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Canada’s Parliament Hill hosts Kullu Dussehra festivity

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Our Bureau

Ottawa

Despite the tense diplomatic relations between India and Canada, the Indian diaspora celebrated Himachal Pradesh’s famed Kullu Dussehra for the first time in Canada’s Parliament Hill, organisers said on Monday.

The festival to mark the victory of good over evil was hosted by Canadian Member of Parliament Chandra Arya and supported by the Himachali Pravasi Global Association (HPGA), a diaspora from Himachal Pradesh that continues to strengthen Canada into the vibrant and diverse country it is.

Himachal Chief Minister Sukhvinder Sukhu addressed the Indian diaspora on Sunday along with other attendees in Canada through video message which was played at Parliament Hill, Bhagya Chander, HPGA’s board director, told IANS over phone from Ottawa.

During his address, the CM invited investors and individuals to visit Himachal for business and tourism.

The event was attended, among other dignitaries, by High Commissioner of India to Canada, Sanjay Verma, besides 25 Indo-Canadian diaspora organisations and international diaspora.

A cultural programme was performed by HPGA members that comprised Himachali Naati.

The festival to mark good over evil was hosted by Canadian Member of Parliament Chandra Arya and supported by the Himachali Pravasi Global Association (HPGA), a diaspora from Himachal Pradesh that continues to strengthen Canada into the vibrant and diverse country it is.

Ramlila, the traditional performance of the Ramayana, was staged. A colourful decorated palanquin carrying the idols of deities to pay their obeisance to Lord Raghunath, the presiding deity of the festival, was performed. During lunch, ‘dham’ was served to the audience which is a mid-day meal served in Himachali culture on the occasions of marriage or religious days.

Back to Himachal, the world-famous Kullu Dussehra celebrations that are believed to have started in the 17th century when the ruler, Raja Jagat Singh, installed an idol of Lord Raghunath in a Kullu temple to remove a curse and seek his blessings begin on Vijaya Dashami, the day Dussehra ends in the rest of the country.

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