|
Rajasthani
Fairs & Festivals - Kite Festival
|
14 January is celebrated in India
as Makar Sankranti - heralding the transition of the sun into
the Northern hemisphere. It is also a big kite day in most parts
of India when children from 6 to 60 can be seen with their heads
turned to the sky. In Jaipur kites virtually blot out the sky.
Everyone joins in this riotous celebration and shouts of " Woh
Kata Hai !" reverberate from rooftops to the accompaniment of
drums as adversaries’ kites are cut down. And everyone’s an
adversary! Any kite in the sky is fair game.
Activities
The three-day festival starts with an inauguration at the Polo
Ground, which is the venue for some serious kite flying and
fighting for the three days of the festival. The festival
includes two kinds of celebrations. A massive extravaganza
follows, with Air Force helicopters releasing kites from the
sky, and hundreds of schoolchildren releasing balloons. Kites
that look like wasps, exquisite stained glass windows, graceful
mythical birds soar in the sky and the sky shimmers with magic. |
 |
|
|
Fighting kites beautifully choreographed by the wind look like poetry in
the skies, written by kite flyers from many nations. The three days of
the festival are divided into two sections. One is the Fighter Kite
Competition and the other is the more sober Display Flying and there are
prestigious trophies to be won in both categories. Every evening
participants are provided with dinner at an exotic location.
On the final day the venue of the festival shifts to the exquisite lawns
of the Umaid Bhawan Palace, the royal residence of the Maharaja of
Jodhpur. The finals of the Fighter Kite Competition and the final
judging of the Display Kites are followed by the prize distribution
ceremony, the valedictory function, and a farewell dinner with the
Maharaja. As the festival draws to an end, traditional Indian kite
craftsmen prepare to return to their humdrum lives, selling handcrafted
aerial art for mere pennies.
|
|
|
Other Fairs & Festivals:
|
|
Nagaur Fair, Nagaur (Jan-Feb.) |
Kite Festival (held on 14th Jan of
every year) |
|
Desert Festival, Jaisalmer (Jan-Feb.) |
Baneshwar Fair, Baneshwar (Jan-Feb.) |
|
Gangaur Festival, Jaipur
(March-April) |
Mewar Festival, Udaipur (March-April) |
|
Elephant Festival, Jaipur
(March-April) |
Urs Ajmer Sharif, Ajmer (According
to Lunar Calendar) |
|
Summer Festival, Mt.Abu (June) |
Teej Festival, Jaipur (July-August) |
|
Kajli Teej, Bundi
(July-August)
|
Dussehra Festival, Kota (October) |
|
Marwar Festival, Jodhpur (October) |
Pushkar Fair, Ajmer (November) |
|
Camel Festival, Bikaner (January) |
|
|
|