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Vrindavan Widows Show The Way To Celebrate Green, Cracker-Free Diwali

The widows of Vrindavan are of the view that there is more fun in celebrating Diwali with diyas and flowers than bursting crackers.

Widows of the holy city Vrindavan, amid a chorus of popular songs, hand-clapping and lots of flowers, celebrated Diwali on Sunday evening by lighting only earthen lamps and candles in keeping with the Supreme Court directives for ensuring a pollution-free celebration.

This assumes significance as the bursting of crackers during Diwali adversely affects the environment and the apex court has advocated opting the eco-friendly way.

"We had decided to celebrate Diwali this time by not touching crackers or sparklers," said Manu Ghosh, a widow from Bengal.

Lighting an earthern lamp along with many other widows at Gopinath temple, she said this time they are enjoying more with flowers and diyas.

Lalita Adhikary and Kanak Lata, who are staying in a nearby ashram for more than 30 years now, maintained that they are enjoying the cracker-less Diwali this time as noise and smoke out of bursting crackers creates problems for them.

Likewise, Draupadi, Sadhna, Garabani and Basanti, all in their sixties and seventies, were of the view that there is more fun in celebrating Diwali with diyas and flowers than bursting crackers.

"We want to continue with cracker-less Diwali in future also," they said in unison.

The pollution-free celebrations were held for the first time by the widows in the light of the apex court's reference to the air pollution levels in Delhi-NCR during and immediately after Diwali last year.

The court observed that due to the adverse effects of fire crackers, "the air quality deteriorates abysmally and alarmingly and the city chokes thereby".

Organised by Sulabh International, about 700 widows residing at nearby ashrams had assembled at the Gopinath temple to celebrate green Diwali in style by dispelling darkness through lighting diyas.

The courtyard of 400-year-old Gopinath temple was tastefully decorated with rangoli and the earthen lamps were lit as the sun set on the horizon. The widows later sang bhajan.

"With an aim to bringing a ray of happiness at their twilight years, we came up with this unique idea to organise the festival of lights, especially for the widows," said founder of Sulabh movement Bindeshwar Pathak.

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Sulabh provides medical facilities and vocational training for widows here, besides meeting their day-to-day needs so that they do not feel left out during their twilight years.

IANS

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