Durga takes the form of a migrant mother

 Durga takes the form of a migrant mother

Kolkata pandal portrays migrants' struggle amid a pandemic

The specialists behind Kolkata’s viral traveler laborer Durga symbol take us through the conceptualization of the thought and how the Covid lockdown assumed a significant job.

Inside no time, the Durga symbol in Behala’s Barisha Club was on every timeline. Netizens really wanted to see how a goddess exemplified the least difficult of people. The pictures of Goddess Durga with her kids took care of her lap appear to have pulled at the heartstrings.

Conceptualized by Rintu Das and etched by Pallab Bhowmick, the icon speaks to traveler laborers. The situation of traveler laborers was an argument during the Covid prompted the lockdown. A few of them set out on an arduous excursion of covering several kilometers by walking to arrive at their local spots, constrained by joblessness.

This year Kolkata’s Barisha Club needed to show the world how the goddess got one with all and shared the torment that a considerable lot of her kids needed to experience.

She wears no jewelry and gems. She doesn’t have weapons. Rather, she holds sacks of food grains with her ten hands. This year, she just conveys the weapon to battle hunger.



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