Deccan Chronicle

Residents gear up for pre-Navratri garba

- KANIZA GARARI | DC

Traditiona­l garba is the crux of the pre-Navratri celebratio­ns. Participan­ts from mainly the Gujarati community hear stories retold about its traditiona­l base and the need to preserve it.

Nowadays, though, Navratri celebratio­ns are thoroughly commercial­ised and the dandiya raas dominates, based on themes from Bollywood. Navratri begins on September 29 and ends on October 7.

To revive garba, Bina Mehta, a choreograp­her of traditiona­l garba, ensures that the rituals which are part of an age old tradition are maintained and passed on to the future generation­s.

Ms Mehta is a traditiona­l garba dancer. “The crux of the pre-Navratri event is to showcase the traditiona­l dance and folklore, which is the main culture. Earlier, people would play in open areas around their homes. This is not possible now. We have these traditiona­l themes, there are no charges, and we have youngsters who are taking part in large numbers,” she says.

It is difficult to perform the traditiona­l dances in these times of discos and DJs. Fusion, mixing of Bollywood and even Tollywood songs, is the masala that dominates the Hyderabad scene too.

Krupa Patel, another enthusiast of the traditiona­l style says, “The traditiona­l music numbers have limited scope in these commercial events. For this reason we make efforts to get the young before the main celebratio­ns, and there is a slow but small shift noted.”

Practising dandiya, traditiona­l and otherwise, begins in June and there are videos for those who want to learn it at home.

 ?? — P. SURENDRA ?? Flower merchants in Gudi Malkapur market eagerly wait for Navratri and Bathkamma festivals as their business has been affected due to rains.
— P. SURENDRA Flower merchants in Gudi Malkapur market eagerly wait for Navratri and Bathkamma festivals as their business has been affected due to rains.

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