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Shri Muthyalamma Devi Jatre: A village festival displaying grace and grandeur

Shri Muthyalamma Devi Jatre: A village festival displaying grace and grandeur

BENGALURU: The Sun beams its grace down on Bettahalsoor, a tranquil village 25km from Bengaluru, as a long column of devotees waits to enter the agnikund, eager for a glimpse of the goddess. Offerings balanced on their heads and prayers in their eyes, these individuals tread barefoot across burning coals, shielded by the divinity of Shri Muthyalamma Devi — their beloved gramadevata.
Thousands gather here each year for the Shri Muthyalamma Devi Jatre, a five-day village fair steeped in spiritual, social and cultural meaning. Beyond its mystical rituals, drenched in folklore and Vedic ethos, the jatre is a lively celebration that transforms this quiet hamlet into a vivid spectacle of sound, colour, and community, during which residents open their arms to performers, small traders, and visitors from neighbouring villages, united in devotion and joy.
'Shri Muthyalamma Devi has presided over our village for nearly a century,' says Praveen BR, vice-president of the Bettahalsoor Gram Panchayat. His family has lived in this village for over four generations, witnessing the fair evolve through the decades. 'Her original abode (moolasthana) was in nearby Doddajala, where a grand jatre drew people from across the region. But our forefathers felt her blessings were needed closer home, so they established her temple here,' he adds. Accordingly, the villagers performed the pranaprathishtapana of the deity in Bettahalsoor. Initially a small shrine, the temple was renovated about 35 years ago, and with it, the jatre gained greater splendour.
Temple priest Prakash Sharma, who has served the goddess for over 50 years, recalls the transformation. 'What started as a modest affair is now a vibrant festival. But the essence remains unchanged, it binds our people in shared reverence,' he tells TNSE.
The entire village contributes to organising the jatre. 'During this week, it becomes part of our everyday life,' says resident Siddagangamma SG, adding, 'We begin each day with pujas to our household gods, then offer our pranams to the village deity. It's deeply sacred.'
Five days of festive faith
Tradition dictates that planning for the jatre begins on the evening of Rama Navami. Village elders and the temple priest consult the almanac to determine the exact time and date for the fair, always a Monday two weeks later. A lagna patrike (invitation) follows, listing rituals and events, and is distributed to all 4,500 residents of Bettahalsoor, and in nearby villages.
When the chosen Monday arrives, festivities begin with an arati at the village's several Shiva temples. Tuesday is dedicated to Danadevaru, special deities invoked to protect livestock. Wednesday is the jatre's spiritual high point. The goddess is bathed (abhisheka), adorned (alankara), and worshipped with arati. Her image is placed in a richly decorated teru (temple chariot) and taken in a pradakshina (circumambulation) of the temple. Devotees crowd for darshan, breaking coconuts and pumpkins to ward off evil.

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The parable holds a deeper message: Is sorrow born of loss itself, or of our attachment to a form or feeling whose absence becomes the axis of our grief? Play Video Pause Skip Backward Skip Forward Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration 0:00 Loaded : 0% 0:00 Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 1x Playback Rate Chapters Chapters Descriptions descriptions off , selected Captions captions settings , opens captions settings dialog captions off , selected Audio Track default , selected Picture-in-Picture Fullscreen This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Text Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Caption Area Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Drop shadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like War Thunder - Register now for free and play against over 75 Million real Players War Thunder Play Now Undo Attachment is alluring — it disguises itself as love, purpose or duty. When left unchecked, it clouds truth, breeds illusion and binds us things that must inevitably change, decay or depart. Detachment is not renunciation, but a deeper embrace of life - knowing when to hold and when to release. Our ancient texts echo this wisdom i.e. to live well is to love deeply, yet let go lightly. We inhabit a world that glorifies unbreakable bonds, everlasting unions and their endless pursuit — where attachment is exalted and detachment mistaken for apathy. Yet life, in its silent ways, teaches while one binds, the other liberates. Discourse on detachment is often exiled to realms of spirituality or philosophy, when it is meant to be practiced. Sooner or later, fate ( Niyati ) compels us to let go of what we once deemed indispensable. And when it does, grief overwhelms — not because loss is rare, but because detachment was never lived, only preached. Live Events The question, then, is: how do we practice detachment—not as indifference, but as life's necessary rhythm? Detachment is not withdrawal from the world, nor a retreat from duty or love. It does not ask us to renounce, but to reframe—our roles, our bonds, our ambitions—in light of higher purpose. Active detachment is to engage fully, yet remain unpossessed. Like a masterful actor lost in a role yet mindful of the stage, we are called to immerse without being consumed. Nature offers the clearest lessons on this: planets hold their orbit through a tension of counterforces; molecules bond and break - transforming the forms of our observable world. Life thrives in this balance. Detachment, then, is not the absence of connection, but it is a way to renew/reshape the connections better. It is knowing when to hold with grace and when to let go in equanimity. A closer look at Nature reveals a beautiful manifestation of this art of detachment. 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