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Photo Essay : Ganga Aarti ceremony at the Har-ki-Pauri ghats near Haridwar

Travelogue
in Haridwar by Saravana
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Photo Essay : Ganga Aarti ceremony at the Har-ki-Pauri ghats near Haridwar

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Har-ki-Pauri (meaning the "Steps of Lord Shiva") is a famous ghat located on the banks of the Ganges river near Haridwar. It is here that the Ganges finally leaves the mountains and enters the plains of North India.

Every evening, the local priests perform a Ganga Aarti ceremony to welcome the revered river to the plains of India. It is a spectacular ceremony of fire and songs, participated and performed by thousands of people who gather here from all over the country.

This post is a brief photo summary from my visit to ceremony back in August 2010. My visit to Har-ki-Pauri coincided with the annual Kanwar mela and there were hundreds of thousands of pilgrims camped out by the river to take part in the mela celebrations.

Note: The photos are best viewed in a browser which understands ICC color profiles like IE9, Safari or Firefox (Google Chrome sucks for viewing photos).

Vendors and stalls catering to the needs of the pilgrims and the tourists alike.

Just behind the Har-ki-Pauri ghats you'll find numerous stalls and vendors peddling all kinds of stuff a discerning pilgrim would desire. The stalls are packed with cheap and mouth watering delicacies like chat, pooris, kulfis and lassi to sate ravenous pilgrim coming there after an intense session of prayers and chantings. It was great fun to walk along the stalls to photograph everything that was on offer there.
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Photos from this story

During the Kanwar mela, millions of people from all over North India come to Haridwar to collect water from the Ganges and take it back home. Here you can see the stalls and camps set up to accomodate the pilgrims. The colorful objects on sale in this picture are Kanwars. Wooden (bamboo) poles used by the pilgrims to carry the Ganga Jal (holy water) back to their hometowns. Usually the pole is slung across their shoulders with water-pots hanging from either end.
© photo in Haridwar by Saravana. All rights reserved.
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As i was walking towards the Har-ki-Pauri ghats these kids came up to me sell these odd looking garlands. I didn't buy any, but still they were happy to pose for a few pictures.
© photo in Haridwar by Saravana. All rights reserved.
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As i reached the Har-ki-Pauri ghats the aarti had already begun. All along the ghats, priests like this can be seen performing the aarti with many devotees around them. The aarti is accompanied by the melodious chanting of the "Om Jai Gange Mata" hymn by everyone gathered there. The whole place swayed to the rhythm and the tempo of the bhajans. The atmosphere was quite incredible. It took me back to my days in the Sivanada ashram where we used to do the Ganga Aarti every day and i found myself singing along to the bhajans.
© photo in Haridwar by Saravana. All rights reserved.
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Once the Ganga aarti was complete, you'll see priests like this walking around offering the flames of the aarti to the devotees.
© photo in Haridwar by Saravana. All rights reserved.
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A priest offering the holy flames to the pilgrims during the Ganga Aarti evening ceremony at Har-Ki-Pauri in Haridwar. The devotees give some offering in the form of money back to the priests. Things did feel a bit commercialized to me, but maybe thats just the cynic in me talking.
© photo in Haridwar by Saravana. All rights reserved.
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Seeking blessings from the scared flames. A typical scene during the Ganga Aarti ritual which takes place every evening at Har-ki-Pauri in Haridwar. I love this picture. Watch the girl in the background taking in the blessings.
© photo in Haridwar by Saravana. All rights reserved.
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People gathered on the Har-ki-Pauri ghats to witness the Ganga aarti ceremony. Once the ceremony is over, some of them take a ritual bath in the waters of the Ganges. Many people pay their respects to the river by placing floating diyas (wick lamps) on the waters of the ganges. The floating diya is basically a plantain leaf folded in the shape of a boat, containing a few flowers and a tiny wick lamp which would be lighted and set off on the waters.
© photo in Haridwar by Saravana. All rights reserved.
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After more than 10 years of living the corporate life, i've recently downshifted my life to create Kettik and dabble in travel photography. My ultimate goal is to travel and make a living through Kettik, and empower others to do the same as well.

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