Poging GOUD - Vrij
Where the Moon sails the river
The Statesman Delhi
|November 06, 2025
n Kartika Purnima, when the full moon spills itself over the Mahanadi and its sister rivers, Odisha becomes a single long, luminous sigh. The night is at once festival and elegy: lamps drift like small stars, miniature boats glide like secret letters, and the water takes the moon’s light and keeps itas memory. Here the celestial, the domestic, and the maritime fold into one another - the moon a silent witness, the river a courier, the boat a human hope set afloat.
The ritual is elemental and precise. Moonlight picks out the ribs of a boat; the river receives it. Fora people once masterful in intercontinental coastal trade, these images are historical as well as symbolic. The Sadhabas - merchant mariners of ancient Kalinga - sailed from these deltas to Java, Sumatra, and Bali. Today, villagers and city folk alike float tiny vessels of banana stem, cork, or paper, each loaded with lamps, rice, betel leaves, and prayers. The gesture is both commemoration and enactment: a remembering of voyages and an offering for safe return.
This triad - moon, river, boat - functions like a poem. The moon illuminates longing; the river carries it; the boat makes of longing a movement. The objects are modest, but the meanings are vast.
Bali Jatra is when Sadhabas set sail on Kartika Purnima on the Mahanadi’s banks in Cuttack. It is more than a fair; it is a living archive where commerce and memory meet. Stalls and performances pulse with
life while ritual sendoffs hold a hush of solemnity; elders intone the old refrains, children learn the careful choreography of letting go, and families perform a communal elegy for those who sail away.
The scene finds a distant cousin in Europe's maritime pageants - most famously Venice's Regata Storica and its “Farewell to the Fleet.” There, too, canals become theatre: crowds line the water to witness processions led by the Bucintoro, a ceremonial boat that turns civic pomp into private longing. In both places the river or canal is a stage where departure is at once spectacle and intimate sorrow, aritual that transforms personal loss into shared meaning,
Kartika is a month of restraint; the culmination is a feast that tastes of both austerity and production. After
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