The two-day event has been organized every year for the past five years by the Rekhta Foundation.
By Kaleem Kawaja
In my recent vacation in India, I attended a unique two-day cultural festival called “Jashan Rekhta” in New Delhi on December 15 and 16 at the National Stadium. The event has been organized every year for the past five years by the Rekhta Foundation, headed by Sanjay Saraf, a New Delhi businessman.
While the core theme of the event is Urdu language and its culture of a composite multi-religious and multicultural society, it makes a huge effort to make artists, speakers and the audiences from Hindu, Muslim, Sikh and Christian communities to participate in equal numbers, thereby promoting India’s basic composite multi-religious society.
In its various sessions, spread over two days, the event presented well-known authors, poets, moviemakers, ghazal, qawwali and Sufi music singers, as well as folk singers from various north Indian regions. In addition to typical Muslim cultural items, such as mushaira, qawwali, ghazal and Sufi music, icons of Hindu culture like Ram Kahani — a rendering of Ramayana in Urdu — and Kabir Kahani, a nugget from the Bhakti movement of medieval India, were presented in equal measure.
The over-riding flavor of the event, though loaded with Urdu and north Indian Muslim culture, was the warm atmosphere of friendship and commonality among men and women from different religious communities and the presence of a substantial number of young, under-40 people. This cultural festival has built such a reputation that a good number of people in the audience were Non-Resident Indians and visitors from other Indian cities.
Another attraction at the Rekhta event was a large food court comprising stalls offering rich variety of high quality food, among them distinct cuisine from Delhi, Lucknow, Rajasthan, Kashmir and Bihar, each with its own authentic breads, rice and non-vegetarian and vegetarian dishes. In the food court, the composite and diverse culture theme was predominant.
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The inter-faith cultural bon-homie in the 3,000-strong audience was so pervasive that, as I was returning home from the event by the Delhi metro, I said to myself “Who says Hindu-Sikh-Muslim-Christian friendship is dead in India?” This in the face of the bad news we often receive of Hindu-Muslim tensions and problems in various Indian cities.
All of us have to work harder to support such positive events and debunk the selfish politicians and the sensationalist TV media in India that divide us by propagating distorted precepts of religion, cow and medieval Indian history.
Indeed, India’s composite and tolerant Hindustani culture is what is in our bloodstream and what we grew up with. I doff my hat off in respect for the Rekhta Foundation and other similar groups that promote such positive cultural and social events to bring people together.
(The writer, a senior engineer at NASA, is a community activist in metropolitan Washington, DC.)