Released in 1986
Directed by Ira Cohen
Directed by Ira Cohen
Ira Cohen is both participant and observer to an extraordinary parade of people on pilgrimage into the heart of one of India´s greatest sacred celebrations. With the eye of a filmmaker and the voice of a poet, Cohen introduces an array of holy men as they gather for the event, which occurs only once every 12 years. The Kumbh Mela traces its origin to a Hindu legend, which tells how four drops of the gods holy elixir fell to earth from a "kumbh," or pitcher, during a battle with jealous demons fighting in the heavens.
Ira Cohen, one of the great poets and film-makers working from the 1960s onwards, who passed away in 2011.
Cohen was living in Kathmandu when he heard that the 3-yearly Kumbha Mela would take place that year in Haridwar, so he grabbed a camera, some friends and headed down to record it.
Along with video of some of the yogis and sadhus at the festival, Cohen reads his poetic reflections of the event, and the outcome is very evocative.
Extreme asceticism, of which this is exemplary, was known also in the Buddha’s time, and was indeed practised by the Bodhisatta, but it is one thing to read about in the discourses, and another to see it as a living tradition.
The film follows different groups of sadhus, some co-operative, some bemused. The culture they represent is part of the backdrop against which Buddhism developed, and against which it preached.
For the faint-hearted I suppose I should mention that there are many scenes of male nudity in the film, and often engaging their organs strenuously.
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