Yahoo – AFP,
January 23, 2018
Allahabad (India) (AFP) - Millions of Hindu devotees are gathering in northern India for the Magh Mela -- one of the world's biggest religious festivals involving ritual bathing in the holy waters of the Ganges river.
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| Shiv Yogi Moni Swami is among some 10 million Hindus who participate in the 45-day religious festival (AFP Photo/Xavier GALIANA) |
Allahabad (India) (AFP) - Millions of Hindu devotees are gathering in northern India for the Magh Mela -- one of the world's biggest religious festivals involving ritual bathing in the holy waters of the Ganges river.
An
estimated 10 million Hindus descend on the city of Allahabad every January for
the festival staged at the sacred meeting point of the Ganges, Yamuna and
mythical Saraswati rivers.
The 45-day
Mela is currently underway, with pilgrims camping across Allahabad and joining
the colourful throngs for dips in the venerated waters.
Among them
is Shiv Yogi Moni Swami, a holy man smeared in sandalwood paste, carrying a
trident and clad in nothing more than beads and a leopard-print wrap around his
waist.
Swami
demonstrates his devotion not by walking to the confluence of the rivers known
as the Sangam but by rolling the roughly one-kilometre distance from his tent
to the waters.
It is not
an easy task, with his body collecting dust and grime before he arrives at the
confluence where he submerges himself fully.
The act "purifies the soul and washes away all sins", he told AFP, after scattering rose petals to the rising sun and performing his ablutions.
![]() |
Swami's
body collects dust and grime before he arrives at the confluence (AFP
Photo/Xavier GALIANA)
|
The act "purifies the soul and washes away all sins", he told AFP, after scattering rose petals to the rising sun and performing his ablutions.
"As we
bathe on this holy day in the Ganges we are praying not only for peace of our
soul but for the welfare of the whole world," Swami added.
Fellow
pilgrims, impressed by his piety and fortitude, bow to touch his feet and take
blessings.
Some even
lie prostrate before him as he passes in a sign of reverence.
Many
Indians believe that holy men like Swami possess mystical powers and are
capable of curing all manner of illnesses.
For the
duration of the Mela, Swami says he eats just one simple meal of fruit a day,
apparently enough to sustain him through a busy schedule of chanting prayers
and performing yagna, a centuries-old Hindu fire ritual.
"I
believe that if you all bow before the Ganges you will be blessed with eternal
peace and happiness," he said, explaining his devotion to the holiest
river in Hinduism.
"She
(Ganges) is just like a mother. Just like a mother is kind to all, be it a
Christian, Buddhist, Muslim or a Jain, the Ganges is all encompassing."
The annual
ritual has been held in Allahabad for centuries and is a smaller version of the
Kumbh Mela, a gigantic event attended by tens of millions that UNESCO describes
as the largest peaceful gathering of pilgrims on earth.
![]() |
Many
Indians believe that holy men like Swami possess mystical powers and
are
capable of curing all manner of illnesses (AFP Photo/Xavier GALIANA)
|
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