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Link: http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1145785

 

Buffaloes fight it out for a TV set and mp3 players

IANS

Thursday, January 17, 2008 17:51 IST

 

AHATGURI (ASSAM): For hundreds of people in Assam it is a carnival, while

for some it has all the elements of a full-scale battle. But the one-tonne

buffaloes like it or not, have to lock horns and fight it out in the arena.

 

The stakes are not high but still the matadors goad and cajole their tame

buffaloes to fight and win them a prize - a television set as the first

prize in this event, a MP 3 player and a wall clock as the second and third

prizes respectively.

 

The village of Ahatguri, 80 km east of Assam's main city of Guwahati, buzzed

with activity Tuesday with the locals organizing the annual buffalo fight -

a tradition that goes back centuries.

 

Some 150 buffaloes took part in the event. For the villagers, buffalo fights

are an entertaining sport organized during Bihu, the weeklong Assamese

harvest festival where traditional games accompanied by feasting mark the

celebrations.

 

" Buffalo fights are a tradition here, organized for pure entertainment. It

also acts as a meeting ground of people from all religious faiths, " said

Bubul Das, a former lawmaker from the opposition Asom Gana Parishad party.

 

The mood was one of festivity with hundreds of people thronging the fighting

ring with drums and cymbals, coupled with hoarse cries of the keepers as

they goaded their flamboyantly decked-up buffaloes with vermilion splashed

over their bodies.

 

After initial song and dance and rituals performed by a village priest, the

buffalo fight began - the trumpet blared with the promoters calling out to

owners to bring their animals to the ring - a paddy field with spectators

sitting in circles meters away.

 

" People are not bothered about winning or losing. The amount of thrill this

sport provides to the people is what matters most, " said Amber Nath, a

55-year-old peasant engaged in buffalo fights for the past three decades.

 

The fight turns aggressive at times with enraged buffaloes running amok,

scaring spectators as they run for their lives.

 

" Apart from minor injuries we do not remember any major accidents during the

event in living memory, " Bhairav Bordoloi, a community elder, said.

 

For the locals, it is a matter of pride to bring their buffaloes to the

fighting ring.

 

" I have been preparing for this event for the last one year, spending an

estimated Rs.30,000 for the upkeep of the animal. For us the day is

special, " said Nur Zaman, a villager.

 

 

 

--

United against elephant polo

http://www.stopelephantpolo.com

 

 

 

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