ’shehnais’ to a specific temple for worship and later return to the Paddal ground.
During the first day of the fair, Lord Madho Rai, an incarnate of Lord Vishnu and the chief deity, leads the procession. The assembled deities follow him in beautifully decorated palanquins as per their protocol and assemble at the Bhutnath temple.
Three such processions, locally called Jaleb, are taken out on the opening, middle and concluding day of the fair.
The conduit between the mortals and the deities are the ‘gur’ - the traditional shamans of Himachal, who form the core of the communities’ spiritual sustenance. The ‘gur’ mediates between the people and the gods.
Thousands of devotees, including tourists from the US, Britain, Italy, France, Germany and Israel participate in the festivity.
During the festival, transactions worth millions of rupees take place. Kullu and Kinnauri shawls, handicrafts, carpets and dry fruits are a major attraction for the customers.
(Vishal Gulati can be contacted at vishal.g@ians.in)
- Over 200 deities to join Himachal's Mahashivratri! - Feb 20, 2012
- Weeklong Kullu Dussehra festivities end - Oct 12, 2011
- Week-long Kullu Dussehra festivity begins - Oct 06, 2011
- Invited to Kullu Dussehra: 250 deities! - Sep 29, 2011
- Dam water to recede, Kullu deities coming - Oct 04, 2011
- Himachal deity gets back role in Dussehra festival - May 19, 2012
- Silence please! The gods are meditating in Himachal villlage - Jan 28, 2012
- Divine battle in Kullu Dussehra has chief minister stepping in - Oct 16, 2010
- To pull tourists, Himachal books its legends (IANS Books)(With Image) - Aug 24, 2011
- Lucknow celebrates Mahashivratri with fervour - Mar 02, 2011
- Fasting, prayers mark Mahashivratri in Delhi - Mar 02, 2011
- Where Diwali is dark and celebrated a month later! - Oct 27, 2011
- India celebrates Mahashivratri with fasting and prayers (Roundup) - Mar 02, 2011
- Elephant processions, percussion orchestras mark Kerala festivals (Letter from Kerala) - May 12, 2012
- As 'dark' Diwali dawns, Himachal awaits animal sacrifice - Dec 04, 2010
Tags: amandeep, art and culture, chief organiser, deities, deputy commissioner, devotees, dussehra, garg, gods and goddesses, gulati, himachal pradesh, jalpa, kashi, language art, mahashivratri, march 1, northern states, religious festivals, ruler, sen sen