
August Fairs Festivals : Nagpanchami
NAGAPANCHAMI
: The Snake Festival
On the fifth day of the bright half of Shravan, Nagapanchami the festival of
snakes is celebrated. Snake worship is more common in peninsular India than in
the north. In Maharashtra, snake charmers go from house to house with dormant
cobras ensconced in cane baskets, asking for alms and clothing. Women offer milk
and cooked rice to the snakes and gather around to see the snakes spread their
hoods to the tune of the pungi, a peculiar wind instrument, played by professional
snake catchers. Clay snakes are brought home to be worshipped by day and immersed
in the sea in the evening In Maharasthra, this festival heralds the arrival of
Ganesha, almost exactly one month later. Tourists from around the world converge
on a little village in south Maharashtra - Battis Shirala - for this festival.
Here the world's largest collection of snakes can be seen.
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