Foreigners gather at Kumbh Mela

Published January 23, 2019
ALLAHABAD: Sadhvi Bhagawati Saraswati, the US general secretary of the Global Interfaith WASH Alliance, talks to followers inside her camp at the Kumbh Mela.—AFP
ALLAHABAD: Sadhvi Bhagawati Saraswati, the US general secretary of the Global Interfaith WASH Alliance, talks to followers inside her camp at the Kumbh Mela.—AFP

AT the Kumbh Mela, the world’s biggest religious event, millions of Indian Hindus are not the only people bathing in the sacred waters to wash away their sins. Foreigners, too, are among the ascetics, saints, sadhus and spectators thronging the confluence of the Ganges, Yamuna and mythical Saraswati rivers in northern India for what is billed as humanity’s biggest gathering.

Sadhvi Bhagawati Saraswati grew up in a Jewish family in California but moved in 1996 to an ashram in Rishikesh — the town made famous internationally when the Beatles visited in 1968 — and changed her life and her name. “I was on holiday with a backpack and when I got to Rishikesh, on the banks of the sacred Ganges, I had a very very deep, very very powerful spiritual awakening experience which made me realise where I need to be, where I need to spend my life,” she said.

The 47-year-old is among the worshippers taking a dip at the Kumbh, which is expected to attract well over 100 million people over the next seven weeks.

Westerners who have immersed themselves in Hindu spirituality include Baba Rampuri, who claims to be the first foreigner to be initiated into India’s largest and most ancient order of yogis, the Naga Sannyasis of Juna Akhara. The surgeon’s son — reportedly born William A. Gans — grew up in Beverly Hills and moved to India in 1970, and like Saraswati is active on Facebook and Twitter. “I am not a great believer in modern technology, or the consumerist messages being sent out through the medium, but we have to make people aware that we exist,” he told The Indian Express.

Many of the foreigners at the Kumbh are simple tourists though, keen to see the ash-smeared, pipe-smoking Naga sadhus, naked except for beads and flower garlands. One ascetic has had his right arm raised for seven years. Another has been standing for eight months and aims to do so for another 43 months.

Published in Dawn, January 23rd, 2019

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