UTTAR PRADESH, India
Vast crowds of Hindu pilgrims in India began bathing in sacred waters on Monday as the Kumbh Mela festival opened, with organisers expecting 400 million people -- the largest gathering of humanity.
The millennia-old Kumbh Mela,
a show of religious piety and ritual bathing -- and a logistical challenge of
staggering proportions -- is held at the site where the Ganges, Yamuna
and mythical Saraswati rivers meet.
In the cool hours before
sunrise, pilgrims surged forward to begin bathing in the waters.
"I feel great joy,"
said Surmila Devi, 45. "For me, it's like bathing in nectar."
Businesswoman Reena Rai's
voice quivered with excitement as she spoke about the "religious
reasons" that brought her to join the sprawling tents, packed along the
river banks in the north Indian city of Prayagraj.
"As a Hindu, this is an
unmissable occasion," the 38-year-old said, who travelled around 1,000
kilometres (621 miles) from Madhya Pradesh state to take part in the festival,
which runs from Monday until February 26.
Saffron-robed monks and naked
ash-smeared ascetics roamed the crowds offering blessings to devotees, many of
whom had walked for weeks to reach the site.
"The world's largest spiritual and cultural gathering is starting," said Hindu monk and Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath in a statement, welcoming devotees to the festival to "experience unity in diversity, to meditate, and take a holy bath at the confluence of faith and modernity".
Organisers say the scale of
the Kumbh Mela is that of a temporary country -- with numbers expected to total
around the combined populations of the United States and Canada.
"Some 350 to 400 million
devotees are going to visit the mela, so you can imagine the scale of
preparations," festival spokesman Vivek Chaturvedi said ahead of the
opening.
Hindu monks carrying huge
flags of their respective sects began marching towards the river on Sunday
evening.
Tractors turned into chariots
for life-size idols of Hindu gods rolled by behind them, accompanied by
elephants, as pilgrims exulted in the beat of drums and honking horns.
The festival is rooted in
Hindu mythology, a battle between deities and demons for control of a pitcher
containing the nectar of immortality.
Organising authorities are
calling it the great or "Maha" Kumbh Mela.
The riverside in Prayagraj has
turned into a mammoth sea of tents -- some luxury, others simple tarpaulins.
Jaishree Ben Shahtilal took three days to reach the holy site, journeying with her neighbours from Gujarat state in a convoy of 11 buses over three days.
"I have great faith in
god," she said. "I have waited for so long to bathe in the holy
river."
Around 150,000 toilets have
been built and a network of community kitchens can each feed up to 50,000
people at the same time.
Another 68,000 LED light poles
have been erected for a gathering so large that its bright lights can be seen
from space.
The last celebration at the
site, the "ardh" or half Kumbh Mela in 2019, attracted 240 million
pilgrims, according to the government.
That compares to an estimated
1.8 million Muslims who take part in the annual hajj pilgrimage to Mecca
in Saudi
Arabia.
Indian police said they
were "conducting relentless day-and-night patrols to ensure top-notch
security" for the event.
Authorities and the police
have also set up a network of "lost and found" centres and an
accompanying phone app to help pilgrims lost in the immense crowd "to
reunite with their families".
India is the world's most
populous nation, with 1.4 billion people, and so is used to large crowds.
Many pilgrims began taking
dips in the chilly water on Sunday, braving rain, with temperatures on the
banks dropping to around 15 degrees Celsius (59 Fahrenheit) overnight.
But many pilgrims threw off
their plastic sheets, insisting rain only added to the "pious mood"
of the fair.
"Once you are in the
water, you don't even feel cold," said 56-year-old devotee Chandrakant
Nagve Patel. "I felt like I was one with god."
Hindus believe bathing there
during the Kumbh helps cleanse sins and brings salvation.
Government employee
Bhawani Baneree, who had come from the western state of Maharashtra, said the
"vibrant atmosphere" had made his long journey worthwhile.
"Everything is so
beautiful", he said.
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