Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Urdu heritage festival at CP regales audience

- Gulam Jeelani gulam.jeelani@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: On Friday afternoon, visitors to Connaught Place’s Central Park were in for a pleasant surprise. They may have walked in for a routine stroll with friends or some alone time, but in no time, they were tapping their feet to a qawwali performanc­e.

The six-day Urdu Heritage Festival that began on Thursday has been drawing huge crowds, officials of the Department of Arts, Culture and Languages said. The department has jointly organised the event with Delhi Urdu Academy to celebrate Urdu heritage and culture.

The opening night of the festival saw Ghazal maestro Talat Aziz perform in front of over 1,500 people. The second day of the festival, also called Jashn-e-Virasate-Urdu, started with a performanc­e by children of Talent Group Delhi who took the audience down the memory lane by enacting a play called ‘Qissa Bachpan Ke Khelon Ka’.

“We come to Central Park regularly. But it is rare to see an event like this. It was a pleasant surprise,” said a visitor, Pooja, who doesn’t use her last name.

After a 45-minute performanc­e by the children, Sarfaraz Chisti and his group of qawwali singers from Uttar Pradesh took stage. The group regaled the audience with their renditions like ‘Maula Ali’ and ‘Jo Mujh Mein Bolta Hain Mein Nahi Hain” besides instrument­al performanc­es on songs like ‘Dama Dam Mast Qalander’.

“Generally, when we want to attend such an event, getting tickets is not easy. This function is free,” said Suman Sharma who had come with her friends.

Officials said that though the festival has been held in Delhi since 2010, many people did not know about it because it was usually held at the Red Fort lawns. Organisers said the new venue was convenient for the regular patrons of the festival as well as attract others to the festival. More than 50 artists, including well-known Urdu poets, Sufi and qawwali singers, are slated to perform at the event.

“Urdu is an integral part of Delhi’s cultural and literary history. It is an important marker of Delhi’s composite culture. We hope to create an environmen­t of harmony and love through such programmes,” said Delhi’s deputy chief minister and minister of arts, culture and languages, Manish Sisodia, on the inaugural day.

With the shifting of the venue and restructur­ing of the programme, the Urdu Academy is expecting more than 2,000 guests every day. “Not more than 1,000 people would attend the event till last year,” an official said.

The festival will conclude on February 20 with a mushaira (poetic symposium) in which famous Urdu poets such as Rahat Indori, Mahtab Haider Naqvi and Nikhat Amrohi are slated to participat­e.

 ?? SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO ?? Singers perform during the opening day of Urdu Heritage Festival at Central Park, Connaught Place, on Thursday.
SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO Singers perform during the opening day of Urdu Heritage Festival at Central Park, Connaught Place, on Thursday.

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