JANUARY
A
cliche if you will-but often laced with snow- the year opens
witha heady cocktail. Thousand of revellers head to celebrate
the new year at Shimla, Chail, Manali and Dalhousie. Around
the common calendar's new-year comes Holda in Lahaul, which is
a more private celebration of the event. Along the valleys of
Chandra and Bhaga rivers, a few members of every household
step out with lit cedar twigs to a west oriented place
selected by the 'lamas'. These slender branches from the first
flames of a bonfire which is then dispersed. Shiskar Apa, the
goddes of wealth is worshipped, and the dancing continues for
a couple of days.
There is greater
sobriely, but no less joy, when Lohri or Moghi comes along in
mid-january. This is the fraditionary mid-winter day and also
commemorates the last sowing of the Rabi crops. Community
bonifires, folk songs and dancing mark the festival. Intribal
Spiti, Dechhang is celebrated at the height of winter while
the Lahaul area reserves it for early April. Paonta Sahib is a
major focus on Guru Gobind Singh's birthday. The town and
other gurudwara close to it, are closely linked with the
Guru's life.
On a mid-night
towards the end of Paush (December-January), Phagli begins in
Lahaul's Pattan valley with snow being packed in a conical
basket-kitta. This is upturned on roof and resembles a
Shivalinga. Shiva, Naga and the goddes Hadimba are worshipped,
and the younger generation also mark it by venerating the
village elders. Chhang and lugri, locally brewed liquors flow
freely, and ritual dishes are eaten. Kinnaur's Sazi ( or Sazo),
also comes ot around this time.
More
contemporary events come in the form of the National Snow
Statue Competition ot Kufri, the Folk Dance Compitition on
Republic Day at Shimla, and the Water Sports Regatta at
Kangra's Pong Dam. To make this wonderful time of year all the
more attractive, Himachal Tourism offers special discounts and
packages in its wide network of hotels.
February
Snow continues
to play a major part in February's festivals and Himachal's
Winter Carnival is also held this month.
Gochi in the
Bhaga Valley is an unusual festival when the villagers
celebrated the birth of male children. Token marriages of
children below the age of six are aalso performed and a
lighter side comes with the snow balling every child
participates in.
The Baba Barbhag
Singh Mela is held in Una and honours this sage who was ren
owned for his magical powers. Basant Panchmi makes the arrival
of spring in the lower areas, and every town seems to keep a
reserve of colour for the occasion and the skies are filled
with a mediely of kites.
Ritual dances
and an unbelievably rich imagery mark Lossar. This is
celebrated in Budhist areas throughout the state- while
Lahaul's monasteries have some of the most spectacular
performances. Onits eve, the stylised chhaam dance and
elaborate costumes and masks, commemorate the ossassination of
the cruel Tibetan king. Langdarma in the 9th century.
Often-though wrongly- called 'the devil dance', it symbolises
the triumph of good over evil.
March
Centered around
the temple of Trilokinath, Char is celebrated in Lahaul.
The town of
Mandi with its ancient temples revels in the Shivratri fair
for a whole week. On elaborately decorated palanguins, hundred
of local deitles are carried to the town. Accomponied by folk
bands, they make their first stop at the Madho Rai Templeand
then go to pay obeisanceto Lord Shiva at the Bhootnath Temple.
This is followed by festivities-music and song, dance and
drama. Yet, all the while the atmosphere is surcharged with
deep religious devotion.
In the third
week of March, the fascinating Nalwari fair is held at
Bilaspur. Cattle is traded, there are wrestling bouts and aero
and water sports snows are recent additions.
Holi's riot of
colours and celebration of spring comes with laughter and
vitality. There are exuberant celebrations of Palampur andf
Sujanpur. By the banks of the river Yamunba, the shrine of
Poanta Sahib in Sirmour is thronged by Hindu and Sikh devotees
on this day. Also in Sirmoor, the Balasundari fair is held at
Trilokpur near Nahan, this coincides with the sacred days of
the Navratras. The temple of Baglamata, near Bankhandi in
Kangra is also a major focus during these days.
Chail, the first
month of lunar calendar is celebrated by the dancing of women
in Kulu and by folk singing in Chamba.
At the shrine of
Deothsidh (Seo) on the district border of Hamirpur and
Bilaspur, a month long fair spans March and April.
April
Held on the
first Baisakh- the 13th April-Basakhi is one of Himachal's
most important festivals. Rooted in the rural agrarian
tradition, it bids a final farewell to winter. At Tattapani
near Shimla, at theRewwalsar and Prashar lakes near Mandi,
people take purifying dips in the water. Numerous village
fairs complete with wrestling, dancing and archery are also
held on this day.
In April Rali
with its clay models is marked in Kangra. Legend has it that
the beautiful Rali was married against her wishes and on the
way to her husband's home, she leapt into a stream. The
husband jumped in offer her and trying to save both, Rali's
brother also dived into the fast flowing waters. All three
died. Today clay models are made every house to mark that day,
while unmarried girls pray for grooms of their choice and the
newly-wedded ask for happinessand prosperity.
At Chamba, the
Sul Mela is thronged by women and children and at the village
of Tarour in district Mandi, the Mahu Nag fair is held. The
holy Markandaya fair is held in honour of the deity, Shikhu.
This is also the time when fishing and low altitude treking
raise their winter barriers, while the Spring Festival is
celebrated in Kulu from April 28 to 30.
May
May gushes in
with a whole series of river raffing festivals and water
sports Regattas, through -out the state.
Focused around
the goddess Hadimba Devi. Kulu celebratesthe Dhoongri fair. In
the Sarhi Jatar are held in May.
Near Shimla at
the exquisite glade of Sipur below Mashobra, the charming Sipi
fair is held. It is frationally a time for match-making.
Thoughout
Himachal a variety of programmes are organised by the
Department of Language, Art and Culture. Dharamsala's summer
festival and the programmes organised by the Tibetan instituts
for Performing Arts, lift their curtains. The skies are blue
and clear for the Hang Gliding Rally at Billing near Kangra,
while Summer Skiing glides smoothly in at the Rohtang Pass.
June
a wide spectrum
of national talent, a variety of programmes and a splendid
setting make Shimla's Summer Festival a memorable event.
Shimla also hosts the Red Cross Frair, spoirt tournaments,
flower shows, a photographs and posters exhibition and a
fashion show based on folk costumes. The Kangra Festival is
also held in June at Kangra.
At Solan on the
third Sunday of the month, the Solan Fair honours the goddess
Shilooni, the presiding deity of the region.
On June's full
moon night, the Ghantal festival is held at Lahaul's Guru
Ghantal Monastery.
And of course,
given the time of the year and the possibilities it offers,
there are various camping and trekking expeditions.
July
In the arid
trans-Himalaya at Kaza, Lodarcha fair, the old trade routes
come alive as traders barter and sell a variety of goods and
produce. At Keylong, the Lahaul Festival is also held this
month.
Elsewhere in the
stahee tfv54ssttaate,Haryali (Rhyali Dakhrain) announce the
advent of the monasoon rains.
Shravana
Sankranti is celebrated at Nahan, at Arki, buffalo fights mark
the Sair fair, and conducted in honour of Banar devta at
Shari, the Rampur Jatar is held near Jubbal in district Shimla.
July also
heralds the travelling and trekking season to Kinnour and
Lahaul and Spiti.
August
Chamba's famous
Minjor fair which celebrates the bounty of nature and prays
for a good harvest is normally held in August. Minjors', maize
shoots or silken strands, are cast on the water of the river
Ravi and the town immerses itself in a week of celebration.
Also in Chamba,
the Manimahesh Yatra to the sacred tarn of Manimahesh is held
immediately after the festival of Janamashimi. At Bharmour, 38
km short of the lake, the nomadic Gaddis hold a fair for six
days.
Celebrated in
Chamba, Kulu and elsewhere, Chrewal Badronjo or Patroru is a
festival of fire and flowers- and a time for purification of
the fields.
In August,
several places in Chamba, Bilaspur and Sirmour have the Gugga
fair which is connected with the worship of Gugga, the Nag
Devta.
The same month
witness the Dal fair in Upper Dharamsala. At Udaipur, in the
Lahaul valley, the Trilokinath temple becomes a focous; this
is a sacred to Hindus and Buddhists alike. The Shravan fair is
held at the shrine Naina Devi, while the Ashapuri fair is held
in Kangra.
September
As the rains end
autumn sends fiery colours rocing through the hills. In
Kinnour, the festival of flowers, Fullaich (Phulech) opens a
window to its remarkable people and their beautiful
countryside. Villagers scout the hillsides for flowers which
are collected in the village square. These are then offered to
the localdeity. Then comes a spate of revelry- singing,
dancing and feasting. Kalpa has some of the most vibrant
celebration and every twelve years, there is the special
festival..
Also in
September at the villageof Chhatrari, near Chamba- and
centered around the exquisite temple of Shkti Devi- a fair is
held and masked dances performed.
The Kangra velly
celebratesthe festival of Sair. This is also celebrated with
stalls,sining and buffalofights at Arki and Mashobra, bothnear
Shimla. At Nurpur in Kangra, under the watchful wallsof its
old fort, the Nagini fair bids the summer farewel. In the same
district, on September27, ToWorld Tourism Day is celebrated.
In Sirmour,
there is a Regatta at the Renuka Lake, and Nahan hosts the
Bawan Dawadashi fair.
October
There is a
Regatta on the waters of the Gobindsagar, anglers vie for the
largest catch in the Sangla valley and paragliders sail the
skies of Billing.
More
traditionally, over two hundred deities converge on Kulu for
its unusual Dussehra celebrations. They pay homage to Lord
Raghunath while music and colour fill the 'Silver Valley'.
Numerous stalls offer a variety of local wares. This is also
the time when the International Folk Festival is celebrated.
The Jwalamukhi
Temple in Kangra becomes the venue for a major fair. At Killar
and panal (in Chamba's Pangi valley)' the Phool Yatra witness
a remarkable display of neighbourly affection and the Dehant
Nag is worshipped.
November
With winter just
a hop and skip away, the age-old Lavi fair fills Rampur with a
burst of activity. The town was once a major entrepot on the
old trade routes to Kinnour, Tibet, Ladakh and Afganistan.
Even today the tradition is as vibrant as ever. By the
churning waters of the river Sutlej, a variety of goods
including wool, dry fruits and horses are bartered and sold
The kharif have
been harvested when at the legendary Renuka lake , a fair
graces its banks. There is trade,recreation and amusement ,
idols of Lord Parsurama and Renuka are ceremoniousy dipped in
the secred waters of the lake-and it is a time when a lot of
match making is done.
Water Sports
Competition are held on the Pong Dam and Gobind sagar.
December
As winter
arrives, anglers to the Pong Dam. With the blessings of Nobel
Laureate, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, the International
Himalayan Festival is held in Kangra district. Troupes from
the Himalayan nations are present. In 1997 this will be held
at Triund.
In their icy
wake the winter winds carry all the delights of ice-skating at
Shimla. The extravaganza of the Ice-Skating Carnival is
normally reserved for December. Christmas celebrations
overtake Shimla and Dalhousie and as the church bells chime,
they carry away another event-packed year.
To visit the
traditional fairs or to participate in the festival, do
confirm the dates as many vary from year to year. A large of
accomodation is available at, or close to almost all the
places. |