Ramman Festival

The Ramman Festival is a traditional religious and cultural celebration held in the Saloor-Dungra villages of Uttarakhand. It represents a unique blend of ritual worship, oral storytelling, dance, theatre, and community participation.

Key Features

  • Celebrated annually in April in honour of the local deity Bhumiyal Devta.
  • Recognized by UNESCO in 2009 as part of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
  • The festival takes place in the courtyard of the Bhumiyal Devta temple, making the ritual space central to the celebration.
RAMMAN FESTIVAL

Cultural Practices

  • The performances include recitations from the Ramayana and local legends, combining mythological and regional narratives.
  • The festival is famous for masked dances, where performers wear 18 types of masks made from Bhojpatra (Himalayan birch).
  • Music is provided by traditional instruments like Dhol, Damau, Manjira, Jhanjhar, and Bhankora.

Community Participation

  • Every household contributes, and roles are traditionally caste-based, such as: Priests conducting rituals, Artisans making masks, Musicians and performers carrying out songs and dances.
  • The festival relies on oral transmission, passing songs, techniques, and rituals from one generation to the next.

Significance

  • Preserves indigenous cultural identity and local religious belief systems.
  • Demonstrates community-led heritage conservation without external institutional control.

Conclusion

The Ramman Festival is a living cultural tradition that showcases the harmony of faith, performance art, and community cooperation, contributing richly to India’s cultural diversity.

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👉 Read Daily Current Affairs – 06th October 2025

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