Saturday, July 11

Behdienkhlam festival ends with colourful display of traditions

Thousands of devotees gathered at the sacred Aitnar in Jowai on Thursday as the four-day annual Behdieñkhlam festival concluded with traditional rituals symbolising the triumph over disease, social evils and negative forces while invoking divine blessings for peace, prosperity and a bountiful harvest.

Celebrated every year in mid-July after the sowing season, Behdieñkhlam is the most important festival of the Niamtre faithful of the Pnar community. In the Pnar language, ‘Khlam’ means plague or pestilence, while ‘Beh Dieñ’ signifies driving away disease and social evils through sacred rituals performed with wooden logs and religious fervour.

The festival’s principal ritual centres around the Dieñkhlam – a large, straight and polished tree trunks ceremonially felled from designated forests and brought to Jowai. This year, in keeping with conservation efforts, the trees were cut only after traditional invocations, while saplings were planted at the felling sites to promote ecological sustainability.

A major highlight on the concluding day was the arrival of the sacred Symbood Khnong at Aitnar. Hundreds of devotees rushed to touch the ceremonial log, believing it would protect them from illness and bring good health, prosperity and success in their livelihoods.

According to the Niamtre faith, Behdieñkhlam is not merely a ritual to ward off sickness but also a symbolic reaffirmation of the community’s resolve to overcome social evils and preserve harmony and righteousness.

The festival also showcased the creativity of youths from different localities of Jowai, who constructed elaborate Rots (Rongs) towering wooden structures decorated with colourful paper, tinsel and traditional designs. Brought to Aitnar on the final day, the structures reflected contemporary themes alongside traditional beliefs.

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