Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Festive creations

Kolkata artists paint, mold idols for Durga Puja

- BIKAS DAS

KOLKATA, India — Spirits have been soaring in India’s “City of Joy” as tens of thousands of people jostle on Kolkata’s streets in celebratio­n of “Durga Puja,” the most important festival of the Bengali community.

The five-day festival that began Saturday is marked by prayers to the Hindu goddess Durga, feasts, rejoicing, music, dance and drama marking the victory of good over evil. People visit richly illuminate­d and decorated community centers with idols of Durga and other goddesses worshipped by the Bengali community.

This year’s Durga Puja in West Bengal state in eastern India comes after two years of pandemic curbs on large gatherings and follows UNESCO’s recognitio­n of Kolkata’s festival as part of the “Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.”

Artists began preparing for the festival months ago by making thousands of clay idols in Kumortuli, the oldest potters’ colony in Kolkata.

The art district has mushroomed in an unplanned way in congested narrow alleys and lanes on the eastern bank of the Hooghly River. Studios dot the area with no concrete constructi­on or proper doors. The artists use the space as their home and studio with common facilities.

With their work growing in popularity, the artisans have introduced fiberglass idols and and export miniature idols of Durga to the United Kingdom, the United States, Japan, Bahrain and other countries.

The work begins with a skeleton of bamboo and wood, which the artist methodical­ly binds with paddy straw to give it a human shape. The artist then places clay over the human-shaped dolls.

The faces of the idols are molded or even handcrafte­d. The clay is collected from the Hooghly River and mixed with small hay pieces and wood dust collected from sawmills. The artists paint the idols in colors chosen by their customers.

The U.N. cultural agency last December included the Durga Puja in Kolkata on the Representa­tive List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Eric Falt, UNESCO director in New Delhi, said the inscriptio­n would encourage the communitie­s that celebrate Durga Puja, including traditiona­l craftspeop­le, organizers and visitors.

Kolkata was nicknamed “The City of Joy” after a 1985 novel by Dominique Lapierre with the same name that was adapted as a film by Roland Joffe in 1992. The theme centered on people’s joyous spirits overcoming hardships.

 ?? ?? A woman hangs clothes outside her house Sept. 18 beside an unfinished idol of Hindu goddess Durga ahead of Durga Puja festival at Kumortuli.
A woman hangs clothes outside her house Sept. 18 beside an unfinished idol of Hindu goddess Durga ahead of Durga Puja festival at Kumortuli.
 ?? ?? Artisans prepare decoration­s for idols of Hindu goddess Durga on Sept. 19 ahead of Durga Puja festival.
Artisans prepare decoration­s for idols of Hindu goddess Durga on Sept. 19 ahead of Durga Puja festival.
 ?? (AP/Bikas Das) ?? People offer prayers Sunday at a makeshift worship venue on the first day of Durga Puja festival in Kolkata, India.
(AP/Bikas Das) People offer prayers Sunday at a makeshift worship venue on the first day of Durga Puja festival in Kolkata, India.
 ?? ?? Laborers pull a clay idol of Hindu goddess Durga to load on a truck Sept. 26 ahead of Durga Puja festival at Kumortuli, the potters’ place, in Kolkata.
Laborers pull a clay idol of Hindu goddess Durga to load on a truck Sept. 26 ahead of Durga Puja festival at Kumortuli, the potters’ place, in Kolkata.
 ?? ?? An artisan works on an idol of Hindu goddess Durga ahead of Durga Puja festival at Kumortuli.
An artisan works on an idol of Hindu goddess Durga ahead of Durga Puja festival at Kumortuli.
 ?? ?? Devotees leave their sandals outside in reverence as they arrive to offer prayer to Hindu goddess Durga inside a makeshift worship place on the second day of Durga Puja festival.
Devotees leave their sandals outside in reverence as they arrive to offer prayer to Hindu goddess Durga inside a makeshift worship place on the second day of Durga Puja festival.
 ?? ?? Devotees pray Monday before an idol of Hindu goddess Durga on the second day of Durga Puja festival.
Devotees pray Monday before an idol of Hindu goddess Durga on the second day of Durga Puja festival.

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