In Rajastan, there is a place that does not allow men to play in Holly, not just this, according to this 500-year tradition, men should leave the village to allow only women to stay and enjoy the festival of flowers.
Holly’s celebrations in this city have a unique turn, he plays without …
Like every festival, people from all walks of society are going to immerse themselves in this festival of flowers. They throw colors and splash the colorful water on each other and want them to happy Holly, as well as treating themselves with Holly’s delicacies like Gugi, Malpoo, Puran Field, and much more with the chilled traditional almond drink. However, India Holly has no standard celebration everywhere, except that throwing colors is often found in many Holly traditions throughout India. Having said this, in Rajastan there is a place that does not allow men to play in Holly, not just this, according to this 500-year tradition, men should leave the village to allow only women to stay and enjoy the festival of flowers.
Unique Holly with a subtly rajastan
According to local fairy tales, in the region of Tnok Rajastan, this tradition took from the system of poultry, which forbade the visibility of women to the presence of men, so at the time men voluntarily left the villages to respect their privacy and allow them to play freely at the festival. Practice is still ongoing. However, boys can remain in the village and above this age, boys and men who leave during Holly, men for ancient age are no exception.
On the day of Holly, in the morning up to 10 am, men leave their homes and move to the temple for the middles in the outer districts of the village. Going out of the house, men spend time visiting the fair and listening to dedicated songs for about five hours, and the village remains exclusively in the care of women. The rule has such serious restrictions that men cannot even observe how women play Holly. Traditionally, men who are in the village during Holly have encountered a physical punishment. Although the times have changed, the violation of this rule can still lead to severe consequences, including constant expulsion from the village.
In a unique turn, women occupy the central scene during Holly in the village of Nagar, giving up in festive events with refusal, dressing in men and using freedom of public norms. The next day, the men join, and the community celebrates together, using colors and participating in a ritual where women are playfully breaking men, marking the end of the 500-year tradition, making Holly this village in Rajastan.