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Kanwar Yatra

The Kanwar Yātrā (Devanagari: कांवड़ यात्रा; also Kānvar or Kāvaḍ Yātrā) is an annual pilgrimage of devotees of Shiva, known as Kānvarias (Devanagari: कावड़िया) or "Bhole" (भोले), to Hindu pilgrimage places of Haridwar, Gaumukh and Gangotri (Uttarakhand) and Ajgaibinath Temple in Sultanganj, Bhagalpur (Bihar) in order to fetch holy waters from the Ganges River. Millions of pilgrims fetch sacred water from river Ganga and carry on their shoulders for hundreds of miles to offer it in their local Shiva shrines, or specific temples such as Pura Mahadeva temple in Baghpat and Augharnath temple in Meerut, Kashi Vishwanath temple in Varanasi, Baidyanath temple in Deoghar, etc.

In 2025, the Kanwar Yatra will be held from 11 July (Starting of Hindu Sawan Month) to 23 July (Shivratri). Kanwar refers to a genre of religious performances where devotees ritually carry water of the Ganges River from holy places like Gaumukh or Haridwar in Uttarakhand in containers suspended on either side of a pole. The pilgrimage derives its name from a sacred water carrying apparatus, called kanwar, and while the source of the water is often the Ganga, it can also be its local equivalents. The offering is dedicated to Shiva, often addressed as Bhola (innocent) or Bhole Baba (innocent saint).

The yatra used to be a small affair undertaken by a few saints and older devotees until the late 1980s, when it started gaining popularity. Today, the kanwar pilgrimage to Haridwar in particular has grown to be India's largest annual religious gathering, with an estimated 30 million devotees in the 2023 and 2024 events. The devotees come from the surrounding states of Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Rajasthan, Punjab, Bihar and some from Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Odisha and Madhya Pradesh. Heavy security measures are undertaken by the government and the traffic on Delhi-Haridwar national highway (NH-58) is diverted for the period.

Kanwar Yatra is named after the kānvale pole (usually made of bamboo) with two roughly equal loads fastened or dangling from opposite ends. The kānvar is carried by balancing the middle of the pole on one or both shoulders. The Hindi word kānvar is derived from the Sanskrit kānvānrathi (काँवाँरथी). Kānvar-carrying pilgrims, called Kānvariās, carry covered water-pots in kānvars slung across their shoulders. This practice of carrying Kavad as a part of religious pilgrimage, especially by devotees of Lord Shiva, is widely followed throughout India (see: Kavadi). Yatra means a journey or procession.

According to Professor Devi Prasad Dubey of the University of Allahabad, the earliest mention of what can be identified as a 'kanwar yatra' (namely carrying load full of water from the river Ganga barefoot for conducting water abhisheka of a famous Shivalinga) can be traced back to the 1700s, when pilgrims would carry Gangajal collected from Sultanganj to pour it at the shrine of Vaidyanath in Deoghar. Before that, it was common for Hindu pilgrims to carry Ganga water barefoot while returning home, out of respect for the river. The phenomenon was too insignificant to be noticed by the British authorities, but it gradually spread among the faithful as an expression of piety.

After the 1960s, 'kanwar yatra' was no longer restricted among ascetics & devotees in rural regions & spread across the urban landscape of the Hindi belt through the patronisation of Marwari businessmen. The yatra saw a massive upsurge in the 1980s due to variety of reasons, like improved road connectivity & the rise of Hindu nationalism centered around the Ram Janmabhoomi movement.

In 2018, there were multiple incidents of violence and vandalism associated with Kanwar Yatra in National Capital Region and Uttar Pradesh. The Supreme Court of India made harsh remarks on such incidents.

In the year 2020, Kanwar Yatra was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in India. In 2021, Uttarakhand decided to suspend the yatra in light of the second wave of COVID-19 in the country india. However, Uttar Pradesh decided to move ahead with the yatra and Supreme Court of India took a case on its own motion regarding the matter.

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Tradition or Holy Custom of Hindu religion
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