Tag Archives: #heritagetourism

Dev- Diwali – Lighted Lamps of Nirvana

Dr Navina Jafa

Dr Navina Jafa, Kathak Dancer, Cultural Technocrat, Expert, Scholar on Cultural Heritage, Cultural Management

Banaras – Assi Ghat – Photo Credit – Cristina Albertin

Aakaashdeep  – Deep-Daan

Aakaashdeep – Story by Hindi Writer Jaishanker Prasad

Here is a brief quote from the story – “Champa pulled the string that made the lighted lamps rise on the bamboo scaffolding. She aspired that her lamps join to play with the stars,” The metaphor of lighted Ganga waters resounds carrying thousands of lighted lamps along the ghats (landing steps) of the sacred ancient city of Varanasi on the festival of Dev Diwali. 

Dev Diwali ( Deepawali) before the Rise of its Identity as part of the Hindu Festival Tourism Calendar

Power of the Lighted Lamp – PC – Mysoulwindow

Process – The Spectacle of Dev- Diwali of Varanasi (Banaras)

Light

Economy: 

Unorganised, self-organised religious businesses are the most significant business sector of Varanasi’s holy, mercantile city. Hindus and Muslims have existed in a collaborative partnership for centuries. Even today, the elaborate lighting and the floral decorations for Dev Diwali have the two communities working together. “There is an increase in flowers, especially with the impetus provided to the tourism of Dev Diwali. Most flower vendors from both communities get their supplies from Kolkata.” 

Nevertheless, business for the traditional potters has remained the same. In the olden days, says Moti Ram, a potter from Varanasi, “our business peaked in the entire month of Kartik. People bought clay lamps for Diwali and enhanced their consumption by hanging them as Aaakaash Deeps. However, today, the lamps are usually the plastic-coated aluminium bowls in which a wax candle is placed.” Nevertheless, the consumption of bamboo for scaffolding has gone up with the elaborate marketing of Dev Diwali.

The impetus provided by the government for Dev Diwali has hotels sold out for several years after COVID-19. Each of these vignettes reflects a dimension of buyer and seller world views previously undescribed in consumer research of the geo-piety economy.

Pilgrims, tourists and the local Banarasi become a sea of humans in motion during the Dev Diwali. They pass through territories not their own but seeking something we might call completion, a goal to which only the spirit’s compass points the way. 

Their eyes look up to the hanging sky lamps, recalling the lines of Jaishanker Prasad – For whose oath are you lighting the waterways… For that whom you consider the lord… In the dark days on the waters, how desperate were we for every ounce of light.” 

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Humayun’s Tomb- Heritage Walk – Dancing Architecture  – Dr Navina Jafa

Heritage Walk – Dancing Architecture – Essence of the Humayun’s Tomb

What a challenge and what a pleasure to curate and present a Heritage Walk – ‘The Internal poetry of design – Humayun’s tomb’, for the participants in a Conference organised by the Indian Institute of Architects, Northern Chapter on a cloudy day in September 2022

Participants

 

The Internal poetry of design – Humayun’s tomb’, a Heritage walk by Navina Jafa.
Executed  for the participants in a Conference organised by the Indian Institute of Architects, Northern Chapter aimed to be an immersive experience to comprehend in the  uniquely lighted heritage landscape the inner essence of the building.
A dancer or a musician does not live in isolation but is an integral part of the environment around him or herself.
As the audience moved around the landscape the walk leader unfolded the  aesthetics of the Humayun’s Tomb that carries diverse stories so profound as a statement of cross-pollination of human ideas, beliefs, metaphors, symbolism, and organisation of landscaping.

@The Indian Institute Of Architects  @SLIUD Institute of Urban Designers @Google Arts & Culture  @IndiaCultureLab  @India Foundation for the Arts 

#navinajafa #heritagetourism #incredibleindia #dekhoapnadesh #indiandance #kathakdance #azadikaamritmahotsav #birjumaharaj #humayunstomb #worldheritagesites #unesco

A dancer or a musician does not live in isolation but is an integral part of the environment around him or herself.

THEMES

–       Reflection of Geometry in Water

Symbolism & Metaphors

DANCE GEOMETRY ARCHITECTUREYATI

YATI

Aspect of the image-making by Indian performing artists who project designs on the canvas of Time and Space reflects a complex heritage of micro mathematics. The concept of Yati is one such principle. Several scholars and performers both in the North and the South have spoken and written about Yati, however, this article a. links the idea of Yati with dance photography and social media on the one hand and on the other hand it brings the view of the legendary and holistic performing artist – Pandit Biju Maharaj explaining the complex concept in a YOUTUBE.

Comprehending layers of any art form revealed in my 10-year research on Kathak, related performing arts and socio-economics of the art in urban towns showed the importance of the concept of Yati that reflected a unique heritage of Mathematics in the Indian Performing Arts.

Pt. Birju Maharaj Defines – “Yati are formations that capture designs and rhythms both natural and manmade.”

Technically speaking: Yati is part of the science of rhythm in Indian Dance and Music which is patterned and designed on the canvas of Time and Space. The patterns are formed using the mnemonic syllables called bols. Yati is an organization concept which is prevalent both in the Northern and Southern Indian systems of music and in Kathak dance. Different lengths of Mnemonic syllables are organized and woven in time-cycles or talas.  There are five major designs:

1.    Sama – where phrases of a particular composition are organized in equal length.    

2.     Gio- Puccha – (Cow’s tail) – the organized phrases are patterned from long to short. 

3.    Strota Gata (or Strot Vaha) – Is opposite to Go- puccha. The patterned phrases begin short (say from a spot) and then gradually expand.  

4.    Mridanga or barrel drum where the pattern of phrases is designed as short, long, short.

5.     Pipilika or the shape of an ant where phrases are designed as long, short, long.

Navina Jafa interviews her Guru Pandit Birju Maharaj on Yati

#architecture #rhythms #incredibleindia