Manipur News

Durga Puja festivities grip Northeastern states, subdued in violence-hit Manipur

The five-day-long Durga Puja festivities have gripped the people of the northeastern states, especially the puja revellers in Assam and Tripura.

Sentinel Digital Desk

IMPHAL/AGARTALA/GUWAHATI: The five-day-long Durga Puja festivities have gripped the people of the northeastern states, especially the puja revellers in Assam and Tripura. The festivities being organized in ethnic violence devastated Manipur in a much more subdued manner.

A Manipuri intellectual and writer, Raj Kumar Indrajit Singh, said that various Durga Puja organisers including the local clubs across Manipur, observed that in view of the overall situation in the state and the economic distress of the people, just a few Durga Pujas were being held in some places, maintaining the basic minimum rituals. “Not only Durga Puja, all kinds of festivities, including the 'Ningol Chakkouba', are not being organized this year in Manipur. Due to over five months of ethnic strife, puja organizers and people in general are not mentally ready to hold any kind of festivities in the state this year,” Singh said.

Though the five-day-long Durga Puja festivities commenced on Friday with “Bodhan”, the actual festival got underway with 'Mahashaptami' on Saturday.

On Chakkouba Day, which falls on November 15, the state’s very old festival, Meitei women, particularly the married ones, in their best traditional attire, move to their natal homes and enjoy multi-dishes with their parents and siblings. With simple gifts and blessings given by their parents and brothers, the Ningols (women) return home with high spirits.

The puja fervour is much better than last year; the illumination, glitz, and theme-based festivities are visible in most places in Assam and Tripura, reflecting the higher budgets of the puja committees this year compared to last year and the COVID-19 pandemic hitting 2021. For the successful celebration of Durga Puja, the Assam government has provided Rs 10,000 each to 6,953 puja organisers as grants-in-aid.

In Guwahati and other places in Assam, Durga Puja is being held with greater zeal as compared to last year (2022) and the previous year (2021), when a minimum number of pujas were held with very few people venturing out of their homes due to the pandemic.

After visiting many pandals and temples in other parts of Assam, Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma visited the Bengali-dominated Barak valley on Saturday, where he went around several puja pandals, offering prayers. Tripura Chief Minister Manik Saha and other ruling party leaders also inaugurated a huge number of pujas in Tripura.

In Tripura, around 2,870 community pujas, up from 2,645 in 2022, are being organised this year. In Meghalaya, the Durga Puja celebrations have started in Shillong and some other parts of the state since Saturday. Police Bazar, the main commercial hub of Shillong, wore a normal look, with people busy with their usual routine in a festive revelry. With the deployment of additional police and other forces, security has been beefed up in Assam, Tripura, and other northeastern states to ensure a peaceful celebration of Durga Puja. CCTV cameras have been installed at important, sensitive, and possible crowded locations and big-budget pujas to manage pandal hoppers and other crowds.

The vigil along the India-Bangladesh borders with Assam and Tripura has been further tightened, and the state authorities have asked the Border Security Forces (BSF) to maintain a strict vigil along the international border to foil any infiltration attempt and cross-border movement of inimical elements. (IANS)

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