Advertisement
As dusk fell, volunteers lit up over six lakh earthen lamps lined up on the Saryu riverbank.
A team from the Guinness World Records was present to see if it made it to their book. Hours later, team leader Nishchal Barot gave the final count as 6,06,569 `diyas’, telling PTI that it was “largest display of oil lamps” in the world.
An organiser said about 8,000 volunteers, drawn from a local college and NGOs, were involved in the feat.
Related Articles
Advertisement
Actors representing the deities of Ram, Sita and Lakshman descended in a helicopter that sprinkled rose petals – a modern take on the ‘pushpak viman’ that brought Lord Ram back home after 14 years in exile.
The deities were received by Uttar Pradesh Governor Anandiben Patel and Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath.
This was the fourth annual Ayodhya Deepotsav, and the first since the ‘bhoomi pujan’ in August for a Ram temple in the city. Its construction has begun following last year’s Supreme Court verdict that settled the temple-mosque land dispute.
The CM and the Governor visited the Ram Mandir site along with other UP and some bureaucrats.
Adityanath gave Prime Minister Narendra Modi the credit for the just-begun construction of the Ram Mandir.
“Our generation is not only fortunate to see the start of construction of a Ram temple here but we also attended the historic event,” he said, adding that generations of seers died without the dream being realised.
“I thank PM Modi, who is the one who implemented the ideology of Ram Rajya,” Adityanath said in his speech to about 1,000 guests at the Ram Katha Park.
With COVID-19 protocols in place, the event was not open to the public.
He said when people in Ayodhya used to ask him about the construction of the temple, he would just tell them to trust Modi.
He said it is Modi’s dream to develop Ayodhya as the “Vedic Ramayana city”.
The celebrations began in the afternoon with a “coronation procession” for Lord Ram starting from Saket College for the riverbank five kilometers away. Eleven tableaux, built around themes from the Ramayana, participated.
In the evening, 11,000 earthen lamps lit up the Ram temple site. On the banks of the Saryu bank, the chief minister performed an ‘aarti’.
He then lit a ”diya” at Ram ki Paidi. This was immediately followed by volunteers lighting up earthen lamps laid out on the riverbank, aiming to create a new Guinness World Record by lighting at least 5.51 lakh `diyas’.
The final count was 6,06,569 ‘diyas’, according to a representative of the Guinness World Records, a private company which publishes a book on records every year.
Last year, the organisers lit about 4,10,000 ‘diyas’, the then new record. Adityanath on Friday said the target next year should be 7.51 lakh.
Eight teams of folk dancers were invited to perform at the Deepotsav.
“We did rehearsals for over two weeks before coming to Ayodhya,” said Vishal, a member of a troupe from Jhansi.
Anuradha, a folk dancer from Mathura, said, “We are very excited that we are performing on the streets of Ayodhya, the city of Lord Ram.”
Before the event, state government officials had listed out development projects for Ayodhya – some of them new, but many already in the pipeline.
These include an international airport and widening of roads to other cities.
The authorities plan to expand the Ram Katha Park, build a Ramlila Centre and carry out beautification of Ram ki Paidi.
Also planned are a modern bus stand, a sewage treatment plant and a multi-level parking lot.