Hindus believe that if they bathe on the most auspicious day, which fell on Monday, a lifetime of sin or indeed the sins accumulated over the course of many lives can be washed away. And of all the locations for the festival, this spot in Allahabad, where the sacred Ganges and almost-equally sacred Yamuna rivers merge with the mystical Saraswati, is said to have no equal.
This shot at redemption explains why so many people from across the breadth of India are willing to embark on an often exhausting journey, sleep by the roadside until their chance to bathe, and then return home again the very same day. Many of those who visit, perhaps most, are from India's small towns and villages.
Naik's journey had taken him 20 jolting hours. The previous day, a group from the northern state of Jammu and Kashmir explained that their journey by bus had taken three days. From this group, a father, his wife and their young daughter bathed together, grinning throughout.
"The whole family has come. It is a part of Hindu life," said the young man, Gorav Chandran.
And yet the mela carries with it real dangers. Yesterday, officials in Allahabad were facing criticism over arrangements made for travellers after a stampede at the railway station left 36 dead and many injured. In 2003, around 45 people were crushed to death when the festival was held in Nasik.
There are other less perilous risks associated with the festival. Several Bollywood films have been devoted to the problem of people getting lost amid the crowds. Centres are established to try and reunite people and all day loudspeakers crackle with details of children and adults who have shown up lost. Some larger groups of people tied themselves to one another with pieces of string or else the end of a sari.
Siddeshwar Prasad had been doubly unfortunate. He arrived from Bihar as part of a group of eight. On Saturday two friends had become separated and on Sunday morning, after their visit to the Ganges, he had lost another three. He was now sitting in the shade under a tree. "Even if we don't find them we are going to return today," he said.
If the central purpose of the festival is religious, then the mela is also part country fair and part massive bazaar. Hawkers selling everything from clothes to religious icons line the sides of the dusty roads that spread over 1820ha, while the evenings pound with the sound of chanting.
Among the various Hindu holy men lured by the festival, it is the naked, ash-smeared Naga sadhus who earn the most attention from both genuine devotees and curious gawkers.
One of them, Shri Panchdas Naam, from Mathura, declined to be interviewed unless the Independent agreed to compensate him for lost time. Much friendlier was Someshwar Giri, a guru from Himachal Pradesh, who toured the festival with his right hand held aloft, some of his fingers apparently fused together. One of his followers claimed the holy man had borne his hand in this position for the last five years. Asked how Giri managed to sleep, the devotee said: "He has not slept for the last five years."
One guru confronted one of the great ironies of the festival, indeed one of the ironies of Hindu India, namely that while the Ganges and Yamuna are utterly revered they are among the world's most heavily polluted rivers.
With a line of a followers queuing to prostrate themselves at his feet, Swami Avimukteshwaranand broke off from juggling calls he was receiving on three phones to demand the authorities take action to protect a river into which is dumped 3400 million litres of sewage every day.
Yet few appeared to spend too much time worrying that the river might not be all that clean. Many believe the water can clean itself.
Naik, who hoped bathing in the Ganges would help him ensure he could get enough labourers to harvest his rice crop, did not pause as he made his way through the crowds to the rivers edge.
"I feel great," he said, a few minutes later, as he clambered from the marigold-strewn water. "I hope this will bring prosperity and good health."
- Independent
Cleaning in dirty water
An estimated 30 million Hindus took a dip at the Sangam - the confluence of the Ganges, the Yamuna and the mythical Saraswati Rivers - as part of the 55-day Kumbh Mela, or Pitcher Festival. The auspicious bathing days of the Kumbh Mela are decided by the alignment of stars.
According to Hindu mythology, the Kumbh Mela celebrates the victory of gods over demons in a furious battle over nectar that would give them immortality. As one of the gods fled with a pitcher of the nectar across the skies, it spilled on four Indian towns: Allahabad, Nasik, Ujjain and Haridwar.
The Kumbh Mela is held four times every
12 years in those towns. Hindus believe if they bathe at the Ganges on the festival's most auspicious day, they can rid themselves of their sins.
- AP