Barpeta’s Dol Jatra fosters community through shared traditions

In Barpeta, the Dol Jatra festival rooted in Srimanta Sankardeva's tradition reorganizes society by blurring professional and social hierarchies during its observance at Barpeta Satra. The event integrates theology with ecology, featuring Holi geets that connect the divine to natural elements like pollen and river wind. It also stimulates local economy through artisan activities and shared labor across communities.

The Dol Jatra in Barpeta, part of the Srimanta Sankardeva tradition, unfolds in the courtyards of Barpeta Satra, where the air fills with scents of oil, soil, and impending woodsmoke during the Phagun season. Unlike typical spring festivals reduced to calendar dates, this event pauses domestic routines and turns the satra's front yard into an open civic space, allowing hierarchies to blur temporarily.

The Neo-Vaishnavite theology shaped by Srimanta Sankardev views the sacred as intertwined with the environment, with Holi geets embedding spiritual themes in elements like rain, dust, and riverbanks. The songs emphasize that societal well-being depends on the health of land and water. Economically, the festival draws artisans selling items such as iron korahis, firewood, jilapis, tepar nimki, bogori chops, aloo bhaja, and ranga dima, transforming local shops into hubs of shared sustenance.

Performances of Holi geet involve a pathak leading verses, palis responding, and rhythms shifting from dwipchandi to kaharwa and jhumri, accompanied by dholak and khanjari, where participants join in, dissolving lines between performers and audience. Ritual tasks, including cleaning the Dol ghar, whitewashing, and gathering reeds for the meji, are distributed across hatis without regard to caste or occupation, promoting equality through practice.

Historical records like Barpeta Satrar Itihax by Gokul Pathak and contemporary efforts by groups such as Anajori, led by Nirmal Ranjan Mazumdar, document the satra's evolution, song variations, and economic effects on traders. These practices suggest ways to build community through proximity, embed ecological ethics in culture, and link economic activity to spiritual life, even as Barpeta faces modern challenges like migration and market changes.

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