HomeNewsTrendsTravelPune’s most popular Ganapati

Pune’s most popular Ganapati

400 artisans put in 60,000 hours to create the Dadgusheth Ganapati pandal.

October 02, 2023 / 15:30 IST
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Every year, the Dagdusheth Halwai Sarvajanik Public Trust commissions a temporary structure to be built for the Ganesh festival celebrations. This year it was a model of Ayodhya's Ram Temple which is slated for completion by January 2024. (Photos by Kiran Mehta)
Every year, the Dagdusheth Halwai Sarvajanik Public Trust commissions a temporary structure to be built for the Ganesh festival celebrations. This year it was a model of Ayodhya's Ram Temple which is slated for completion by January 2024. (Photos by Kiran Mehta)

Neelam* has crossed borders, from Mangalore, Karnataka, to visit the Dagdusheth Ganapati, a star-studded idol that holds the faith of millions of devotees. Driven by her faith, she says, “I have a wish in mind (one she refuses to divulge) and I know that after visiting this temple, it will be fulfilled.” For Akshay*, a Mumbai-based businessman, the visit is about seeing ‘the fabulous decorations and backdrops’.

The Dagdusheth Halwai Sarvajanik Public Trust has been known to erect temporary temple structures - for Ganesh Chaturthi celebrations - that are replicas of famous temples across India. Every year a new theme is chosen. This year they recreated Ayodhya’s Ram Mandir. One of the trustees, Mahesh Shankar Survavanshi explains, “The Ayodhya Ram temple will be inaugurated in January 2024. We wanted to give the people a glimpse of it before it opens.”

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The towering replica is over 100 feet high and over 50 feet wide. It took 400 artisans over 60,000 man-hours, spread across three months, to create this structure. It’s hard to believe that this structure is temporary with a total of 60 gigantic pillars holding it up. Visitors are greeted by a magnificent dome soaring into the sky. Attention to detail is apparent in the intricate carvings of deities on the pillars, a roof carved with floral motifs, and twinkling chandeliers hanging from above.

The pandal is named after sweet-trader and mud-wrestler, Dagdusheth Gadve, who had migrated from Karnataka to Pune to make this city his home. In 1893, Dagdusheth funded a Ganapati temple - a permanent temple separate from the pandal - which still stands, just a few feet of the temporary structure. A few years later - in 1896 - Dagdusheth lost his young son to the plague. Overtaken by grief, he also passed away a few months later. His wife Lakshmibai approached her guru, Maharaj Madhavnaji, who advised her to set up yet another temple, to Lord Dattatraya. He advised her to dedicate her life to the worship and care for the two temples, as though they were her own children. He predicted that the two deities would bless the family such that their names would never be forgotten, even centuries later.