Posts Tagged kite flying

Kite Festival in Jaipur, Rajasthan – Colorful Sky Filled with Kites and Joy

The Rajasthanis love to celebrate and happily participate in elaborate rituals with gay abandon. There are numerous fairs and festivals  in Rajasthan and there is always something assigned to each month of the year. Kite Festival is certainly one of them, which is enjoyed by people of all age-groups in Jaipur Rajasthan.

Makar Sankranti or 14th January is celebrated with a lot of fanfare and color every year. Family and friends gather in throngs on top of roofs, celebrating Makar Sankranti and unleashing their kites on the sky and add a romantic touch to ethereal pink Jaipur monuments.

Kite Festival in Jaipur

The three-day festival will start tomorrow (14th Jan) with an inauguration at the Polo Ground, which is the venue for  kite flying and fighting for the three days of the festival.

The festival includes two kinds of celebrations. A massive extravaganza follows with Air Force helicopters releasing kites from the sky, and hundreds of school children releasing balloons. Kites that look like wasps, exquisite stained glass windows, graceful mythical birds soar in the sky and the sky shimmers with magic.

Significance of Makar Sankranti

Makar Sankranti is a festival of the Sun god. The sun goes for Uttarayan popularly called Utran from this day according to Indian astrology.

Makar is a Rashi (Zodiac) and Sankranti means transition. Hence, Makar Sankranti means transition of the Sun from the zodiac Makar. People goes to Ganga Sagar near Kolkata, West Bengal, to take a bath on Makar Sankranti.

Large number of people go to Ganga Sagar to take a bath on this day. Kumbh Mela in Haridwar is also beginning from Makar Sankranti.

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Kite Flying – A Popular Festival of Jaipur

Kite Flying in Jaipur - Celebrated Festival in Rajasthan

Kite Flying in Jaipur - Celebrated Festival in Rajasthan

About Kite Festival

The much-awaited  Kite Festival started on 12 January at City Palace organized by Maharaja Sawai Man Singh Museum Trust to promote the cultural heritage of the state.

This five-decade-old festival celebrated with same fervor reflecting the social ethos of city. More than 300 tourists left spellbound when the saw the kite experts giving twist and turns to kites in the sky.

The festival reflects a spirit of gay splendor and attracts the best kite flyers of the world to participate and exhibit their kite flying skills in this unique festival. The colorful paper kites in red, blue, yellow, green, pink, orange, fushcia, indigo, ochre, gold and silver kites adorn the azure skies of Jaipur.

There were foreign fliers from countries including Singapore, Malaysia, France, UK, US, Japan, South Africa and Holland. Foreign kite fliers demonstrated stunt-kite flying, known as “traction” or “power” kiting, while Indian fliers displayed their skill at flying kites made of paper.

Kite Flying in Jaipur

Kite Festival is a popular festival of Jaipur,  Kite flying is enjoyed by people of all age-groups. However, 14 January, the day of Makar Sankranti, makes the official day for flying kites in Jaipur.

Jaipur is well known for its passion for kites, where half of the city can be seen on the roofs of houses, deeply engrossed in the skills of kite flying.

People make most out of the festival by flying kites for the whole day. The sky becomes next to invisible as innumerable kites cover it. People form groups and fly kites, to enjoy the event to its full. With each cut loose of a kite, people fill the environment shouting, “Woh Kata”.

People shout from their terrace as adversary’s kite is cut down. Everyone is an adversary in this game and each kite is a competitor for the other. Engrossed in Kite flying, people enjoy loud music and food on the terrace itself. In Jaipur, the sky looks like a huge collage with all kites of all shapes and designs in it.

The sky is dotted with thousands of kites of different colours, sizes and styles.Kite flying started in the early morning with music and shouting, and is due to end late at night.

History About Kites

Kites has a very ancient kite tradition. Most people believe that kites were brought into India by Chinese travelers F Hien and Huin Tsang. Patang or guddi as it is more commonly known, are made of tissue paper, and bamboo. And almost all Indian kites have a very similar shape and that is of a diamond tissue paper with a center spine and a single bow intersecting the spine.

Kites are a part of everyday life in India. The anxiety and the energy that runs over many a rooftops during pench larana or kite fighting evokes immense nostalgia.

The tradition is passed onto kids from their elder brother or father or cousins. or they will pick up the tricks of the trade while assisting their seniors by holding the charkhi or the roll on which glass coated thread or manjha is wound, and keeping the line free of tangles. If you are a good assistant, you would grow up to be a good kite fighter!

Image Source : Wikipedia

Tags: , , , , , , , ,