Mandi Shivaratri Fair
Mandi Shivaratri Fair is an
annual renowned international fair, held for 7 days starting with the Hindu
festival of Shivaratri, in the Mandi town of the Indian
state of Himachal Pradesh. The Mandi Shivaratri fair is held as
per Hindu calendar every year on the Krishna paksha 13th
day / 13th night of the waning moon in the month
of Phalguna that corresponds to February / March as
per Gregorian calendar. This festival invites participation from 81
temples in the region. The festival is centred on the protector deity of Mandi
Madho Rai (Lord Vishnu) and Lord Shiva of the Bhootanatha temple in Mandi.
History
Mandi town, where the festival
is held, was ruled by Raja Ajber Sen who was considered the first great ruler
of Mandi State in the sixteenth century, since he not only combined
the hereditary regions but also added to it by conquering new areas. Apart from
his palace, he built the temple of Bhootanatha at the centre of the Mandi town,
which is one of the two focal temples of the festival. In the theocratic state
that evolved during this period, worship of Shiva and related goddesses was
dominant.
However, the theocratic nature
of the state received special emphasis when, during Raja Suraj Sen’s reign,
Vishnu worship also became integral to the State. Raja Suraj Sen (1664 to
1679), who did not have an heir, built the temple known as Madhav Rai temple,
dedicated to a form of Lord Vishnu, as protector of Mandi. An elegant
silver image of Radha and Krishna was made by his goldsmith Bhima, in
the year 1705, which was named Madho Rai and deified, and ordained as the King
of the State of Mandi thereafter.
Since then the rulers served the
state as servants of Madho Rai and custodians of the State. Suraj Sen’s
successors have also held the deity of the temple in great reverence. This god
is represented with precedence over all other gods on various religious
occasions. The theocratic nature of the people of the state is amply reflected
during the popular Mandi Shivrathri Fair, which is held every year with great
fanfare.
However, the specific observance
of this festival as a fair, starting with Shivaratri, is linked to its ruler
Ishwari Sen. Ishawri Sen was held a prisoner for 12 years after he lost his
kingdom in the war waged by Sansar Chand of Punjab, in 1792. He was released by
the Gurkha invaders who had invaded the Kangra and Mandi states.
Afterwards, the Gurkhas' restored the Mandi state to Ishwari Sen. He was given
a reception on the occasion of his return to Mandi, his state capital.
On this occasion, the King
invited all hill deities of the Kingdom and held a grand celebration, and this
day happened to be the Shivrathri festival day. Since then the practice of
holding the Mandi fair during Shivaratri has been observed every year at Mandi.
In recent years, modernity has also set in with Bollywood artists
performing at the fair at Paddal in the celebrations in the evenings.
Festival
The observance of the fair is
marked on the Shivaratri day when the village gods are carried
in palanquins or rathas (chariots by people) to Mandi to
pay homage to Madho Rai and the Raja. Members of caste denominations such
as Brahmin and Kshatriya carry their gods and goddesses by
palanquins or on their back. However, some exceptions of carrying them in vehicles
by some caste groups have been noted. Thereafter, the fair lasts for seven
days.
It is an accepted practice that
every deity that is brought to the festival (decorated with glittering
embroidered drapery) visits Madho Rai temple first to pay obeisance to Lord
Vishnu and then proceed to the palace in a colourful procession called the
Shoba Yatra, known locally as Zareb, to honour the ruler (the regent of the
Lord Madho Rai). It is said that Madho Rai comes out of his temple only once a
year on the Shivaratri day and leads the procession. The ruler thereafter pay
obeisance to Lord Shiva at the Bhootanatha temple where the main festival of
Shivaratri is held.
The palanquins of the deities
are swayed to the drum beats and folk music to indicate their happiness after
visiting the temples of Vishnu and Shiva. There is pecking order that is
maintained in the sequence of worship by the deities invited to the fair, based
on rank and status. The day after the Shivaratri, on the second day of the
fair, a pageant of gods with folk bands, dancers and devotees (all dressed in
their colourful attire) and with lot of fanfare, is held in Paddal, a large
open ground at the confluence of the Beas and Suketi rivers.
Some 200 deities arrive from
shrines around Mandi town and are assigned places at the Paddal grounds as per
the pecking order, where the devotees offer worship to all the deities. The
pageant is held every day of the festival. The fair is also an occasion when
local traders and people carry out brisk trade in local products such as wool,
opium, honey, walnut, ghee (butter oil), and general merchandise from the
region of Kangra, Kullu, Shimla, Bilaspur and from the neighboring
state of Punjab.
It is said that the festivities
promote handcrafted jewellery of the region. However, during the entire Mandi
Shivaratri Fair, religiosity is the main theme. It is said that religious
synthesis was achieved by combining the worship of Vishnu and Shiva cults
during the seven-day fair. One day before the concluding day of the festival at
the end of fanfare, music and dance, in the evening, Jagaran (night
vigil, a nightlong worship) is held.
On this occasion, a guru and his
disciple proclaim prophesies for the following year. On the last day of the
festivities, prayers are chanted and, after paying obeisance to Lord Shiva, all
the deities assembled in Mandi depart to their original abodes. On this
occasion, chadars (a form of devotional drapery offering to the god)
are offered. It is an occasion when the head of the state (now a governor) is
normally present on the last day, joins the worship, and accompanies the
pageant.
During all these festivities, it
is said that Rishi Kamru Nag (local god of rains), the presiding deity of the
Maha Shivaratri, after paying his obeisance to Madho Rai, moves to the Tarna ma temple at the top of the Tarna hill from where he watches the proceedings of
the fair for seven days. People from all walks of life and belonging to
all strata of the society from adjoining areas come to visit this fair and
to seek the blessings of Lord Shiva on this auspicious day.
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