Remnants of a Fast Disappearing Way of Life: A photo-narrative by Sneha Parthasarathy of the quintessential Indian village culture, lifestyle and architecture, against the backdrop of the Godavari River Festival.
The Pushkaras, occurring annually, are river festivals celebrating in a cyclic manner each of the 12 important holy rivers of India. This year was that of the river Godavari and was said to be a ‘Maha Pushkara’ – occurring once every 144 years. The 12 day festival saw over 11 crore devotees, from Telangana-Andhra region rush to the river banks of Godavari to take the emancipating dip and pray for departed souls of their loved ones. There is something very powerful and beautiful about belief but mass hysteria and hype is worrying. Worrying because it leads to herd mentality; when you do something not because you deeply believe in it but because you do not want to be left out.
Capitalising on faith, the freshly split governments of Telangana and Andhra tried to outdo the other to publicise this auspicious occurring as a ‘mega event’; one that is not to be missed out on. Starting from the temple town of Basar in the east, where the river enters Telangana and uptill Antarvedi in Andhra where it drains into the Bay of the Bengal, about 11 important pilgrim destinations were earmarked for provision of special arrangements for the public. Both governments apparently spent approximately Rs 1000 crores each to provide for the necessary support infrastructure, personnel and grand festivities. A total of 300 concrete ghats were built, along the almost 1000 km stretch of the Godavari river, in the two states within a matter of 5-6 months.
Dharmapuri, a village settlement along the Godavari river in Karimnagar district of Telangana, was one of the 11 earmaked Pushkara destinations. It is an important pilgrim place because of the religious significance of the Lakshmi Narasimha Swamy temple located here and is considered a ‘Punyakshetra’ because of its many ancient Hindu temples. It is also said to be one of the largest existing settlement of Vedic scholars. Although exploring the settlement was accidental to my primary motive of being there – to document the makeshift arrangements by the government for the Pushkara, it naturally became the more interesting part of the trip.
At the very heart of the settlement is the main temple that is said to have been originally built between 928-850 BC. Subsequently, the temple was converted to a mosque during incursions by Muslim rulers and in the following years the temple was re-built beside the mosque and as it exists today both of them still stand beside each other. This temple-mosque complex stands where the two main movement axes of the village converge. To the south of the east-west axis that connects the main temple to the western bank of the river is the temple tank. This quadrangular stepped tank, with its central pavilion connected by an arched bridge extending out from one of its edges, sits beautifully in the midst of the settlement becoming an inherent part of its daily life and rituals.
Walking and discovering the village felt like discovering wonderland after having fallen through the rabbit’s hole. It is a quintessential Indian settlement characterised by narrow streets with houses packed together like books on a shelf; books that readily welcome you into their fold before narrating their own unique story.
These houses with their main doors opening directly onto the main thoroughfares, internal courtyards and tiled sloped roofs, talk about a lifestyle and culture that can no longer be found in our cities. What makes the story of the village even more rich is the diversity of influences on its built form. The houses in their details bear testimony of strong Islamic influences that have gracefully blended with the predominantly Hindu cultural fabric⊗
The true Indian culture is in the villages. One must realise that it is not cities that make India, but the villages. With the influence of British, villages have lost their life. Agriculture, Vocational skills have forever been neglected. There is no craftsmanship. No family education is continued. There are some exceptions where today such village culture is still surviving and our Dharmapuri is one such exception.
Though Dharmapuri today is not a village in the geographical sense, since many amenities available in a city are found there, the village purity and atmosphere is still retained with good effort of people. That much love the people there have for their village.”
From the Temple Website
Sneha Parthasarathy is a practising architect currently based in Hyderabad. Her interest in studying the built heritage of the Indian subcontinent stems from a need to discover original and local grammar that is global in its sense of purpose.