Residents Of This Tamil Nadu Village Bid Adieu To Diwali By Throwing Cow Dung At Each Other

Indian village marks end of Diwali with massive cow poo fight

Shirtless men fling dung at each other in a pile of dung.
The Gorehabba festival is held in on the border of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu in India.

Joyful crowds have pelted each other with fistfuls of cow manure as part of one village’s local ritual to mark the end of Diwali, India’s most important Hindu festival.

Similar to Spain’s La Tomatina festival — the eccentric tomato-hurling celebration — residents of Gumatapura instead fling snowball-sized wads of bovine poo.

The Gorehabba festival on Saturday began with the afternoon collection of “ammunition” from cow-owning homes in the village, which lies on the border of the southern states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.

The manure was brought to the local temple on tractor trolleys, before a priest performed a blessing ritual.

After that, the dung was dumped in an open area — with men and boys wading in to prepare their weapons for the battle ahead.

People flock to Gumatapura from far-flung cities each year, and for those in attendance, the messy battle is as much about fun as it is about the perceived health benefits.

“If they have a disease, it will get cured,” said Mahesh, a farmer at Saturday’s festival.

Some Hindus believe cows and everything they produce is sacred and purifying.

Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi has pushed for greater protection of the animals, and many Indian states have long banned their slaughter for meat.

A smiling man hefts a large wad of cow manure.
The cow dung is blessed before the event by a Hindu priest.

Residents Of This Tamil Nadu Village Bid Adieu To Diwali By Throwing Cow Dung At Each Other

Joyful crowds pelt each other with fistfuls of cow manure this weekend as part of one village’s local ritual to mark the end of Diwali.

Similar to Spain’s “La Tomatina” — the eccentric tomato-hurling celebration of the local fruit — residents of Gumatapura instead fling snowball-sized wads of a more earthy variety.

The Gorehabba festival begins with the afternoon collection of “ammunition” from cow-owning homes in the village, which lies on the border of the southern states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.

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