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Do you know what Ganeshotsav really means? Or what the immersion ritual means? When were you going to find out?
Jatin Sharmaby Jatin Sharma

The day when Mumbai turns into a fanatic for its favourite God is here. Ganeshotsav kicks off today.

The 10-day Ganeshotsav is Mumbai’s biggest festival, or as I like to call it, Mumbai’s biggest event where the whole city is immersed in the celebrations. From pandals on every corner of the street to houses in different societies setting up Ganesha statues, Ganeshotsav is one big celebration that can’t be missed. To put it succinctly, Mumbai waits for this festival to come all year long, and turns into a very different creature during this festival.

But with each passing year, there is one question that crosses my mind: Are we still only about the festivals that we celebrate?

I am afraid to answer this question because I don’t find any celebrations nowadays that only pertain to God. I see commercialisation, politicisation and vandalisation associated with every festival. I see people who, rather than playing Ganesha songs and propagating His teachings, play songs about Sheilas and Munnis.

The younger generations have always asked their elders – Why do we celebrate so many festivals? The answer to that is, we were a farmer society and a society that believed in values, and that our festivals were the right way to instill those cultural values in us. But with every passing year, whether it is Ganeshotsav, Holi, Navratri or any other festival, it has become more about our convenience rather than our culture. We want to celebrate, but on our terms.

For example, during Ganeshotsav, it is believed that Ganesha visits Earth and stays with us for 10 days. In those 10 days, we are supposed to make him feel welcome. Do our Bollywood item songs make for good welcome songs? Again, the immersion is a symbolic send-off to the God, where it is believed that He takes our misfortunes with Him. How many of us even know about this? Instead of seeing Him off with respect and sombre devotion, we send Him on his way with songs blaring out of loudspeakers. And that’s not all, because we seeing off Ganeshadon’t know the prayers and the mantras we need to chant when we worship Him or see Him off, we play recorded CDs that do the job for us. Even when someone else chants the prayers for us, we still don’t bother to find out what the words mean or learn them.

I am not going all Right-wing here and demanding that you must believe in God. I just feel that you should do things only because you believe in doing them, not because you want to show off or prove a point to someone.

Not many know what the word ‘Ganapati’ means. ‘Gana’ means ‘community’ and ‘pati’ means ‘the head’. The legends of Ganesha always talk about being prosperous in the real sense of the word, and spreading happiness no matter what. But all these years, I have been seeing that the festival has just turned into an event where people get drunk and are least interested in maintaining the sanctity of the elephant God. They play loudspeakers that blast out music and hurt birds and animals, that ruin any chances that students may have of studying in a quiet environment. Then there are the pandals themselves, which take up half the road and harm people’s commutes. Why can’t a celebration be complete nowadays without disrupting normal life and societal norms?

Let’s celebrate the festival the way it is supposed to be celebrated – with love and respect for human beings and the environment, with the involvement of the community and while focussing on what’s most important, Lord Ganesha. Since He is also known as the God of Wisdom, my only prayer for him this year is that he showers us with wisdom, since we’ve all forgotten what His festival is all about.

Jatin Sharma is a media professional who does not want to grow up, because if he grows up, he will be like everybody else.

(Pictures courtesy full2faltu.wordpress.com, postnoon.com)

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CM allows music up to midnight during Ganeshotsav

But cautions that sound norms may not be flouted; Ganesh mandals have requested that norms be relaxed during the festival.
by The Editors | editor@themetrognome.in

Ganesh mandals meet with the CMGaneshotsav comes to the city on September 9 this year, and mandals across the city are gearing up to welcome the elephant god. A meeting yesterday between mandals and the Chief Minister of the State, Prithviraj Chavan, was held to discuss various issues related to the festival, prominent among those being the relaxing of sound norms during the 10 days of the festival.

While the Government gave no immediate assurance on this front, the CM is learnt to have allowed mandals to play traditional music “within reasonable sound limits” till midnight for all 10 days of the festival. Recently, the BMC too, had issued an appeal to mandals to not play music beyond midnight on any of the 10 days of the festival.

Overall, Chavan is learnt to have taken a soft stand against Ganpati mandals in the city. “There were mandals that met with police trouble last year, over law and order problems and over noise pollution norms. If such mandals write to the Government appealing that the charges against them be dropped, the Government will look at the case sympathetically,” he reportedly said. Chavan is also equally sympathetic about new Ganpati mandals mushrooming in the city after Ganeshotsav 2012, and has asked the BMC Commissioner Sitaram Kunte to consider each new case.

Apart from these, Chavan has asked that all mandals help in spreading awareness about the issues, especially terrorism, that currently plague the city. He also wants the BMC to set up CCTV surveillance of visarjan areas, that police train each of the major idol sites in safety, and that monitoring agencies should immediately apprehend those selling spurious mawa and milk during the festival.

(Pictures courtesy DGIPR and mmclaughlin11.wordpress.com)

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