Durge Durgati Naashini
Durga puja for me is MA-made
clothes. My mother never attended any
formal tailoring classes but has the best acumen of measurement ….she would sew
clothes for people staying in Kolkata…perfect fitting…and in perfect taste. Every year, my B’Day would come either in the
same month or a month prior to the Puja.
So, the new dress in B’Day….usually a frock or a skirt/top sewn by ma
for the occasion of my B’Day would be worn on Saptami. For Ashtami… In the morning, I would wear a
saree (borrowed fom Ma) ……and we would go to the railway colony puja pandal to
offer pushpanjali and accept bhog prasad….for the evenings, ma would either buy
a new pair of trendy clothes or sew another frock.

I kept wearing frocks past the age when
my contemporaries switched on to other forms of clothing. Somehow, we never questioned….we were happy and
proud of and with whatever was provided by parents…our choice was what was laid
by them…..we were happy since our needs were limited.
Durga
puja for me is paye hanta (walking), baba’s two wheeler, a grey coloured bajaj
scooter and a fiat car. Mukherjee kaku,
an old friend of my father…..owned an olive green fiat car that was big enough
to accommodate eight persons of two families.
In that car we would hit the farthest puja destinations, located at the
outskirts of the steel city. When we
were young, my baba would return from his shift at the steel plant, take a
shower to wash off the coke, get dressed and take us around to visit the
different puja pandals, mostly on foot, on the first day, by the fiat car of
kaku on Mahashtami and by his bike on the Navami puja.
We
never realized that after facing such hardships in the Coke-Oven Department in
the hazardous work environment of the steel plant, wherefrom baba got so much
energy to visit the pandals till late in the night and resume work the day
after?
Durga
puja for me is eating out…..usually in roadside dhabas….rumali rotis and butter
chicken…masala dhosa…foochka….
Durga
pooja for me is …riding and screaming in the nagordola (the giant wheel) and
merry go round installed in the fair put up in the puja venue of Sec-16. Each sector had a separate puja and sometimes
more than one puja. It also meant
shooting at balloons and missing the hits with the rings …..
Durga
puja for me is MA– made sweets…patti shapta, dudh puli, rosh bora…..and
a variety of interesting snacks. Dada
and I would plan out in advance when to visit which family so that the hosts
are satisfied with our feeding prowess and that we do justice to the hard work
of the mashis and kakis…..Both of us had lion’s appetites and were a source of
delight for all the autnies whose kids fussed while eating…
The
first time when we came over to Kolkata from Rourkela during Durga Puja, we
were but awestruck. Impermeable traffic,
late night life, huge pandals, complex and interesting lighting patterns, larger
than life effigies, vast variety of food, maddening crowd and cultural shows in
every nook and corner…. The quiet lanes in the planned steel township stood is
stark contrast to the puja décor and glamour in Kolkata. Another attraction was the gifts showered on
us by the kind relatives…the variety of clothes we had….the range of choice….
Dada
and I would devour time on soaking in the intricately designed pandals….. the eyes
of the goddess, the posture of the buffalo demon, the costume and the interior
decorations of the pandal…while our relatives were busy calling us out to
proceed to the next destination. There
were sea-like crowds flowing in from all directions, but other than those with
whom we were moving around…none of the faces were known. Back in Rourkela, more than the goddess our
eyes would be roaming in search of other classmates and friends visiting the
pandals. We would sit around in the pandals
in large groups…children playing under the watchful eyes of parents, mothers
engaged in gossips and sharing recipes for the Vijaya Dashami and the fathers
planning for the next rendezvous. The
big city of Kolkata was too big to acknowledge or wait for us to realize our
small dreams….
Here
in Gujarat….Durga Puja is my sole ray of hope towards keeping alive the
bengalee roots in my half bengalee-half gujarati offsprings. Wearing aalta, donning the white saree with
red border in the typically bengalee way on all puja days…wearing saree to office
during the puja days, putting shindur, wearing shankha, offering pushpanjali
and queuing up to accept bhog Prasad, listening to the cultural programmes much
after the midnight …… all these and more
were never so important till I chose to marry in a Gujarati family….For me it
was sort of conflicting….I learnt the steps of garba and dandia but also tried
to woo away the kids matching their steps to the drums, urging them to leave
the garba ground and visit the puja pandals.
I like to observe fasting during the Navaratra but the stalls put up in the pandals tempt me to extremes.....I buy Ghaghra cholis but keep on wearing sarees...
In
Ahmedabad, there are several puja mandaps by the local bengalee associations.
One of them is celebrating the 75th puja this year. Apart from the excellent administration of the
puja rituals, crowd management at the Panktibhojan there is planned execution
of a variety of cultural programmes by artistes of scaling fame from
Kolkata. For me Durga Puja in Ahmedabad
is a living throbbing proof of my identity which gets strengthened amidst the
grip of the festive spirit of Navaratri…..
Bolo
Durga Mai Ki…JOI
( I wrote this on request of my dear cousin Moharotno.....)
Through your blogs I am reliving my childhood. darron laglo porhe. sheyi Mar er haate shelai kora jama, sheyi dhaba te khawa dawa, phuchka, aloo kabli, sheyi kakur ambassador ba Babar scooter e kore doorer pandal gulo to jawa. uff!! bhishon bhalo laglo.. aar tarpor Maha ashtamir din sokaale Ramakrishna mission er bhog khawa. Durdhorsho :-). Toke kaache pele hazar ta huge bear hug ditam. getting really emotional.
ReplyDeleteLove you too!
DeleteThe narration is so common... By virtue of the common experience BUT yet so unique in its style of creation... By that standard it's only yours, Sudeshna. Lots of regards for pulling it off so beautifully.
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