3.5 C
New York
Friday, January 3, 2025
HomeIndia NewsNo human pyramids in Mumbai's Janmashtami festival due to coronavirus

No human pyramids in Mumbai’s Janmashtami festival due to coronavirus

Date:

Related stories

Toxic gas leak at Gujarat fluorochemicals plant in Bharuch claims four lives

The Bharuch district police have initiated an investigation into...

Indian police kill Sikh militants linked to grenade attack in Punjab

Indian police reported killing three Sikh separatist militants in...

Bangladesh requests India’s help in Sheikh Hasina’s extradition

Bangladesh’s interim government has formally requested India to extradite...

Clash at Parliament: Opposition and BJP MPs face off over Ambedkar remarks

A confrontation between INDIA bloc and NDA MPs over...

There were no human pyramids in Mumbai’s Janmashtami festival celebrating Lord Krishna on Wednesday, which normally attracts thousands onto the streets, due to a surge in coronavirus in India, with more than 60,000 cases reported in 24 hours.

“This year, the celebration will be symbolic,” said Ram Kadam, a state lawmaker who organises one such celebration in Mumbai.

“We will just have posters cheering on doctors and nurses, and will pray to the Lord to help us overcome this pandemic.

Usually Hindus in Mumbai form human pyramids and try to break a pot of curd at the top. Folklore says Krishna formed pyramids with friends to break pots of butter or curd hung from ceilings so they could steal the contents.

Kadam said there would be no public festivities in Mumbai this year. State governments have clamped down on celebrations since a strict lockdown was imposed in India on March 25.

- Advertisement -

On Tuesday, in a video-conference with regional leaders, Prime Minister Narendra Modi requested states like Maharashtra, of which Mumbai is capital, to ramp up coronavirus testing and focus on contact tracing and isolation, saying it was key in controlling the spread of the outbreak.

But muted festivities affect thousands of small scale businesses and vendors, who have already been hit by the economic downturn brought on by the lockdown.

Janmashtami heralds a festive period for India‘s majority Hindus, with another festival celebrating the elephant-headed God Ganpati this month, and several others until November.

India has reported a total of 2.33 cases million so far, third only behind Brazil and the United States. Its death toll is now at 46,091, federal health data showed on Wednesday.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories