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  • No Bar To Adda, Food & Shopping...

    NO BAR TO ADDA, FOOD & SHOPPING...

    Kolkata Newsline, India
    Sept 28 2006

    Though Bengalis have the time of their life during the Pujas, Kolkata
    being a cosmopolitan city, people from other communities have different
    interpretations of the same. our correspondent

    Ishrat Ara Salim

    Kolkata, September 28: So the time for Maa Durga to be seated on a
    gaj and visit her devotees has finally arrived! Meet any Bengali and
    he/she is too busy preparing for the big event. After all, who does
    not know what importance the Pujas hold for a Bengali.

    However, while the city is immersed in festivities, it is interesting
    to find out what people with different religious affiliations
    indulge in.

    Holidays, brightly lit roads, decorated pandals, toy-trains, giant
    ferris-wheel rides, toys and a tarry of mouthwatering delicacies to
    gorge on, is what brothers Farhan and Furquan Yusuf, aged eight and
    six years, respectively, associate the Pujas with. The enthusiastic
    duo can hardly think of anything beyond the Park Circus fair they
    frequent during the Pujas, it being the closest one to their homes.

    "We love the Puja vacation. It is the best time of the year,"
    they said.

    Their mother, Nahid Yusuf, agrees. "The children enjoy themselves
    thoroughly during the Pujas. It's party time for them," she said.

    Though she is not too comfortable with the hustle-bustle around and
    the excessive noise, the joy on her children's face is enough to
    overlook the disturbance.

    "Pujas for me mean relaxed holidays, discounts and good food,"
    said 28-year-old Cecilia Shiu, a Chinese. Though she admits to not
    having the patience for pandal hopping, she is perfectly comfortable
    braving the crowds to get the best bargain while picking up something
    in advance for the Christmas. When asked why she is not too keen
    on checking out the pandals, she replies, "It's nice to see people
    dressed colourfully but I'd rather avoid the crowd. The vagabonds
    take these opportunities to hit out at you," she said.

    One is forced to wonder if the Pujas become less of a festival and more
    of a feast for eve-teasers. However, Tanya Ellis, an Anglo-Indian,
    begs to differ. She lets herself get engulfed by the revelry and
    said that she had never faced such advances during the Pujas. She
    emphasises that she cannot even think of spending her Puja holidays
    in some place other than Kolkata. "During the Pujas Kolkata is the
    best place to be in," she said. At present, she is waiting her turn
    at the marathon adda sessions at Maddox Square.

    Iftekar Ahsan, 25, too visits the popular Maddox Square pandal to have
    a blast with his friends. Asked if his business is affected by the
    Pujas, he vehemently nods in agreement. "We have a business of dying
    and processing clothes. There is a huge overload even one-and-a-half
    months before the Pujas and our employees have to work in double
    shifts," she said. That also means doubled profits.

    David Nahoum, owner of Nahoum Confectionary at New Market, makes
    an important observation. "We do record a 20-30 per cent increase
    in sales during Pujas. But unfortunately, because of the failure
    of the underground parking system and the unavailability of proper
    parking facilities, the sales figures have been affected," said the
    80-year-old Jew.

    On being asked whether the confectionary has anything special to offer
    during the Pujas, his answer is in the negative. However, he said:
    "We are concerned about giving our customers the best variety and
    are quite happy to serve them with special delicacies like baqlava,
    cheese sambasuk, chocolate walnut brownies and rich fruit cake around
    the year." At the same time, he said that no discounts are on offer.

    Zarine Choudhary, a Parsee from Mumbai, has made Kolkata her home
    for 30 years now. She is a freelance teacher who coaches student in
    speech and drama. Choudhary never misses out on the discounts that
    almost define Puja shopping. In fact, she waits for the special offers
    during the Pujas to purchase upholstery, towels, sheets, linens and
    clothes for the year. "One can get really good bargains during the
    Pujas and I quite enjoy indulging into it," she said.

    So are the Pujas only about shopping extravaganzas and pandal-hopping
    for the non-Bengalis?

    "That's not true," she said. "I have always loved Puja-time. It has
    a very unifying quality and brings people together," she added.

    Sonia John, an Armenian has witnessed the Pujas of Kolkata ever since
    she came here as a little girl before the Second World War. "For
    me, to see a family together, parents and children, hand-in-hand,
    is beautiful, something that is gradually getting lost in the modern
    world," she said.

    She considers the Pujas a very inspiring spectacle because of
    its artistry. Pointing out the difference between the Pujas of
    yesteryears and the present, she said that the Pujas in the past
    were based only on the religious aspect, but nowadays because of the
    increasing competition among the various Puja committees, each year
    the spectacle becomes more glamorous, decorative and innovative.

    However, amid the festivities one tends to dismiss the disruption of
    normal life that results from Pujas. Traffic jams and road blockades
    increase both in frequency and dimension due to the construction of
    pandals and the people thronging the streets. Such problems can be
    tolerated said John, adding, "The pujas happen only for a few days
    in a year as compared to the protests, processions and strikes that
    continue throughout the year. They are the ones that disrupt our
    day-to-day lives as they are working days."

    So all those who have already started grumbling about the overcrowded
    streets, traffic jams, noise pollution take lessons of tolerance from
    the lady and this Puja and just enjoy!
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