Durga Puja is no longer something that excites only one community nor is the celebration limited to a few regions… the fervour is the same all over the country. Delhi now probably has more than a thousand puja pandals. But this post isn’t about the pandals… it is about the making of Durga idols and trying to click an essence of the entire process. I had been planning to do this for years but have done it only this year, thanks to the #pujowithcanon photo-walk.
Durga puja happens during the Devi Paksha or the Fortnight of the Goddess and is celebrating the victory of the Goddess over evil. The evil here is the evil buffalo demon Mahishasura. These celebrations happen from ‘the sixth to tenth day of bright lunar fortnight (shukla paksha) in the Hindu calendar month of Ashvin’. Yes, the photo-walk did give me a number of beautiful shots and I have been able to arrange them in a sequence that will give an idea of how the idols get to their final shape.
However, before we get to the photo-essay on the making of Durga idols, let me add here that according to our epics, Lord Ram was a Durga worshipper and before he launched his final assault on Ravana, he is said to have performed the ‘Chandi Homa’ to invoke her (Durga’s) blessings. The epics clarify that Lord Rama was then revealed the secret method of killing Ravana and it was on the day of Ashvin Shukla Dashami, that he (Rama) discovered the whereabouts of Sita and defeated Ravana in battle. Ashvin Shukla Dashami is also celebrated as Dussehra.
Knowing this, I wasn’t a bit surprised to be told that the clay that is collected for idol-making must actually be done following a particular series of rituals. It is on Akshaya Tritiya the day for the Ratha Yatra that clay for the sculptures must be collected from the banks of a river.
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Durga puja isn’t about only religion and rituals now. It is also about the Indian instinct to love a mela and the good food that is invariably there. It is also about art and the competitiveness it has the power to invite. Sometimes the pandals taken together are defined as the largest art festival on earth… but then Bengalis are rather fond of their hyperbole, I guess. But these pandals and this fortnight is for sure a great convergence of art, music, and dance and not worth missing despite the crowd. The Wikipedia states: ‘The prominence of Durga Puja increased gradually during the British Raj in Bengal and erstwhile Assam. After the Hindu reformists identified Durga with India, she became an icon for the Indian independence movement. In the first quarter of the 20th century, the tradition of Baroyari or Community Puja was popularised due to this. After independence, Durga Puja became one of the largest celebrated festivals in the whole world. It is also the largest open Air Art Exhibition in the World.’ Well, wherever there is a festival there is bound to be an exhibition… isn’t Diwali an exhibition of the wealth one has to burn and explode as crackers? Isn’t holi about exhibiting how full of a colourful verve you are? But let me just stay with Durga Puja for a while… and add that the pandals have intricately made idols and an equally intricate and overwhelming exterior. I’ve heard that architects are hired to design the pandals and that the aim is always winning the prize for the best one in a city.
All of this happens between the sixth to ninth days of the waxing moon fortnight known as Devi Paksha, as I have mentioned before…and the tenth day is for the immersion (or visarjan or bishorjan) of the idols to represent return of Durga to her husband Shiva after she has vanquished evil and ensured a victory for all that is good and virtuous.
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A few more pictures that I liked from my shots:
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Arvind Passey
20 October 2015
Note: All photos clicked on my Nikon D5100. lens used: 50mm and 18-55.
10 comments
Ankur says:
Oct 20, 2015
The pictures sum up everything. Amazingly covered Arvind Sir.
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 20, 2015
Thank you, Ankur… do visit my blog again and read the other posts as well. 🙂
VJ Sharma says:
Oct 20, 2015
Nice post with wonderful photographs. I loved the way you observed the place and idols. My fav is 015_Durga Puja
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 20, 2015
Thanks a lot, VJ… but you must know that YOU are the guru and I am just trying to attempt some of the things you keep telling me.
Thank you for liking the post and commenting. 🙂
Sutapa Basu says:
Oct 20, 2015
Arvind, you have caught Durga in all her splendour even as she and a her children are being made. When you wonder at the intricacy of the artists, you must remember that for them the making of the idol is worshipping the deity. So create the Mother that resides in their hearts. So the dedication is not so much for the viewer as much for their own spiritual satisfaction.
Another interesting fact is that in West Bengal a little clay for the idol is collected from a prostitute’s home. In fact the ritual is that she is begged for the clay outside her home and it is taken from her hands as a blessing for a successful idol creation. The reason for this ritual is that when people visit a prostitute it is believed that they leave their purity outside her home. So the clay outside her home is called ‘punya mati’ and it is necessary for the idol.
Strange that all the year, those who are outcastes are suddenly given this significance when the Durga idol, worshipped by all, is created.
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 21, 2015
This is interesting… thank you, Sutapa, for this story. Your story has now inspired me to search for more stories surrounding Durga Puja… and I am planning to go and talk to a few Bengali friends and see if they happen to know any. Nice to have you read my post… 🙂
Chandresh Jain says:
Oct 21, 2015
Durga Puja 2015. This demon is excited to be loaded on the truck… does he even know what is going to happen to him …. The shot reminds me of a scene from movie ” OMG ” where akshay kumar playing the role of Lord Krishna Roam around watching and wandering why people make and worship Statue’s when there hearts are filled with hatred
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 21, 2015
Interesting observation, for sure… and yes, the real essence of festivities is not smiles that are external but harmony that runs like blood in our arteries. 🙂
Swati & Sam says:
Oct 22, 2015
Very beautiful photographs
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 23, 2015
Thank you… 🙂
And I must thank Canon too for allowing a Nikon-wielding enthusiast to join their walk. Ha! Ha!