Sunday, March 6, 2016

Know One of Indian Cultures-The Kajari Festival


The Kajari Mahotsav at Banaras is considered to appear the very utmost and alluring episode celebrated by farmers colossally. Really, this matters to farmers to seek the blessings of Goddess Bhagwati to bestow the prosperous crops. The time to celebrate the Kajari Festival begins on the ninth day after the Shravan Amavasya as the months of July and August in the Gregorian calendar.

 

Delightfully, this festival comes with lot of pleasurable episodes and professional aptitudes, as handloom, handicraft, regional variety of refreshments, and tempting kinds of entertainment herein.

Specifically, no matter to describe for this festival is likely to reveal the silhouette of village and cities as below:
  • Enable an open ground with pathway to Entrance and Exit with stickers as “Entrance” at their opposites to organize the festival i.e., The Kajari Mahotsav to display rural and urban perspective in form of stalls to sell and to display their products also, in Banaras.
  •  Arrange a stage with little height to the ground to showcase the culture, and traditions of nearer village by dint of local dramas, dances, folk songs and others to acquaint the viewers with their cultural practices.
  • Show some vendors of toys, and ice cream, to walk/move to sell their work of art around the stage.
  •  Install an LCD to televise How to cleanse Ganga at left area of Stage.
  • Adorn the fair (mela) with decorative objects relevant to rural fair outlook.

Precisely, to install a few of stalls, shop as the insiders/close to stage like:       
  • A shop for rural food products as pickles,  ingredients and so on.
  • 4-sided Canteen.
  • An open shop for rural foot wears (Juti).
  • An open shop to demonstrate the clay modelling

Additionally, to establish the few of stalls at the edge of venue but systematized setup of stage as below:
  • A stall to sell the sweets flavouring of rural taste.
  • A stall to display Kachhi Gori Dance to entertain the viewers.
  • A stall to display the modern or urban hand-looms.
  • A stall divided into two divisions to sell village and urban’s ornaments.
  •  A stall to be called the photo studio.
  • A stall to ice cream.
  • A stall to sell foot wears.
  • A stall to sell crockery.
  • A stall to demonstrate the embroidery and also to sell them.
  • A stall/shop to sell flowers as synthetic and natural.
  • A stall divided into two divisions to sell village and urban’ furniture.
  • A small site to the game called as The Bumping-jumping game.
  • A stall to sell the village hand-loom.
  • Finally, a stall to sell the village handmade products.

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