
How Ganesha Chaturthi celebrations in Bengaluru today are a pale shadow of yesteryears
The Hindu
The festival is limited to the installation and worship of the idol, procession, distribution of prasada and immersion of the idol, for the most part. The number of people organising musical nights and other cultural events has come down significantly.
Not long ago, Ganesha Chaturthi was eagerly awaited by not just households, but residents of various streets and localities, as they came together to participate in the festivities that included stage shows that often acted as a talent hunt of sorts.
Today, the festival is a pale shadow of yesteryears. It is limited to the installation and worship of the idol, procession, distribution of prasada and immersion of the idol, for the most part. Apart from big associations and organisations, the number of people organising musical nights and other cultural events has come down significantly.
“Earlier, various organisations would organise cultural events by State and national-level singers, dancers, musicians and actors for the Ganesha festival. Orchestra by Manjula Gururaj, B.K. Sumitra and others were really famous. There was a huge crowd for dramas of Master Hirannaiah, Harikatha programmes ofGururajulu Naidu and his daughter Shobha Naidu, and others. But these days, we do not see any crowd pullers like them,” said T.R. Mohan, an ex-serviceman and resident of Srinivasanagara.
Ganesha festival was also the stepping stone for various political and social leaders.
“But even this has dwindled. Politicians only misuse the festival for political gains and the public tend to show disinterest due to this,” said Umashankar, a member of Panchamukhi Vinayaka Yuvakara Balaga, Hanumanthanagar.
“Earlier, on the occasion of Ganesha festival, we used to conduct not only cultural programmes, but also social service activities, such as eye and health check-up camps, blood donation camp, and tree planting. We used to invite writers, actors and achievers in society. But now all these things have stopped, and are limited to only a few cultural programmes,” he added.
While Shashidhar Kote, a singer, said that the number of cultural events has reduced drastically compared to earlier years, singer M.D. Pallavi is not seeing a dearth of events. She is booked for seven programmes.













