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In the month of Kartik each year, a staggering number of
camels travel their way across the golden sands of Rajasthan to collect at
Pushkar for the week-long fair devoted to them. Coming in from all
directions, their masters astride them, they flick the sand at every step
with casual ease. The horses that march to this site find the sand-trot a
touch exercise. Numerous cows and sheep also come to the animal fair.
Completing the scene thousands of men, women and children, come with their
beasts, suddenly inhabiting the barren plain with the camel providing the
backdrop.
The contrast to the dull desert landscape is the riot of
colours - the large gaudy turbans of the native males arriving here to
trade their animals or set up the stalls to cater to the booming captive
market, and the loud hues of the pleated ghagaras (ankle-length skirts) of
the women bangled by the armful, bejewelled from head to toe- adding charm
and zest to the massive affair.
At Mela time, Pushkar is
Rajasthan under one roof, a complete exhibition of its culture.
The trading: Over the first five days of the fair, camels, horses,
cows, goats, and sheep are sold and purchased. There may be long-drawn
negotiations, or sometimes, a quick transaction. Hard bargains are struck,
the vendor praising the long list of virtues of his camel to the
prospective buyer.
Fashionable
Women… Womenfolk seem to have little interest in the business
of animals. They are more attracted to the glittering wares in the stalls
under canopies. The large variety of intricate silver ornaments - hairpins
and chains, nose rings and neckbands, waistbands, anklets, toe rings and
the ivory bangles worn from wrist to shoulder - would send any woman on a
buying spree.
The garments stalls, in no way less colourful, sell
high fashion upper garments of patchwork and tie 'n' die. Tattoo stalls
give many women beauty marks that last a lifetime. Whoever said that the
unsophisticated are not fashionable!
…and
Camels: In Rajasthan even the camels are fashion-conscious, and
that too to a high degree, for they are soon to be part of a beauty
parade! The proud owner of a newly acquired camel promptly goes to the
stalls which the women bypassed.
At these stalls all the crafts of
Rajasthan have been pressed into the service of the camel community.
Handmade saddles to fit every hump; long strings of cowries, beads;
colourful, woven saddle-straps, and embroidered back-covers to boot. After
a shearing and a scrub, the camel is costumed and even perfumed! Surely
the Rajasthani man loves his camel-and his wife!
Fun and frolic: As the tempo of business
goes down, the men folk turn to merriment, for the day of the camel sports
is at hand. Camel races are the first event. Usually a lumbering
beast of burden, the camel all decorated in finery, imagines itself to be
an ostrich, and rushes through the race like one. Then comes the event
analogous to musical chairs. Here, as the music stops, the camel is
supposed to manage to stick its long arching neck between two poles, each
camel owner guiding its entrant by means of a silken cord attached to its
nose ring.
Vying for the first pace in the beauty contest,
splendidly bedecked camels are bought to the ring and paraded to catch the
critical eye of keen judges. The gait of the camel, the choice of its
equipment and ornament, its capacity to interpret and carry out commands
and the variety of pranks it is capable of performing are the criteria of
selection. The most thrilling camel event is 'laadoo oonth'. see
how much weight the camel can can carry, man after man clamber onto the
ridge-like back of the camel, each clutching at the other to retain the
collectively precarious position. It is not an uncommon sight to see the
human cargo come crashing down as the camel tries to get to its feet! It
is yest to be known if this is the intention of the
camel.
The culmination :
Kartik Purnima, the day of ritual oblation , is also the
closing day of the world's most colourful festivals. Bathing begins at
dawn. There is quite a scramble for getting a place on
the bathing ghats. The famed waters of the Pushkar Lake wash away the sins
of a lifetime. The mystical water is also believed to cure skin diseases,
making Pushkar the Lourdes of the east. After bathing, the devotees line
up in long colourful queues to take their turn to worship the Creator,
Brahma.
Romance touches Pushkar on the full moon night, as tiny
leaf boats, each carrying flowers and an oil lamp, are set afloat on the
placid lake. Twinkling like thousands of stars, their flickering flames
reflected in the water. The next day dawns for the exodus. Long caravans
hump their way along, taking many camels to their new homes. Little does a
camel know which master it will serve after the coming Pushkar Fair. |