

Who see themselves as guardians of the faith, approach the confluence at the appointed time with all the pomp and bravado of a charging army. Have determined the propitious bathing time or Kumbhayog, the first to hit the water are legions of Naga Sadhus or Naga Babas, the ferocious-looking members of the "snake sect" who cover their naked bodies with ash, and wear hair in long dreadlocks. The mela is especially renowned for the presence of an extraordinary array of religious ascetics - sadhus and mahants - enticed from remote hideaways in forests, mountains and caves. The Maha Kumbh Mela - the "Great" Kumbh Mela - is the largest religious fair in India, attended by literally millions of rejoicing the vast floodplains and river banks adjacent to the confluence are overrun by pilgrims, tents, organized in almost militaryįashion by the government, the local authorities and the police. The event is commemorated every three years by the Kumbh Mela, held at each tirtha in turn the Sangam is known as Tirtharaja, the "King of Tirthas", and its Mela, once every twelve years, is the greatest and holiest of all. They fell to earth at the four tirthas of Prayag, Haridwar, Nasik and Ujjain (tirtha means "ford of a river", a place where the devout can cross from this finite world into divineĬelestial realms. (nectar), when a scuffle broke out between the gods, and four drops were spilled. According to legend, Vishnu was carrying a kumbh (pot) of amrita

Hindus traditionally regard river confluences as auspicious places, more so the the Sangam at Allahabad, where the Yamuna and the Ganges meet the River of Enlightenment, the mythical Saraswati. The holy Sangam is the site for Annual Magha Mela/Ardh Kumbh/Kumbh Mela. Kumbh that the Sangam truly comes alive … attracting the devout from all across the country. At the Sangam, the waters of the Ganges and the Yamuna can be distinctly seen to merge into one. The sacred Sangam is the confluence of three of the holiest rivers in Hindu mythology – Ganga, Yamuna and the mythical Saraswati. Once abandoned, the offerings are fished up and sold on to other pilgrims – a blatant if efficient form of recycling. On the way to the Sangam, high-pressure aquatic salesmen loom up on the placid waters selling offerings such as coconuts for pilgrims to discard at Prices for a whole boat are between Rs 100 and Rs 120 but can soar to more than Rs 250 during peak seasons. However, most pilgrims pay around Rs 36 and you can be charged as much as Rs 150. Beaches and ghats are littered with the shorn hair of pilgrims who come to offer pind for their deceased parents.īoats to the Sangam, used by pilgrims and tourists alike, can be rented at the ghat immediately east of the fort, for the recommended government rate of Rs 12 per head. To perform puja and assist the devout in their ritual ablutions in the shallow waters. At the point at which the brown Ganges meets the Greenish Yamuna, pandas (priests) perch on small platforms

