A Legacy in Devotion – The Ghosh Family’s Kali Puja Marks Its 184th Year

A Legacy in Devotion – The Ghosh Family’s Kali Puja Marks Its 184th Year

Lifestyle

New Delhi [India], October 24: In a quiet corner of Khejuri, East Midnapore, the lanterns gleamed, the names of ancestors were whispered, and the fragrance of incense intertwined with the dusk. For the venerable household of the Ghosh Family, the year 2025 brings a milestone: their family courtyard celebration of the Goddess Maa Kali holds its 184th anniversary. What began as a humble offering of faith has become a living tradition of continuity, heritage and collective reverence.

Origins rooted in devotion

According to family records, the invocation of Maa Kali by the Ghosh family traces back to the year 1842 – marking the start of an unbroken chain of celebrations that now enters its 184th edition. A handwritten ledger and careful oral histories recount that it was Mr Bholanath Ghosh, a zamindar moved by devotion and gratitude, who first triggered the ritual offerings and lit the lamp of tradition after moving to Khejuri, East Midnapore, from Tirol, Hooghly, for his zamindari. In the decades since, the ritual has passed down through successive generations, each steward shaping it while preserving its core purpose: to honor the Divine Mother and bind the family via spiritual unity.

Rituals and resonance

In the lead-up to the Puja night, the courtyard of the ancestral home is swept clean, clay lamps are set in symmetrical rows, and a potter-crafted idol of Kali is installed before thinning dusk. The priests chant Vedic invocations, the family gathers in prayer, and the offerings are made: sweets, fruits, constructive silence. According to the current patriarch, Mr Biswadip Ghosh (aged 61), “Our Puja is not for show; it is a pact with our forefathers, with the Goddess, and with each other.” The rhythm may be subtle, far removed from the pandals and public spectacles elsewhere, but the gravity is profound.

A quiet heritage amid changing times

In recent years, with Bengal’s urban sprawl and societal shifts, many old “bonedi barir pujos” (traditional households’ pujas) have faded or transformed into public pandals. The Ghosh family’s ritual stands out by staying in the ancestral home, un-commercialised and intimate. It is precisely this adherence to home-ritual, family-gate and courtyard that imbues it with what anthropologists call “ritual anchoredness” — the sense that the sacred is tethered not just to the deity, but to place and lineage.

Yet even as times change, the family has adapted: the idol is crafted by ta rusted artisan from the local potter community whose family is associated with the Ghosh’s for the last 9 decades, arrangements are scaled to current means, and the guardians of the tradition remain cognizant of its financial and generational burdens. “We may not have the grandest lights or the longest procession,” says Mr. Bitan Ghosh (aged 33), a younger member of the family, “but we have our continuity.”

Why this 184-year mark matters

Reaching 184 years in a family, Puja is, among the region’s traditional households, a rare accomplishment. It signifies not only the durability of belief but the endurance of household identity itself. In a city where many old houses have been replaced, many families have relocated, and many rituals have been commercialised, maintaining a family Puja over nearly two centuries is itself an act of cultural preservation.

Moreover, such traditions help bridge generations: the grandfather who recounts legends, the youths who participate in the rituals, and the children who light the earthen lamps all become participants in a shared heritage. The Ghosh family views this Puja as both an educational and a religious heritage.

Looking ahead

As evening falls this year, when the first lamp is lit and the bells ring, the house will be illuminated not only by that lamp but by the weight of 184 cycles of memory. The invitation to participate remains within the family circle, but the spirit is open: the family hopes younger generations will carry the torch further, and that the 200-year mark will one day be celebrated with the same serenity and commitment.

In a world rushing toward the new, sometimes the oldest rituals remain the most radical. The Ghosh’s Kali Puja, rooted in 184 years of devotion, stands as a testament to faith, heritage, and the quiet resilience of family.

Reference:

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