Chatar jatra

Chatar Jatra or Chatar Yatra is a traditional festival celebrated by the people of Kalahandi District, Orissa, India. The festival involves Maa Manikeswari, the family goddess of the Kalahandi King's family.[1]

Chatar Jatra
Chhatar of Goddess Manikeswari
Official nameChhatar Jatra
Observed byHindus
TypeReligious
BeginsMaha astami, Durga Puja


Origin

Maa Manikeswari is the prominent presiding goddess of Kalahandi district. The temple of the goddess is situated with in the boundary of the ex-rulers of Kalahandi, so that the rulers could observe the auspicious festival Chhatra Jatra, which has been transformed and is now known as Chatar Jatra.

Plot

Chhatra Jatra or Chatar Jatra or Chatar Yatra are meant to celebrate the Vijaya utsav with cheerful heart and splendid display. The festival is being celebrated during the Mahastami of Durga puja festival. The ritual practice of Khonds (Adivasis of Kalahandi Districts) Nabakalevar (the renewal of post-worship) is also performed during the festival.[2]

Maa Manikeswari comes out from the Garbhagriha on Mahastami mid night to Jenakhal which is at about 3 km distance from the alma mater. The jatra starts with Nagar Paribhramana on Mahanavami auspicious morning. A bamboo covered with black cloth represents Maa Manikeswari in the jatra, and at the top on silver plate Dasamahavidya Yantra is installed which represents the Tantric Hinduism. To please Maa Manikeswari, a tribal dance is performed, which is known as Ghumura dance. Ghumura is a traditional dance and a heritage of Kalahandi district. It is a dance performed with a traditional instrument Ghumura Veer Badya. The dancers tie the Ghumura (badya/instrument) on their shoulders and hang it tight on their chest. [3]

Celebration

Chatar Jatra is mainly celebrated in the district headquarter of Kalahandi, Bhawanipatna though Thuamul Rampur, Jugasaipatna and Bhawanipatna, all three places are famous for Maa Manikeswari temple.[4]

Animal sacrifice is prevalent in this festival. Though government has strictly banned these kind of activities, still devotees don't follow the rule. About 50,000 animal sacrifies take place in this festival. [5][6]

gollark: Perhaps we should just ban philosophy.
gollark: Yes. Okay. But we can't be sure of what the underlying objective stuff is.
gollark: ...
gollark: If you define "objective" as "you can test this against reality", then yes.
gollark: Some theories have better evidence than others, they're never *definitely true*.

References

  1. "Kalahandi info". www.kalahandi.info. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24.
  2. "Chhatar Jatra begins amid pomp & devotion | OTV". 2017-09-28. Retrieved 2019-01-17.
  3. Umesh Chandra Satapathy. "Chhatra Yatra of Manikeswari" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-05-09.
  4. "Kalahandi to celebrate Chatar Yatra today". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 2019-01-17.
  5. "Animal Sacrifies in Chatar jatra".
  6. "Chatar Yatra: Blood-soaked roads in Bhawanipatna after mass animal sacrifices". Pragativadi: Leading Odia Dailly. 2017-09-28. Retrieved 2019-01-17.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.