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Bangalore Karaga

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Bangalore Karaga

Bengaluru Karaga is an annual festival celebrated in the Thigalarpete, central Bengaluru. The festival centered around the worship of Draupadi, considered as from of incarnation of Adishakthi by worshipers. The festival activities takes place around the temples of Dharmaraya (Yudhishtira) and Draupati in Nagarathpete (historically Thigalarpete).

Karaga is linked to Thigalas, a subgroup of Vahnikula Kshatriya, a community in south India who claim their mythological origin with fire with mythological connections to Draupadi of Mahabharata. Historically the community was refereed as Palli or Vanniyar in Tamil Nadu and Thigala in Karnataka, with sanskritization efforts in late 19th century, stated associated with Kshatriya and sometimes connecting dynasties like Pallava and Chalukya.

Historically, the community migrated from Tamil nadu to Bangalore with significant waves of migration occurred during the 18th century under the reign of Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan. The rulers invited them, who were skilled in agriculture and horticulture to maintain the Lalbagh Gardens.

The festival history spans back to 800 to 300 according to different sources. It is usually held in the months of March or April, the hindu month of Chiatra. The festival celebrates Draupadi as the ideal woman and the Goddess of Strength (Shakti) which is atrribuated to slaying of Timirasura.

Towards the last days of their lives, the Pandavas and Draupadi left their kingdom and journeyed to the Himalayas. Draupadi was far behind her husbands when Timirasura who saw Draupadi approached her menacingly to tease and impress her. Draupadi (an incarnation of Shakti) with her powers, is believed to have created an army of soldiers, called Veerakumaras to defend and destroy Timirasura (some retellings also say that she transformed into a man to fight and kill Timirasura). When Draupadi continued her ascent to heaven, the Veerakumaras asked her not to leave. She promised them that she would come back to earth on Chaitra Poornami. The ten-day Karaga marks the homecoming of Draupadi.

The word 'Karaga' means mud pot. A decorated mud pot, usually with jasmine flowers is traditionally carried by a male dressed as female on his his. The ritualistic processing and the dance involves the pot carrying on head, balancing it without touching it. The bearer is accompanied by hundreds of Veerakumaras, male volunteers of the community who took ritual initiation.

The 10 day festival activities starts around the Dharmaraya Swamy Temple. The last day night procession coincides with the full moon.

Hasi Karaga (Pacchi Karagu) is a preliminary ritual observed during the Karaga festival on the day of Chaitra Shuddha Trayodashi. It forms an important preparatory phase leading up to the main Karaga procession and is associated with the invocation of Shakti.

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