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Reporter’s diary: When Gurugram danced to the beat of Durga puja

From dhaak beats to Sindoor Khela, the festival transforms Gurugram into a mosaic of faith, nostalgia, and togetherness.

Published on: Oct 13, 2025 05:37 am IST
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Festivals, they say, have the power to turn strangers into family, and nowhere does that feel truer than during Durga Puja in Gurugram. Over the years, this city of migrants has transformed the five-day celebration into a mosaic of faith, nostalgia, and belonging. This week, as I moved from one pandal to another, my notebook filled not just with details for a story but with emotions that words could barely contain.

Women take part in ‘sindoor khela’ on Vijaya Dashami in Sector 15 Part II. (Parveen Kumar/HT)

The morning began in DLF Phase 1, where the air was alive with the rhythm of dhaak (traditional Bengali drums), conch shells, and the fragrance of incense. Women in red and white sarees, their faces glowing with devotion, offered flowers to the goddess, while children tugged at their mothers’ hands, impatient to grab a plate of bhog. Watching them, I couldn’t help but think that this city, often accused of being too mechanical and too rushed, suddenly had a heartbeat.

At one of the pandals, Anindita Basu, a marketing professional from Kolkata, told me with misty eyes, “Durga Puja here is our connection to home. For five days, we forget that we’re far away. We rebuild Kolkata in our hearts.” And she was right. Every beat of the drum and every aroma of khichuri and labra carried pieces of distant memories stitched together in the heart of Gurugram.

As dusk fell, I watched the idol being readied for immersion. The drums grew louder, the chants more emotional. People danced not in grief but in gratitude. They were celebrating not an end but a promise that Ma Durga would return next year.

In that moment, standing under the golden lights, I realized something simple yet profound. Gurugram may be a city of concrete, but during Durga Puja, it finds its soul. It is in the shared laughter, the collective prayer, the red-stained smiles of women, and the rhythm that binds thousands of hearts into one. When the drums finally faded, I closed my notebook—my story written, but my heart still full. Festivals like Durga Puja remind us that beyond the chaos of life and deadlines, what keeps us human is our ability to come together, to dance, to pray, to believe.

Leena Dhankhar heads the Gurugram bureau, and has extensively covered civic issues, environment, Wildlife, Forest, crime, real estate and politics.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Leena Dhankhar

Leena Dhankhar is the Bureau Chief of the Gurugram bureau at Hindustan Times, where she covers crime, excise, civic agencies, forests and wildlife, real estate, and politics. With over a decade of experience at the organisation, she has reported some of the region’s most impactful stories, known for her deep investigative work and on-ground reporting. Leena has extensively covered major crime cases, systemic lapses and financial irregularities, often exposing civic agency failures and prompting administrative action. Her journalism is driven by accountability, public interest, and a commitment to highlighting issues that shape everyday life in Gurugram.

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