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Millions purify themselves at largest Hindu festival

Published: 15 Jan 2013 - 06:38 am | Last Updated: 06 Feb 2022 - 03:52 am


Hindu devotees after taking a dip during the first Shahi Snan (grand bath) at the ongoing Kumbh Mela, or Pitcher Festival, in the northern city of Allahabad, yesterday.  

ALLAHABAD: Upwards of a million elated Hindu priests and pilgrims took a bracing plunge in the Ganges river to wash away lifetimes of sins yesterday, in a raucous start to an ever-growing religious gathering.

Once every 12 years, tens of millions of pilgrims stream to the small northern city of Allahabad from across the country for the Maha Kumbh Mela, or Grand Pitcher Festival, at the point where the Ganges and Yamuna rivers meet a third, mythical river.

Officials believe that over the next two months as many as 100 million people will pass through the temporary city that covers an area larger than Athens on a wide sandy river bank. That would make it larger even than previous festivals. 

After a slow start, police chief Alok Sharma said 1.5 million people had gathered by 8am yesterday, with more on their way.

Two dreadlocked men riding horses emerged from thick camp smoke before dawn, followed by a crowd of ash-smeared and naked holy men, or sadhus, one incongruously wearing a suit jacket. At exactly five minutes past six (0035 GMT), they yelled and dashed dancing into the river. 

That the ancient festival grows in size each time it is held partly reflects India’s expanding population, but is also seen as evidence that spiritual life is thriving alongside the new-found affluence of a growing middle class. AFP