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A giant papier-mâché, multi-faced, mustached figure in shades of pink, red, and white is seen outside against a sunny, bright blue sky, and tethered to the ground with guide wires.

A forty-foot-high effigy of demon king Rāvana rises up on the Festival grounds.
Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives

Image Description A forty-foot-high papier-mâché figure stands outside against a blue sky with white clouds. Large guide wires tether it to the ground. The figure’s wide pink head has multiple mustached faces, large eyes, and large ears. The body is painted to show a long red garment with small white flowers. On the head of the figure sits a large white crown-like structure, out of which rises a multicolored horse head, topped with a parasol, topped with a small bird. In the right hand, the figure holds a long scepter with a gold ball, and in the left hand, a small, black, flower-shaped shield which is decorated with smaller white flowers.

Ravana Effigy

“On the last day of Mela! the effigies of Rāvana were burned. Inside that fire, when the effigies were burned, all the bad things that were inside of us were thrown into that fire.” So sang Banku Patua when showing villagers in West Bengal his painted story scroll of the 1985 Mela! An Indian Fair program.

The fiery triumph of good over evil

The story of the victory of Lord Rāma—who rescues his kidnapped wife Sita from the ten-headed demon king Rāvana—is reenacted each year throughout India during the ten-day Hindu celebration of Dassehra. At the 1985 Festival, the drama unfolded in the center of Mela! An Indian Fair.

A melā is a combination bazaar, street fair, and cultural festival that people travel far and wide to attend. At the composite melā in Washington, D.C., visitors were immersed in the sights, sounds, smells, and rituals of regional India. An outdoor Learning Center housed a performing space and workshop area devoted to ritual activities. There, Jamil Ahmed, Bal Mukand, Gopal Singh, and others from Uttar Pradesh worked to create the towering effigies of Rāvana and his allies, son Meghanada and brother Kumbhakarna. Visitors watched them carefully split and tie together the bamboo sticks that formed the structures of the flamboyant characters. These forms were then covered with papier-mâché, brightly painted, and embellished with oversized jewels. Once finished, the effigies were laid out on the ground, securely assembled, and raised by ropes to their upright positions.

  • The three effigies rising up on the National Mall, where they will stand until their confrontation with Rāma.

On the evening of July 5, the epic confrontation between Rāma and Rāvana took place on the National Mall. At the drama’s climax, Rāma shoots a blazing arrow into the demon king, who explodes into flames. It is a noisy conflagration—all three effigies are packed with firecrackers. In the end, good triumphs over evil, and the audience is cleansed in the process.

Gallery
  • The epic battle between Rāma and Rāvana begins with the giant effigies being shot by a flaming arrow and ends with a bonfire across from the Smithsonian Castle.

The Mela! program lives on in people’s memories. Visitors recount their fascination watching figures emerge from the piles of thin bamboo sticks. Staff remember the complex logistics of mounting the finale—in essence a giant bonfire—on the National Park Service's most regulated property. Fire trucks, firefighters, and emergency supplies were everywhere. For former Festival director Diana Parker, exposure to the distinctly non-Western practice of destroying something so exquisite for ritual purposes was both transfixing and unforgettable. All that remained was a twenty-nine-inch length of singed bamboo, which was used by staff for many years to talk about the purpose of the Festival, including its occasionally dramatic events—and the ephemeral nature of some of them.

  • Bamboo remnant.
—Erin Younger, exhibition curator

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