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16/04/2005
Celebrating the joys of Mother Earth
The weeklong celebration, in fact, has gripped the Jharkhand countryside. Visit any tribal habitat on the outskirts of Ranchi and you will find tribals, drunk on hadia, celebrating Sarhul with pomp and enthusiasm. The city on Monday witnessed this festive spirit. I noticed a marked difference between the involvement of the city in Sarhul and in festivals like Durga Puja and Ramnavami. The city was only an onlooker, enraptured by the high spirits of tribals attired in leaves and smeared in gulal. Last year in October, Churuwala, Kaveri and other restaurants opened extended stalls for Durga puja revellers and did brisk business with couples and kids going out to eat. There were huge crowds at garment shops and sweet stalls during the puja. Traders dominated the puja committees, which organised cultural programs, and the city hummed for seven days with inhabitants visiting the puja pandals that dotted its nooks and corners. Ranchi is all set to witness similar involvement during Ramnavami on April 18. The restaurants and garment shops, however, showed little interest in the centuries-old Sarhul, the predominant festival of tribals. Understandably so, as the indigent tribals hardly have any buying power to inspire the traders. Though Governor Syed Sibte Razi gave his message of love for nature through an advertisement and some non-tribal politicians attended the Sarhul procession, the city residents, at large, were indifferent to it. Experts
say that the festivals like Durga Puja and Ramnavami came to the city
with the arrival of Sarhul a combination of Mundari words sarai (flower) and hul (bouquet) means a bouquet of summer-blooming flowers. As the name suggests, the tribals worship trees and flowers that decorate mother Earth. According to Jagdish Trigunayats Munda Lok Kathayen (Folk tales of the Mundas), Sarhul celebrates the arrival of Viddi, believed to be the daughter of the Earth. Once upon a time, Viddi, in a bid to pluck a lotus, drowned in a river and went to Yamlok. The mothers grief at the treatment meted out to he daughter caused the flowers and trees growing on her lap to dry up. The creator of the universe had to intervene and request Yama, lord of death, to return Viddi to earth. Viddi landed on earth to the delight of her mother, who infused life in the flowers and trees once again. To date, pahans (priests) decorate their homes with flowers to mark Sarhul. Jharkhand watchers say that the Sarhul procession has been getting relatively smaller and less enthusiastic in the last two decades. They describe the citys indifference towards the festival as the main reason for the decline of enthusiasm in Sarhul. (Courtesy The Telegraph)
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