The Kumbh Mela is the biggest gathering of people in the history of humanity although few in the West have ever heard of
it. More than 70 million pilgrims attend this extraordinary spiritual festival in 2001, which has been held every 12 years near Allahabad, India, for over two millennia. A vast
tent city was established to accommodate the masses, and many of Indias greatest gurus and spiritual leaders set up camp to give discourses to their devotees. On certain
auspicious days everyone takes a holy dip at the confluence of two actual rivers the Ganges and Yamuna and a mythical river, the Saraswati. On the main bathing day,
more than 25 million people bathed in the sacred waters. This single act of faith is believed to cleanse the sins of a thousand lifetimes and secure release from the endless cycle
of rebirth literally a short cut to the state of purest bliss
nirvana.
Short Cut to Nirvana: Kumbh Mela takes a voyage of discovery through this vivid and vibrant world, accompanied by an irrepressible young Hindu monk, Swami Krishnanand, and
several Westerners, each on their own spiritual quest. With Swamiji we encounter some of the Kumbh Mela's wisest and most fascinating characters, including an ascetic sadhu who
has held his arm in the air for over 20 years, another who sits on a throne of nails, a Japanese devotee who is buried in a pit for three days, and a guru who proposes that Americans
would do well to start meditating for three hours each day. We also spend time in the company of an honored guest, the Dalai Lama, as senior leaders of Hinduism and Buddhism join
together in an historic moment of unity.
More than a simple account of the Kumbh Mela, this film is a sensory experience of an ancient, grand occasion, a swirl of color and motion, song and cacophony, the sacred and the
surreal -- spiritual India exactly as anyone would hope to find it. And from this unique event comes a powerful and uplifting message of peace and tolerance for all humanity. |