23-year Felipe Patterson, a student at the University of Buenos Aires, who attended the festivities last evening at the grand Lav Kush Ramlila function, said, "The experience left me literally bedazzled."
"It is my first visit to Delhi and I had no idea about this festival (Navratra) and I just randomly walked into the celebrations. The crowd was overwhelming but it was all part of experiencing India.
Portugal national Henrique Veranda, an avid photographer, who just finished school and wishes to pursue cinema for undergraduate studies, tried to capture the Dusshera celebrations on his camera in colour and in black and white.
"The festival is full of colour from the stagecraft to the effigies and hawkers selling food items. But, I am trying to mostly capture the celebrations in monochrome. As Satyajit Ray, one of the master filmmakers from India, did in his films. Black and white frames capture the essence of life," he told PTI.
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Giant effigies of the 10-headed demon-king Ravana, his son Meghnad and brother Kumbhakaran were ceremonially burnt on the Red Fort front lawns, marking the triumph of good over evil on Dussehra yesterday.
43-year-old social worker Javier Gallego from Barcelona, who works with children, said, "People at the hotel I am staying here, suggested me to go attend the festival, and I never thought it would leave me so pleasantly surprised."
Veranda said, "The crowd went in a frenzy after seeing him arrive on stage. I did not know that he (Devgan) was a film star. In our country, such big crowds are hardly seen."
"Also, I did not know who Ravan was so I will go read more about him now, and about Ram and Hanuman, the monkey-god, who carries a mace on his shoulder," he added.
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