BJP Launches Offensive Against Depiction of Farmers’ Footwear in Durga Puja Pandal

In Kolkata, BJP has paid little heed to the tradition of pandals focusing on contemporary politics but instead claimed that the footwear in a pandal is an insult to the goddess.

Kolkata: On the evening of Saturday, October 9, Prithvijoy Das, a Kolkata-based lawyer closely associated with Bharatiya Janata Party, sent a legal notice to the organisers of a Durga Puja committee in Kolkata’s Dum Dum Park area for allegedly “hurting religious sentiments” by using slippers to decorate a festival pandal.

“It has been found that Dum Dum Park Bharat Chakra Durga Puja Committee has decorated the sacred ‘Durga Mondop’ with footwear…such a manifestation of ideas by the said puja committee is enough to injure and deprave the religious feeling of any devotee and true belief. That I, being a “Sanatan Hindu”, cannot convince my mind with, and accept, these perverted ideas and thoughts that hurt my religious feelings and holy beliefs,” reads the legal notice.

A day later, another Kolkata-based lawyer Shantanu Singha lodged a First Information Report (FIR) at Lalbazar, the police headquarters, against the same organisers. Meanwhile, Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s south Bengal spokesperson Sourish Mukherjee told reporters that VHP will launch a protest in front of the puja pandal during the festival itself.

Suvendu Adhikari’s social media post.

Soon after, leader of opposition of West Bengal assembly, Suvendu Adhikari tweeted saying, “A Durga Puja pandal in Dumdum Park has been decorated with shoes. This heinous act of insulting Maa Durga in the name of ‘Artistic liberty’ won’t be tolerated. I urge the Chief & Home Secretary to intervene & compel the organisers to remove the shoes before Shashti (ritual commencement day).”

BJP leader and former governor of Meghalaya, Tathagata Roy, told reporters on Saturday, “Everything won’t be tolerated in the name of artistic freedom. This is a grave insult to goddess Durga and hurts our religious sentiment”.

These developments have come while Bengal was preparing for its biggest annual festival. While last year saw a lull induced by COVID-19 concerns, this year, the state has been eager to observe the week-long festival in grand spirit. Advertisement boards have plastered half of Kolkata and loudspeakers hanging from treetops have been blaring songs and sounds of the festive drum or dhaak nonstop. The bigger community pujas have been inaugurated and are thrown open to the public already.

The pandal at the eye of this storm was commissioned by the Dum Dum Park Bharat Chakra Durga Puja Committee, an association known for showcasing great pieces of art and craftsmanship through their pandals. They themed this year’s puja pandal on the ongoing farmer’s agitation.

A massive art installation portrays the plight of farmers who have been protesting against the farm laws for nearly a year. The committee has also sharply criticised the recent violence in Uttar Pradesh’s Lakhimpur Kheri that left eight dead, including four farmers and a journalist.

A tractor full of gunny bags greets visitors at the entrance. Outside the main pandal, on the right side, hundreds of sandals, some torn, some in proper shape, can be spotted on the ground. These symbolise a common scene from agitation spots in the aftermath of police action, when protesters have no option but to run leaving their footwear behind.

A graffiti of a car and farmer lying on its path can be seen at Dum Dum Park Bharat Chakra Durga Puja pandal. Photo: Himadri Ghosh

Posters with legends like “no farmer no food”, “new farm bills are suicidal”, “jai jawan jai kisan”, and “we are with farmers” line the walls. There is also a nod to history – the rebellion by tribals in 1831, the Tebhaga movement, etc.

As one moves towards the main pandal, the graffiti of a car and farmer lying on its path can be seen. The caption says, “Motorgari uray dhulo, niche pore chashigulo. ‘Cars speed away raising dust, farmers come under the wheels.’

The main pandal, with the idols, depicts a heap of paddy, sacred to farmers.

Speaking to The Wire, Anirban Das, the artist who conceptualised the piece, said, “Art always speaks of the times we live in. We have done exactly that, nothing extraordinary. For years now, Durga Puja pandals in Kolkata are depicting various contemporary socio-economic and political issues. This is nothing new.”

Posters like “No Farmer No Food”, “New Farm Bills Are Suicidal”have mastered the walls. Cutouts of rebellion by the tribals in 1831, Tebhaga movement can also be seen. Photo: Himadri Ghosh

Reacting to the legal notice and FIR, club general secretary Pratik Choudhury said, “A section of people are just distorting facts to malign our puja. A morphed photograph was posted in social media, which shows sandals were installed above the Durga idol. This is completely baseless. Sandals which we have installed here are 62 feet away from the Durga idol. Farmers who provide us food are staging protests against the three farm laws for a year now. So many of them were martyred. We are telling their story.”

Choudhury adds, “We will not be changing the pandal or removing anything because of this false propaganda which is clearly done with political intentions.”

For decades now, Durga Puja pandals in Kolkata have focused on various socio-economic and socio-political themes.

From cinema to politics, issues like like global warming, climate change, use of plastics, the advantage of recycling, necessity of education for all, the need for affordable healthcare have been some of the mainstays for pandals, along with the focus on indigenous art.

A puja pandal in Kolkata themed around recycling. Photo: Himadri Ghosh

South Kolkata’s Barisha Club chose the National Register of Citizens (NRC) as the theme for its pandal this time.

The pandal shows goddess Durga as a mother who is being taken to a detention camp near the India-Bangladesh border. Barbed wires, check-posts, and daily belongings feature as well.

The Barisha Club Durga Puja pandal with the National Register of Citizens (NRC) as their theme. Photo: Himadri Ghosh

Club member Debashish Bose says, “The theme depicts plights of the people, who suddenly became stateless, even though they have been residing in the country for generations.” Last year, this club’s pandal was themed on the migrant crisis with Durga represented as a migrant worker.

A section has also criticised this pandal for depicting Durga inside a detention camp.

Kolkata based photographer-filmmaker, Ronny Sen, wrote a post on social media in 2017:

“This is what Calcutta was all about. I was shooting an assignment during the Pujo last year where I had found a little mosque as a part of a Pujo pandal at 66 pally. Everything was two dimensional and had things which were 66 years old as the city looked back then. It also had this one, the Nakhoda Masjid. Having a Hindu goddess inside many things including a mosque was so cool. Something an Australian journalist had told me while working on a story about Mother Teresa that in Syria in Damascus the ancient mosque was actually inside a very big church compound. Anyways, in these terrible times, we are living in things like 66 Pally were really nice…”

Once exclusive to the houses of rich zamindars, community pujas have been marked by a coming together of people and a pooling of resources. The transition from shabeki (or traditional) pujas to theme-based puja also witnessed brickbats from sections of Bengalis. But no amount of resistance could significantly  hold back the evolution of the Durga Puja.

Which is why, the BJP’s reaction to a quaint Puja trait has appeared out of place.

Journalist Sreya Chatterjee tweeted saying, “For some of us who have grown up celebrating Durga in their homes, she is more family than God. Every year we take turns to gift her “Pujor Saree” and Panchami is when she is presented with her attire. For us in Bengal, Maa is our own. We don’t fear her, we love her. The unnecessary controversy on how Bengal celebrates Durga Pujo should stop.”

Notably, the Durga Puja in Bengal has never been the exclusive domain of Hindus and signifies the coming together of all religions. Notwithstanding this cultural fact, BJP, for the past few years, has campaigned far and wide in Bengal with the allegation that Mamata Banerjee-led TMC government does not allow Hindus to worship Durga in the state.

Also read: With ‘ModiShahSurmardini,’ Mamata Banerjee’s TMC Shows It’s Loathe to Let Go of ‘Didi as Devi’ Trope

In the last two years, Union home minister Amit Shah came down to Kolkata to inaugurate various Durga Puja pandals. Last year, leaders of BJP started their own Durga Puja at the Eastern Zonal Cultural Centre (EZCC) in Kolkata’s satellite town of Salt Lake, which was virtually inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

However, this year, until two weeks ago, the former state president of BJP Dilip Ghosh and the recently appointed new president Sukanta Majumdar had been trading barbs on whether BJP should continue organising a Durga Puja or not.

Last week, state vice-president Pratap Banerjee told reporters that they are organising Durga Puja this year also and either Amit Shah or party national president J.P. Nadda will inaugurate it this time. But The Wire can confirm that none of the leaders are inaugurating it. Unlike last year’s extravaganza, this year’s BJP Puja appears to be a low-key affair.

Speaking on the current discourse, senior Kolkata journalist Rajat Mondal says that the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh had long ago “admitted that it was not convenient for them to accept the kind-hearted humanitarian side of Bengalis.”

“Recent election results proved that BJP’s religion-centric politics has no life in West Bengal. Still, they are constantly engaging in this kind of discourse as they have nothing to offer other than hard-line Hindutva. Last year, they constantly harped that the current state government doesn’t allow Durga Puja to take place in Bengal. This year, we see another desperate attempt by BJP to defame our culture and dehumanise Muslims. This is nothing but their attempt to get media publicity,” he adds.

This Year, the Durga Puja Returned to Its Core Group – Those Who Can’t Celebrate It

Even though it is by far the happiest point of the Bengali calendar, the Durga Puja has always been as much about celebrating as it has been about not celebrating.

Kolkata: It is not as if the Durga Puja was ever entirely bright.

Anyone who has spent the duration of the pujo season in Kolkata knows that at the heart of the celebrations, there is a heavy ounce of sadness –  of sorrow, or mourning or even an unscientific strangeness in one’s mind.

Even though it is by far the happiest moment in the Bengali calendar, Durga Puja is as much about celebrating as it has been about not celebrating. Every ritual, every swell in the clouds that heralds this time and even the depth of the songs of the Mahalaya is a reminder that there is much that has passed, that will not come again and that the only paradise is a paradise lost. In the coming and leaving of a goddess, there is an implicit understanding among all revellers that the sound of the dhak may be a merry one, but it is not merry for every one.

If you have visited any pandal, you have seen the ecosystem of inequality around it. The bigger the puja, the more the stalls of fast food sellers, and the deeper the furrows in their brows over business done and undone. In the cheap watered down cold drinks sold in glasses, in the vomit that trickles down the ferris wheel at Park Circus,  in the children who are begging at your elbow for the soggy bhelpuri being sold and the unending distance between the parking area and the pandal, there is a wretchedness. This is the delight.

That foreshadowing of doom that repeat watchers of that great Bengali institution, Pather Panchali, have come to associate with kash flowers is the very essence of the sorrow in the Durga Puja. Apu and Durga at once bring in puja and run to their sorry ends. This is the demon in the eudaimonia.

A still from Satyajit Ray’s ‘Pather Panchali’. The kash flowers are a symbol of impending autumn and Durga Puja festivities.

Which is why this year, the Durga Puja appeared to return to the very people at its core — those who cannot celebrate it. There were always people who could not be joyous during the puja, and this year, this group comprised nearly everyone. The puja had come home to those who never had it.

Yet to sweep the small complexities and the big joys of a beloved festival with a single brush is wrong. The puja committees of Bengal, their self-important secretaries and their appointed personnel at the microphones rose in unison to attempt an effort at maintaining rules. “I beg of you all, please do not come into the pandal without a mask, if a policeman sees us, they will close us down,” the voice in the loudspeaker, usually given to announcing the evening’s special function, pleaded.

Dhak players in masks sweated. Volunteers in masks also sweated. With pandals declaring themselves ‘no-entry zones’ following the Calcutta high court order, the small crowd at the 10-metre barricade in front of every pandal zoomed into the idol with their phone cameras.

A ‘no entry’ board in front of a community puja on north Kolkata’s B.T. Road. Photo: Soumashree Sarkar/The Wire

Cultural activist Sundeep Bhutoria, who organises the Manicktala Chaltabagan Lohapatty puja, one of the glitziest community festivities in Kolkata and one with an unerring ability to unite personalities across the political spectrum (‘the chief minister and the governor were both at the festivities last year,’ mentions Bhutoria) spent a rare puja with a “near negligible” visitor count. “We began the pandal making process almost two months late. Two of our defining activities, the sindoor khela [where women sprinkle each other with vermillion] and the dhak utsav were both done away with. Instead, we made a film to be circulated and screened,” he said.

Like Chaltabagan, another crowd puller of a puja, the Bosepukur Sitala Mandir opened itself up so that visitors could see inside the pandal while walking or riding by. For the latter, this must have taken some humility considering that until last year, the Sitala Mandir would erect tall tin sheets on the road divider so that stragglers would not be able to catch a casual glimpse into the pandal.

People take photos of a Durga Puja pandal in south Kolkata from the sidewalk and road. Photo: Soumashree Sarkar/The Wire

At Sinthee More, in the north Kolkata suburbs, a large field which would transform itself to a month-long carnival spot with at least three dangerous rides, 20 food stalls, three game stalls and a towering pandal, was empty except for a small pandal. The latter, in recognition of the times that are, was a likeness of the Calcutta Medical College.

There is no doubt that Bengal tried. To maintain restrictions, traditions that had evolved through three centuries were dispensed with. “I don’t remember a puja in the last few years where the house was closed to visitors. Even the traditional method of immersing the idols by first placing them between two boats and then hacking away at the three planks of wood on which the idol stood was done away with. Our idols are usually aekchala or one unit, but this year, we individually placed the five idols because people carrying the enormous structure shoulder to shoulder was not an option,” says Raina Ghosh. Raina’s mother Rasna belongs to the Shobhabazar royal family.

The Shobabazar Rajbari puja. Photo: Biswarup Ganguly/Wikimedia Commons

In 1757, the family’s founder, Raja Nabakrishna Deb, set the standard for what was to become the traditional Durga Puja. What was once a celebration attended by Robert Clive, is now two pujas on either side of a road in north Kolkata. The bigger is by the part of the family coming from Nabakrishna’s adopted son and the smaller, to which Rasna belongs, is descended from his biological son. While the bigger Shobhabazar puja opened itself to a trickle of visitors this year, the smaller one did not. Nor did the dhakis arrive, or the century old chefs who made the puja meal called bhog.

“We paid our ancestral dhakis, the chefs, the shehnai players who performed in the evenings, but asked them all not to come this year. Members of the family played the dhak when needed,” Raina says.

Sambit Chatterjee, whose ancestral home in Southern Avenue has been organising the puja for the last 83 years, has a similar story to tell. “When my grandmother passed away, we had the puja that year as well. She made us promise we won’t stop. But this year, we took the tough decision and paid our dhakis, chefs, the pandal workers and the priest, and asked them to stay in their homes. We put up a poster of the idol from 2019, lit a candle and played the dhak on a Bluetooth speaker. That was our puja,” says Chatterjee.

A Kolkata Traffic Police volunteer directs cars away from a lit gateway of a pandal in south Kolkata. Photo: Soumashree Sarkar/The Wire

The economy of the Durga Puja — a festival that artisans, musicians, performers, labourers, eateries and just about everyone in Bengal depends on for an influx of cash — has noticeably grappled with the new normal.

Also read: Durga Puja Washed Out for Kolkata’s Idol Makers

“The amount of donations we got was remarkably and understandably low. And comparatively, the money we found ourselves paying the dhak players and the priest was higher. Our dhaki took Rs 7,000 instead of the usual Rs 5,000 because in the absence of trains, he had to pay Rs 1,400 for each journey to and from his village to our building. Our priest had to take an Uber to and from his house to the puja venue,” says Kalapi Joardar, who organises the puja at the Parijat Building in south Kolkata. The puja which began in 1977 usually ensures a packed six days for the residents of the flats in the building, complete with meals, evening chat sessions and revelry that goes into the night. None of that happened this year.

“At one point, it was so quiet, I felt for the first time that it was truly a puja and not a festival,” notes Joardar. “Barring the police personnel who visited every evening to keep tabs on whether we were maintaining rules, we did not get a single visitor.”

In the rest of the city, what was a quiet Shashti (the sixth day of the time of the goddess), rose into a murmur at Saptami, and a buzz at Ashtami before erupting into a full scale cacophony at Nabami. The ninth day saw enormous crowds.

But even they were no match for the usual. By a wicked twist of fate, the late puja meant a chill in the air that was unfairly conducive to long hours of pandal hopping through the streets. Even crueler was the fact that thanks to the very pandemic which drastically streamlined the festivities, much of Bengal’s significant young population which usually has to stay away to work in other cities, was in the state this time.

A man and a woman stare at an empty dais after the Durga idol has been carried away for immersion, in south Kolkata’s Golf Club. Photo: Ananya Chatterjee

In the absence of almost every other form of celebration familiar to this season, small solace can perhaps be found in the knowledge that when the idols move towards the Ganga for immersion in processions vastly smaller than the usual, people can still stand at their balconies, waving.

Calcutta HC Eases Some Durga Puja Regulations, Pandals Still ‘No Entry’ Zones for Visitors

The new number of people who can be allowed at once inside a pandal is 45.

Kolkata: The Calcutta high court has relaxed some of the conditions of its significant order on Durga Puja festivities. Pandals, however, still remain no-entry zones for people.

Hearing a plea against its order on October 19, the bench of Justices Sanjib Banerjee and Arijit Banerjee raised the number of puja committee members or organisers who will be allowed into the pandals.

The earlier number was 15 to 25 and their names had to be displayed prominently outside the pandals. These names, the court had said, could not be changed from day to day.

The new number of people who can be allowed at once inside a pandal is 45. This includes not just organisers but also local residents and dhakis who are traditional drummers intrinsic to the festival. A list of 60 names in total has to be prepared in advance by puja committees, reported Anandabazar Patrika. This list can be changed daily.

Workers, some of them in masks, carry a Durga idol to a pandal. Photo: PTI

The Forum for Durgotsav Committees, which moved the plea, has called the revised regulations a “moral victory.”

There is no permission yet for the community sindoor khela, a ritual where women smear each other with vermillion on the last day of the pujas.

Doctors in West Bengal have overwhelmingly welcomed the order, as have a wide section of the general public.

The ruling Trinamool Congress had said on Monday that a lot of people would be disappointed with the order declaring puja pandals no-entry zones. Several TMC leaders are organisers of some of the biggest Durga Pujas in Kolkata.

The BJP, which is organising a Durga Puja at Eastern Zonal Cultural Centre in Salt Lake, said it would adhere to the court order.

CPI(M) Legislature Party leader Sujan Chakraborty said the verdict would save hundreds of lives. CPI(M) leader Bikash Bhattacharya, who was Kolkata mayor at one time, was the lawyer for the petitioner who moved court seeking the curbs.

State Congress president Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury said that due to the unprecedented situation caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, this year everybody has to make some sacrifices.

COVID-19: Calcutta HC Declares Durga Puja Pandals ‘No Entry’ Zones

Pandal footfall, in Bengal capital Kolkata, and many other cities and towns go into lakhs during the festivities.

Kolkata: The Calcutta high court on Monday ordered that all Durga Puja pandals across the state be declared no-entry zones to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

A division bench of the high court comprising Justice Sanjib Banerjee and Justice Arijit Banerjee, hearing a public interest litigation filed by one Ajay Kumar, said that no visitors will be allowed to enter the pandals.

Pandal footfall, in Bengal capital Kolkata, and many other cities and towns go into lakhs during the festivities. Several puja committees had announced that they were closing off pandals, or building much more open structures that allow for easier circulation of air.

On Sunday, October 18, which was the last weekend before the festivities, several marketplaces across the state saw crowds that wildly overshoot permissible limits considering the risk of COVID-19.

People shop at New Market area ahead of Durga Puja festival, in Kolkata, Sunday, October 18, 2020. Photo: PTI

For small pandals, barricades will have to be put up five to 10 metres from the entrance, while for the bigger ones, the distance has to be 10 metres, the court ordered.

There should be no-entry boards on the barricades, it said.

The court also ordered that the Kolkata police commission and West Bengal DGP would have to submit affidavits to the court by November 5 on how these orders were followed, reported Anandabazar Patrika.

The court also ordered that only 15 to 25 persons belonging to the organising committees will be allowed to enter the pandals.

Only those organisers whose names have been put up outside the pandals will be allowed to enter them. All Durga Puja committees across the state have been asked to submit a blueprint for crowd management, according to a report by Indian Express.

A day earlier, the same court had directed that community Durga Puja organisers in the state spend 75% of the Rs 50,000 grant given by the West Bengal government on the procurement of COVID-19 protection equipment and the rest on strengthening public-police bonding.

A division bench comprising Justices Sanjib Banerjee and Arijit Banerjee directed that the money given by the state to the Durga Puja committees cannot be used for any other purpose, and purchase bills have to be submitted to the authorities for audit.

Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee had announced on September 24 the Rs 50,000 grant for each of the 36,946 Durga Puja committees in the state.