Gangaur
Festival
The Gangaur Festival is the colourful and most important local
festival of Rajasthan and is observed throughout the State with
great fervour and devotion by womenfolk who worship Gauri, the consort
of Lord Shiva during July-Aug. It is the celebration of monsoon,
harvest and marital fidelity in Jaipur.
Gan is a synonym for Shiva and Gaur which stands for Gauri or Parvati
who symbolises saubhagya (marital bliss). Gauri is the embodiment
of perfection and conjugal love which is why the unmarried women
worship her for being blessed with good husbands, while married
women do so for the welfare, health and long life of their spouses
and a happy married life.
The festival commences on the first day of Chaitra, the day following
Holi and continues for 18 days. For a newly-wedded girl, it is binding
to observe the full course of 18 days of the festival that succeeds
her marriage. Even unmarried girls fast for the full period of 18
days and eat only one meal a day.
Images of Isar and Gauri are made of clay for the festival. In
some families, permanent wooden images are painted afresh every
year by reputed painters called matherans on the eve of the festival.
A distinct difference between the idols of Teej and Gangaur is that
the Idol will have a canopy during the Teej Festival while the Gangaur
idol would not have a canopy.
The ladies decorate their hands and feet by drawing designs with
mehendi (myrtle paste). The figures drawn range from the Sun, Moon
and the stars to simple flowers or geometrical designs.
Ghudlias are earthen pots with numerous holes all around and a
lamp lit inside them. On the evening of the 7th day after Holi,
unmarried girls go around singing songs of ghudlia carrying the
pots with a burning lamp inside, on their heads. On their way, they
collect small presents of cash, sweets, jaggery, ghee, oil etc.
This continues for 10 days i.e. upto the conclusion of the Gangaur
Festival when the girls break their pots and throw the debris into
a well or a tank and enjoy a feast with the collections made.
The festival reaches its climax during the last three days. Unmarried
girls and married women decorate the images and make them look like
living figures. At an auspicious hour in the afternoon, a procession
is taken out to a garden, tank or a well with the images of Isar
and Gauri, placed on the heads of married women.
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