It
is the Sikh festival called Vaisahi and it happens every year a few
blocks from my apartment. This year I found out that it actually
happens all over the world, where ever there are Sikh communities. I
just thought they all came here. After all it is New York. Anyway,
as always, it was huge, it was a genuine piece of India and it was
fun!
When I was in India a few years ago, I got to visit the Golden
Temple, the holy center of the Sikh religion at Amritsar. Kinda like
the Vatican or The Wailing Wall which the Isreali's still manage to foist off as being
part of King Solomon's Temple, while everybody knows it really isan't. But it is a great
tourist attraction, so nobody wants to blow it.
Anyway,
back at Amritsar: as it happened the day I was there also happened to
be in the middle of another yet another festival. The crowds were
equally huge, but what do you expect? I mean it was India, after all and huge crowds go with the territory. The only requirements for entering the temple
grounds were to cover my head and remove my shoes. And eat. Well,
eating wasn't actually required, but the first question I was asked
was “Have you eaten yet?” Seems one of the tenants of the
religion is to feed visitors and they take that seriously. There
were huge caldron's of rice and vegetarian foods being cooked up
(they are strict vegetarians) and plates full passed to all. It also happened to be Yom Kipper.
Really. I figured it was OK to eat, since it seemed that not eating
would have been offensive. But at the huge pool across from the Golden Temple (it really is gold), I did say Kaddish. One of my more memorable Yom Kippors. Chalk up yet another amazing experience in India.
Meantime, back
on Madison Avenue, in the park where the festival parade ended –
this is a bit about this festival, here in New York, remember? -
there were dozens of stands set up by various local temples handing
plates of that same wonderful food, along with containers of sweetly
spiced masala tea and mango lasi to wash it all down. Everyone was
happy, the women were beautiful - especally that cute Indian cop - and in the immortal words of Mr.
Rogers:
“A beautiful day in the neighborhood. “
3 comments:
Lovely......(the women especially smile well for you!)
Nice photos of my brothers and sister Maury...
We will have to get together soon.
Your student,
John Isaac
I loved the way you tied together the neighborhood event in NYC with your earlier adventures in India. That's the way it should happen for each one of us!
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