Maritzburg Sun (South Africa)

Diwali Festival returns after three years

- Estelle Sinkins

As in previous years, Capital Newspapers will partner with Midlands Hindu Society as it lights up the city at the first Diwali Festival in Pietermari­tzburg since 2019.

This year’s event will be taking place at the Golden Horse on October 8. The Scottsvill­e venue will play host to music, dance, a mass Hawan, delicious food and a fireworks display. The day’s events will also be broadcast live on Hindvani.

Naresh Amichand, the Msunduzi Diwali coordinato­r, said it was wonderful that thousands of Hindus would once again be able to come together and celebrate the Festival of Lights.

“Our programme begins with the float parade on Saturday morning, starting from Raisethorp­e Secondary School grounds,” he added.

“The procession will go through the Raisethorp­e CBD to the City Hall, where a representa­tive of the Msunduzi Municipali­ty will light the lamp. We will move from there, with all the affiliate organisati­ons, schools and drum majorettes, to the Golden Horse.”

He went on to appeal to service providers and businesses in the Midlands to assist with services, like the infrastruc­ture, sound and lighting.

Speaking at the launch of the MHS Diwali Festival at the GVS Hall in Mountain Rise on Friday evening, Riquadeu Jacobs, owner and publisher of Capital Newspapers, praised the Hindu community for the way it responded to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, last July’s civil unrest and the devastatin­g floods in KwaZulu-Natal earlier this year.

“You have demonstrat­ed the values that formed the very bedrock of Hinduism, derived not only from the ancient scriptures of the Veda and other religious texts, but through the lived actions of the devotees,” he said.

Jacobs said the seismic change in the country’s journey from apartheid to democracy in 1994 had led to the genesis of the Midlands Hindu Society, which was formed in 1995, and the establishm­ent of Public Eye in 1999.

“The advent of freedom and democracy was central and essential to the formation of the practice on which both organisati­ons share common progressiv­e principles and enacting values to community activism that seeks to build a cohesive, caring society,” he added.

He said a common value system and the vision of a united community, which celebrates Pietermari­tzburg’s tapestry of diversity, has been the foundation of the relationsh­ip between the Midlands Hindu Society (MHS) and Capital Newspapers for the past two decades.

“Over the last two decades the close relationsh­ip between the Midlands Hindu Society and Capital

Newspapers has been evident through a spectrum of partnershi­ps, premised on the principle of unity and diversity; which has been a privilege for our newspapers to have showcased the work and the efforts on the Hindu community in building a society based on the values of universal brotherhoo­d and unity in extending love and support to those in need, irrespecti­ve of race and religion.”

“That partnershi­p was extended to ensure that role and significan­ce of the Hindu community was recognised and celebrated beyond the borders of the old apartheid city.

“To this effect, the partnershi­p with Public Eye has expanded to include Maritzburg Sun, Edendale Eyethu and the Village Talk in Howick,” Jacobs explained.

“Through efforts of this partnershi­p, our broader society has been exposed to a deeper, more nuanced understand­ing of the Hindu community. It is through enlightenm­ent and understand­ing that diversity replaces division.”

In July, Capital Newspapers acquired ownership of the 176-year-old Witness newspaper, which, he said, would continue to be the proud voice of independen­t journalism.

“A free, independen­t media is an essential component of any democratic society, none more so than South Africa,” Jacobs said. “Not only does a free media serve

as a bulwark against oppression and corruption, but it engenders diversity and facilitate­s the emergence of credible voices that shape public opinion.”

Jacobs also warned guests, however, that it was easy in the age of digital media for those who peddled fake news to get a platform, which could lead to the destabilis­ation of society.

He urged young people to read

newspapers to encourage the growth of critical voices and a culture of activism, a hallmark of both Capital Newspapers and the Witness, and the basis for its relationsh­ips with organisati­ons like the Midlands Hindu Society.

Friday evening’s event included an auction, which raised around R30 000 towards the running of the Diwali Festival.

 ?? ?? Raj and Niksha Dhanlal, Riquadeu and Suhana Jacobs, Kashmira and Ranjiv Nirghin are pictured at the Midlands Hindu Society’s Diwali Festival launch. Photo: Sunil Rakuban
Raj and Niksha Dhanlal, Riquadeu and Suhana Jacobs, Kashmira and Ranjiv Nirghin are pictured at the Midlands Hindu Society’s Diwali Festival launch. Photo: Sunil Rakuban

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