Assam turns festive for Rongali Bihu

IANS  |  Guwahati 

The people of on Saturday started celebrating Rongali to mark the beginning of the Assamese New Year and the end of the harvesting season amidst traditional fervour and large-scale fanfare.

The first day of the week-long festival was celebrated as Goru (Cattle Bihu) across the state in which people took their cattle to a nearby fishery or pond to give them a ceremonial bath and beat them with 'dighalati pat' -- leaf of a plant having medicinal value -- to ward off the flies and insects from the animal's body. They also recite some hymns praying for the good health of the animal.

The second day of the festival, which falls on the first day of the new Assamese Calendar month of Bohag, which is on Sunday, is known as Manuh (Human Bihu). People take bath and wear new clothes on this day and sing and dance to enjoy.

Younger people visit elders in the family and seek their blessings. Elders give Bihuwan -- the traditional Assamese towel known as Gamocha -- and bless the younger ones for good health and prosperity.

Although the Bohag or Rongali is a week-long festival, the celebration continues for the whole of the month and beyond with people organising different cultural programmes and functions in different parts of the state.

Conveying his greetings, Prof. said: "Let this which marks the advent of Assamese New Year be a harbinger of a new dawn of warm and harmonious relationship and peace, prosperity and progress in the state."

The expressed hope that the celebrations of Rongali reinforce love and goodwill among all sections of the people and strengthen the bond of unity and bonhomie among them.

"Let this Rongali and the Assamese New Year be a reason for the people of to take a pledge for a 'Swachh Bharat' and 'Swachh Assam'," he added.

Chief Minister also extended his wishes to all sections of people.

"is a land where people representing all caste, creed, and community live in absolute harmony. Since time immemorial people of all sections have been living in the state upholding the tenets of peace, prosperity and mutual co-existence," Sonowal said adding that is a festival which constitutes the lifeline of the people of and the crux of the composite culture of

The celebration of Rogali and Assamese New Year besides reinforcing the age-old bond of unity and camaraderie among the people of in a new dawn of peace and prosperity, he added.

--IANS

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First Published: Sat, April 14 2018. 18:48 IST