WHN

BREAKING NEWS

Essential ration supplies donated to distressed Pak Hindu migrant family in Jaipur   |   Jaipur Based Pak Hindu Migrant Family In Deep Social, Educational, Economic Distress   |   Delegation Appeals for Special Indian Visas for Pakistani Hindu Brides, married to Indian citizens   |   Hindus urge Bordeaux National Opéra of France to discard culturally insensitive opera Lakmé   |   Ganesh-Festival and Lokmanya Tilak: Er.Rajesh Pathak   |   Designated “Hindu Prayer Room” sought at University of Maryland   |   Why should I Donate to the Organizations like GHHF?   |   HinduPACT AHAD Demands Immediate Dismissal of Peter Navarro for Promoting Hindu Hate   |   How do we stop the Hindu Genocide in India?   |   Hindus urge US crematoriums become Hindu-friendly   |   HAHRI Condemns Terrorist Attack on Tourists in Pahalgam, Demands Global Action Against State-Sponsored Islamic Terrorism   |   World Hindu News Condemns Islamic Terrorist Attack on Hindu Tourists in Pahalgam   |   Coalition support for First Hindu School in Sydney   |   Knowing the contribution of Janjati community to the cause of nation’s freedom   |   Hindu mantras to start the day of four South Carolina city/town councils   |   International Women’s Day Celebrated as Shakti Day in Houston, Texas   |   Candlelight vigil & multi-faith prayers to honor those who died homeless in Washoe County in 2024   |   Sambhaji   |   For Sardar Patel the nation was supreme   |   Jeopardizing national interest for the sake of appeasement   |  

Around Town: Hindu community celebrates spring with combined festivals

Organizers, in fact, sold out of the 100 kites they had on hand Sunday for a Hindu festival in Fitchburg.

“I’ve never seen so many kites in my life!” said Chris Dsouza, 7, a first-grader at Sunset Ridge Elementary School in Middleton.

Dsouza had just stepped out to the big field at the American Hindu Association’s Shiva Vishnu Temple and Cultural Center, a 7-acre property the group purchased in 2009 at 2138 S. Fish Hatchery Road.

“It’s really awesome,” said Chris’ father, Collin Dsouza, who had yet to unwrap their new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles kite. “It’s great to see all the kites up in the sky.”

The Fitchburg festival mixed two traditional Hindu spring festivals for the first time — the kite festival, and Holi, also known as the festival of colors, where participants grab handfuls of colored powder and throw it into the sky.

They also put it all over their friends, family members and sometimes even strangers.

“All of these activities are designed to bring the community together,” said Narend Reddy, president of the local American Hindu Association. “It also is a chance for non-Hindus to come and integrate into the community and see what we are doing.”

What they are doing is constructing a 7,000-square-foot community center and temple on the property. Construction should be complete by the end of the year, Reddy said. Visitors were invited to take tours of the center-in-progress.

Currently, the temple’s members worship in a three-bedroom house that sits on the property, but that space no longer meets the growing community’s needs.

Association treasurer Samir Datta estimated that there are 3,000 Indian families in the Madison area, the majority of whom are Hindu.

“We feel like we are in India. The children are very happy,” said Jayashri Shirule, who was at the festival with her husband, Bharat Shirule, and his parents visiting from Maharashtra, India.

The couple moved to Madison 18 months ago after spending 18 months in Anchorage, Alaska. The festival felt like being back home in India, but with more space to spread out, said Bharat Shirule, an IT manager at American Girl in Middleton. “Here, we have plenty of ground that we can enjoy.”

Reddy said that more than 300 people attended Sunday’s festival and ate food supplied by the Indian restaurants Swagat and Amber. The local band Sangamam, with nearly 20 members in tie-dyed shirts, played largely Bollywood tunes.

“In some other cities they do it on a larger scale,” Reddy said. “We want to get there.”

He is also interested in growing the group’s Ratha Yatra or Chariot Festival, which will be held July 9. Last year, the event drew about 1,000 people, packing the center’s grounds, said Bikash Pattnaik, one of that festival’s founders.

Venu Pittala, coordinator of Sunday’s festival, was thrilled with the turnout on a day that started with rain but became warm and sunny by the time the event started. There also was a perfect amount of wind for the kites.

It was the first time in Wisconsin that the kite and color festivals had been combined, he said.

“We had a tremendous response from the community — and not just Indians,” Pittala said.

Source: http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/around-town-hindu-community-celebrates-spring-with-combined-festivals/article_4dc7e142-5d7b-5e8b-9130-564875c91b47.html