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Bhagoria Haat, Jhabua
This
colourful festival of the Bhils and Bhilalas, particularly
in the district of West Nimar and Jhabua, is actually in the
nature of a mass svayamvara, a marriage market, usually held
on the various market days falling before the Holi festival
in March. As the name of the festival indicates, (bhag, to
run), after choosing their partners, the young people elope
and are subsequently accepted as husband and wife by society
through predetermined customs. It is not always that boys
and girls intending to marry each other meet in the festival
for the first time. In a large number of cases the alliance
is already made between the two, the festival providing the
institutionalised framework for announcing the alliance publically.
The tradition is that the boy applies gulal, red powder, on
the face of the girl whom he selects as his wife. The girl,
if willing, also applies gulal on the boy's face. This may
not happen immediately but the boy may pursue her and succeed
eventually.
Earlier, the Bhagoria haat was also the place
for settling old disputes; open invitations were sent to enemies
for a fight in the haat. Bloody battles used to be quite common
in the past but today police and administration do not allow
people to go to the haat armed.
The Bhagoria haat also coincides with the completion
of harvesting, adding to it the dimension of being an agricultural
festival as well. If the crops have been good, the festival
assumes an additional air of gaiety.
In the life of the Bhils and Bhilalas, Bhagoria
is not merely one festival but in fact a series of fairs held
one by one at various villages on their specific market days,
commencing eight days before Holi.
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