Mumbai: Millions of people in Mumbai and the rest of Maharashtra bid a tearful adieu to elephant-headed Lord Ganesh whose thousands of big and small idols were taken out in colourful processions for immersion, marking the end of the 10-day long Ganeshotsav festival here yesterday.
Since daybreak, people began trooping out in large numbers, singing bhajans, dancing, performing prayers before over 110,000 idols of Lord Ganesh before taking them in processions to various immersion points around the metropolis and other parts of the state in the fifth and final phase of immersion yesterday.
The skies reverberated to the cries of ‘Ganpati Bappa Moraya, Pudhachya Varshi Lavkar Ya’, as long processions wound their way through main roads, highways, internal and arterial roads amidst tight security and elaborate traffic arrangements.
In the 121st year of Ganeshotsav, the public and joint celebration of the festival, while Mumbai will witness the immersions of around 110,000 idols on Sunday, this figure could touch the half-million mark in rest of Maharashtra.
The festival that witnesses massive public participation was revived by ‘Lokmanya’ Bal Gangadhar Tilak in 1894 in Pune, as a subtle challenge to the British empire that frowned on any kind of mass gatherings during the pre-Independence era.
The processions began slowly with over six million locals and tourists expected to throng the roads and hundreds of immersion spots, both natural and artificial, including beaches, creeks, ponds, lakes, wells, specially created artificial sites, big and small rivers in the city and state.
In Mumbai, the traditionally popular immersion sites are Girgaum Chowpatty, famed for immersion of some of the most gigantic idols that are around 20 feet tall, Shivaji Park, Worli, Juhu, Versova, Marve, Madh Island, Manori, Gorai, Thane Creek, Bassein Creek, Bhayander Creek, a lake inside Sanjay Gandhi National Park and scores of artificial immersion sites set up by the Brihan Mumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).
The Mumbai and state police made elaborate arrangements for security, traffic regulations and safety of the devotees everywhere, with other state and central agencies on stand-by to tackle any emergencies.
In Mumbai, besides the police, State Reserve Police Force and Rapid Action Force were deployed, while helicopters of the Indian Navy and Coast Guard conducted regular sorties to keep an eye from the sky.
Personnel of the BrihanMumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC), Home Guards and trained volunteers of the 11,000-plus Ganeshotsav organisations help the official agencies to maintain security and order.
Immersion ceremonies began simultaneously in Thane, Pune, Nagpur, Aurangabad, Kolhapur, Nashik, the coastal Konkan districts and others parts of the state.
The 2015 Ganeshotsav began on September 17 with phase-wise immersions on the second, third, fifth, seventh and the final 10th day (yesterday).
In Hyderabad, Idols of Lord Ganesh were immersed peacefully with religious fervour and enthusiasm in Hyderabad and other parts of Telangana yesterday amid tight security.
Three people died in two different incidents during the festivities in Khammam and Medak districts.
While a nine-year-old child died after falling from a truck carrying the idol in Medak district, two teenagers were drowned in a lake in Khammam district while immersing the idol.
Director General of Police Anurag Sharma said the celebrations were held in a smooth and peaceful manner. Thousands of vehicles carrying idols of all sizes and in different ‘avataars’ of the elephant-headed Hindu god headed for the Hussain Sagar Lake in the heart of Hyderabad city, marking the culmination of the 10-day Ganesh Utsav festivities.
Telangana Home Minister N. Narasimha Reddy, DGP Anurag Sharma, Hyderabad Police Commissioner M Mahender Reddy and other officials made an aerial survey of the mammoth procession.
The mammoth procession, which began from Balapur on the city outskirts, passed through the communally-sensitive old city and the main thoroughfares while proceeding towards the Hussain Sagar Lake.
Police said no untoward incident was reported from anywhere in the city. The afternoon and evening prayers at the historic Makkah Masjid near Charminar passed off peacefully amid tight security and vigilance by the police.IANS