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City celebrates UNESCO’s recognition

Participants ranging from Durga Puja organisers to artisans, and people’s representatives to common men and women walked the 2 km distance from Academy of Fine Arts to Dorina Crossing in the heart of the city in a colourful rally carrying ‘Thank You UNESCO’ placards amid sounds of the ‘dhak’, the traditional drum inseparable from Bengal’s biggest festival.

City celebrates UNESCO’s recognition

Procession in Kolkata to celebrate UNESCO's intangible heritage tag for Durga Puja (IANS photo)

In a unique gesture to hail UNESCO for having recognized the Durga Puja festival in Bengal as one of an intangible Heritage, a conglomerate of puja organizers in bid to re-live the famous fervour of the autumn festivities on Wednesday took out colourful processions bedecked with banners and festoons with Dhakis in tow made rounds on the city streets.

Participants ranging from Durga Puja organisers to artisans, and people’s representatives to common men and women walked the 2 km distance from Academy of Fine Arts to Dorina Crossing in the heart of the city in a colourful rally carrying ‘Thank You UNESCO’ placards amid sounds of the ‘dhak’, the traditional drum inseparable from Bengal’s biggest festival.

Rashbehari MLA Debasish Kumar, also a member of Forum for Durgotsab, said, “We have assembled here to celebrate the UNESCO honour to West Bengal’s soul Durga Puja. This is an acknowledgement of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee’s drive to promote the festival globally.”

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Sculptor Sanatan Dinda said, “I couldn’t hold back tears of joy on hearing the great news (of UNESCO tag). West Bengal’s Durga Puja has assumed unbelievable aesthetic proportions in terms of creativity while still being rooted in its devotional aspect. It has risen over religious, linguistic barriers and turned out to be a universal festival of humanity.”

Apart from hundreds of dhakis, Purulia’s Chhau dancers flaunting their colourful masks, and women draped in white sarees with red border and holding prayer urns adorned the rally.

“The sound of dhak in Aswin (month of Bengali calendar when Durga Puja is celebrated) is now being heard across the globe. Thanks UNESCO,” state minister Chandrima Bhattacharya, whose award-winning Hindustan Park Sarbajanin is one of the women-conducted pujas in the city, said. While commending the values, which the Durga Puja festival represents it wrote on its website, “During the event, the divides of class, religion and ethnicities collapse as crowds of spectators walk around to admire the installations”.

It is also seen as the best instance of public performance of religion and art and as thriving ground for collaborative artists and designers. On December 15, UNESCO accorded ICH status to Kolkata’s Durga Puja festivities, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee lauding the move.

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