HomeNewsTrendsLifestyleA desi wedding at the 2023 Burning Man Festival

A desi wedding at the 2023 Burning Man Festival

What were the odds of attending a desi wedding on the Playa grounds at the Burning Man Festival? It happened this year.

September 07, 2023 / 12:32 IST
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A rigged-up white elephant-shaped art van, named Funkdelephant, that blared Bollywood music during the baraat of an Indian wedding, a first at the recent Burning Man festival in Nevada, US.
A rigged-up white elephant-shaped art van, named Funkdelephant, that blared Bollywood music during the baraat of an Indian wedding, a first at the recent Burning Man festival in Nevada, US.

If you had attended this year’s Burning Man Festival at Nevada, the US, you would have most likely come across an elephant! A rigged-up white elephant-shaped art van, named Funkdelephant, that blared music during the baraat of an Indian wedding, a ‘first’ for the festival. The couple Sheel Mohnot, 41, and Amruta Godbole, 37, got married, with an open invitation for all the people gathered for the festival. The baraat had a few hundred attendees, and the elephant played Bollywood music. It caught the attention of the desis who were attending the festival, surprising them to no ends.

The Indian couple Sheel Mohnot and Amruta Godbole.

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Since 2010, Mohnot, a venture capitalist, had been attending the Burning Man festival known for its flaming pyres (the installation of the ‘man’ gets ritually burned at the end of the festival) and psychedelic art. Each year, a pop-up city springs up in the middle of the desert with at least 70,000 people attending it. Godbole, a lawyer, had just attended once last year. The duo, who were ‘set up’ last year by a mutual friend, decided to get married there because it was a ‘fun’ thing to do. “Many of our friends go to the festival and we liked the idea of celebrating with them there,” Mohnot said.

Luckily for the couple, it was bright (and very dusty) on the day they got married and the next day, on a Friday, the rains began. “We couldn’t go out when we wanted and ended up staying on for another day than what was planned,” he said. The wedding, Mohnot said, was a ritualistic one, officiated by his younger brother, and had the baraat, Saptapadi, exchange of garlands and the marriage vows. The two even had Playa names — the names attendees use at the festival — and so, Garbanzo (Mohnot) and Roots (Godbole) were married on the Playa ground in a ceremony that began with an invocation to Lord Ganesha, the ‘remover of obstacles’. Neither the rains nor the muddy slush or the ‘moop’ (how rubbish is referred to at the Burning Man) were obstacles in the path of the newly-weds who are now clean and dry at San Francisco.