Ratha Yatra. Piazza del Popolo. Rome, 3 June 2023 |
Also this year the Hindu festival of the Chariot took place: the Ratha Yatra, in the historic location of Piazza del Popolo, with the parade on Via del Corso, in the heart of Roman shopping, a perfect fusion of the sacred and the profane, where the sacred is also represented – in a fantastic glance – by the synchrony of Hindu divinities and painted madonnas, crosses, and profiles of centenary churches.
Before starting the parade, all the Hindu faithful, the Hare Krishna (many Italians), and a lot of curious people, gathered in Piazza del Popolo, for songs and dances. Then the great Chariot – Ratha Yatra derives from two Sanskrit words, Ratha, which means chariot or carriage, and Yatra which means journey or pilgrimage, while in other Indian languages such as Odia, phonetic equivalents are used, such as jatra – it began its public procession along Via del Corso, which seemed to
explode
in containing the colorful and joyful mass of the faithful.
The big wooden chariot with the
deities Jagannath (avatar of Vishnu), Balabhadra (his brother), Subhadra (his
sister) and Sudarshana Chakra (his weapon), is pulled by the ropes by the
faithful creating an internal space in which they dance and sing, while the
spectators remain outside the two side wings.
It was thanks to the Hare Krishna movement that the festival began to be common in major cities around the world, since 1968.
Ratha Yatra is very famous in
Odisha, Jharkhand, West Bengal and other eastern Indian states, most notably
the Odia festival.
Although Ratha Yatra has religious
origins and significance, the festival has become an important community
heritage, of social sharing and cultural significance for the organizers and
attendees.
During the Jagannath Rath Yatra, the
triads are usually worshiped in the shrine of the Puri temple, but once during
the month of Asadha (the rainy season of Odissa, which usually falls in June or
July), they are brought to the main road Bada Danda in a path of 3 km up to the
Shri Gundicha Temple, allowing the public to have the darśana (Sacred
Sight). The chariot for Jagannath is approximately 45 feet 35 square feet tall
and takes approximately 2 months to build. Puri artists and painters decorate
the chariots and paint flower petals and other designs on the wheels, the
charioteer and horses carved in wood, and the upside-down lotus flowers on the
wall behind the throne.
A procession that is always capable
of magnetizing the amazement and interest of those who happen upon the heart of
Rome by chance.
Waiting for the Ratha Yatra of the
two Hindu temples of Torpignattara which will take place at the end of June.
Apparently in Italy there is also a large number of different races and religions.
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