Bengali New Year 1423 Celebrated in Sacramento
By Ras H. Siddiqui

  It is well known that one of the largest annual celebrations of Bengali New Year or   Pohela Boishakh   outside the country of Bangladesh or the state of West Bengal in India is held in the area around East London called Brick Lane. But since one cannot bring Brick Lane to places like California, at least the Bengali community here can bring the spirit of the festival to our Capital City. This year the Bangladeshi-West Bengali community in the greater Sacramento area led by the local   Anandamela Team did just that as it celebrated a very colorful cultural event at the Orangevale Community Center with several hundred people in attendance on April 16th.

And it was certainly a display of collective pride in a culture that has produced South Asia’s only native language (with some English translations involved) Nobel Prize in Literature to date, that being Bengali writer Rabindranath Tagore in the year 1913. Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam still remain the two titans of Bengali poetry and just cannot be ignored in any Bengali celebration which involves songs and music.   Rabindra Sangeet  and   Nazrul Geeti  are performed at almost all of these festivals and   Boishakhi Melas  are no exception.

After having attended a number of these Sacramento area   Boishakhi  events and even offering minor suggestions it was indeed a welcome sign to see them move and have the annual   mela  at this larger Orangevale location instead of the nearby college town of Davis mainly because of capacity issues. But even this larger location may be too small soon, as this event and the area Bengali community grows.  And who knows, maybe soon we will see a Bengali/Bangladeshi newspaper resurface again in northern California. Another welcome addition at least to the Sacramento area would be a restaurant which serves Bengali cuisine.

Delicious Bengali food was available for sale at this event. This writer’s only complaint was that   Jhal Muri  was not present this year. This puffed rice street food delicacy can be heavenly, and the available   Chatpati   just  could not fill in that void. And one had to be quick to grab the delicious best because the   Ilich Maach  (Hilsa Shad fish cooked Bengali style) disappeared quickly. But for some of us, that loss was made up by some absolutely great homemade   Chom Chom  and   Roshogolla desserts. 

Bengal is a land rich in colors where green, red and gold dominate. This bouquet of color was reflected in the attire of the women and children present, both on stage when dances were performed and amongst the audience.   Boishakhi  brings forward women and children dressed in their very best. And the dances were once again well done and coordinated along with the many songs that took the audience through memory lane. In closing, Happy Bengali New Year 1423 from Sacramento!

 


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