Socio- Economic dynamics of Kumbh Mela 2013: A Study
Project ReportSubmitted towards the partial fulfillment of requirements for the award
ofMaster in Business Administration, 2012-14
Submitted by
Ayush Vaish (2012MB73)
(Semester-II)
Under the Guidance Of
Prof Peeush RanjanAgrawal
Dr. G.P. Sahu
Dr. Shefali Nandan
Ms. Bhoomika
School of Management Studies
MNNIT, Allahabad
To
School of Management StudiesMotilal Nehru National Institute of Technology, Allahabad
April, 2013
1
DECLARATION
I, the undersigned solemnly declare that the report of the project work entitled “Socio- Economic
dynamics of Kumbh Mela 2013: A Study” is based on my own work carried out during the course
of my study under the supervision of Prof Peeush Ranjan Agrawal, Dr. G.P. Sahu, Dr. Shefali
Nandan and Ms. Bhoomika. I assert that the statements made and conclusions drawn are an
outcome of the project work. I further declare that to the best of my knowledge and belief that the
project report does not contain any part of any work which has been submitted for the award of any
other degree/diploma/certificate in this institution or any other University.
Date:
Prof Peeush Ranjan Agrawal(Professor)
Dr. G.P. Sahu(Associate Professor)
Dr. Shefali Nandan(Guest Faculty)
Ms. Bhoomika(Guest Faculty)
SMS, MNNIT
Ayush Vaish (2012MB73)
(MBA 2ndSemester, 2013)
2
Table of Contents
Serial No. Topic Page Number
1. Acknowledgement 1
2. Preface 2
3. Chapter -1
Introduction
1.1 Elemental Meaning of Kumbh
1.2[1.1] The Prayag Kumbh Mela
1.3[1.2] Importance and Significance of Kumbh
Mela
1.4[1.3] History of Kumbh Mela
1.5[1.4] Prayag Kumbh Mela 2013
4
4. Chapter- 2
Literature Review
2.1Introduction To Literature Review
2.2 Basic Introduction Of Kumbh Mela
2.3 Historical Aspect of Kumbh Mela
2.4 Significance of Kumbh Mela
2.5 Different Forms of Kumbh Mela
2.6 Significance of Tirthraj Prayag
2.7 Rituals of Kumbh
2.8 Kalpvas
2.9 Akhara
2.10 Organization and Plan of Maha Kumbh
Mela
2.11 Factors Considered Fro Estimation Of
Pilgrim Resource/Infrastructure
Planning
2.12Other Services Offered At Maha Kumbh
2.13 The World Of The Kumbh Mela : Inside
12
3
The Largest Single Gathering Of Humanity
2.14 Kumbh Mela Brings Economic Prosperity
2.15 Socio-Economic Impact Of Maha Kumbh
On Local Economy
2.16 Management, Maha Kumbh Style
2.17 Healthcare At The Kumbh Mela
2.18 Kumbh Mela, A Sacred Geography
2.19 The Construction Of The Kumbh Mela
2.20 Researches In Kumbh Mela
2.21 Researches At Kumbh Mela by the
Researcher Of Harvard University
2.22 Kumbh Mela: 80 Million Pilgrim March
2.23 Business Worth Of Kumbh Mela 2013
2.24 Opportunities For Corporate Market in
Kumbh Mela 2013
2.25 ASSOCHAM Analysis On Job Prospects in
Maha Kumbh Mela 2013
5. Chapter -3
Research Methodology
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Research Questions
3.3 Objective Of Research
3.4 Scope Of Research
3.5 Field Of Study
3.6 Research Process
47
6. Chapter -4
Analysis and Discussion
4.1 Factor Analysis
4.2 Reliability Analysis
52
7. Chapter -5
Conclusion and Suggestions
69
8. References 71
9 Annexure-Questionnaires 73
4
List of Tables
Serial No. Description Page No.
1 1.1 Important Past and Future date of Kumbh Mela at their respective
Venue
5
2 2.1 Estimated Pilgrims During Kumbh Meha 2013 22
3 2.2 Comparison of services provided during Kumbh Mela 23
4 2.3 Police services provided during Kumbh Mela 23
5 2.4 Services provided by PWD during Kumbh Mela 23
6 2.5 Services provided by Jal Nigam during Kumbh Mela 24
7 2.6 Services provided by Electricity Board during Kumbh Mela 24
8. 2.7 Health and Sanitation services provided during Kumbh Mela 25
9 2.8 Food and Civil services provided during Kumbh Mela 25
10 2.9 Roadways services provided during Kumbh Mela 26
11 2.10 Railways services provided during Kumbh Mela 26
12 2.11 Camp Charges during Kumbh Mela 27
13 2.12 Extra Bed during Kumbh Mela 27
14 2.13 Transport Charges during Kumbh Mela 28
5
15 2.14 Estimated Pilgrims during Kumbh Mela 2013 28
16 2.15 Job Opportunities in Kumbh Mela 2013 46
17 3.1 Likert Scale to check Satisfaction Level 50
18 4.1 Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin Measure 53
19 4.2 Total Variance Matrix 54
20 4.3 Rotated Component Matrix 57
21 4.4 Rotated Component Matrix After Adjustment 60
22 4.5 Administrative Services 63
23 4.6 Information Technology 64
24 4.7 Safety and Security 66
25 4.8 Basic Amenities 67
26 4.9 Product and Pricing 68
6
List of Abbreviations
PWD Public Works Departments
SPSS Statistical Package for Social Sciences
ASSOCHAM Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India
APA American Psychological Association
7
Acknowledgment
This is our great privilege to acknowledge our sincere honor and solicitous gratitude to our guide
Prof. Peeush Ranjan Agarwal, Head of School of Management Studies, Motilal Nehru National
Institute of Technology, Allahabad for his inspiring and excellent guidance, keen supervision and
help in successful completion of this Minor Project.
We also express our profound gratitude and thankfulness to Prof. Geetika, Dr. Tanuj Nandan,
Dr. G.P.Sahu, Dr. Vibhuti Tripathi, Dr. Tripti Singh, Dr. Piyali Ghosh and Dr. Shefali Nandan
for guiding and encouraging us during the completion of our Minor Project.
We would also like to express our deep gratitude towards Mr Ashish Gupta,
Mr. Shwetank Parihar, Ms. Swati Gupta, Ms. Bhoomika and Mr. Suman Gupta for their
valuable guidance in using SPSS software and in preparation of our report.
Ayush Vaish2012MB73
8
Preface
Kumbha Mela is "the world's most massive act of faith' – the largest congregation of devotees at one
place. It is believed that by bathing in the Ganges during Kumbh, one is freed from one's past sins
(karma), and thus becomes eligible for liberation from the cycle of birth and death. The literal
meaning of Kumbh is a pitcher, but its elemental meaning is something else. The Kumbh Mela takes
place in an approximately 4x8km area on the flood plain of the Yamuna and Ganga river and on
defense land behind the old Fort at Allahabad (popularly known as parade grounds).The estimated
worth of the Kumbh Mela 2013, was 15000 crore rupees, and expected number of visitors to be 10
crores (Source: The Economic Times).
The main objective of the research was to study the social and economic dynamics of the Kumbh
Mela 2013. The study was divided into two subgroups, i.e. demographics and institutions. The
demographic division covers the study and analysis of the pilgrims who are residing in the Kumbh
Mela premises as pilgrims for more than a week. The institution division covers all the economic and
social aspects of different organizations in the Kumbh Mela.
We developed a thorough and diverse questionnaire with contributions from every student of the
batch and help and guidance from the faculty. It included various questions regarding all the
aforementioned aspects, and some others. The first questionnaire on demographics consists of 26
questions. Similarly the questionnaire on institutions consists of 21 questions. They were either
multiple choice types or were based on Likert scale.
On 24th of February, 2013, whole batch was divided into 8 groups each comprising of 10 students
each and we set out to the Kumbh Mela on various vehicles, each vehicle supervised by a faculty
coordinator. Different sectors were pre-assigned to different groups, and we were dropped on
respective sectors to conduct the survey. The survey was carried out by directly interviewing the
pilgrim in different sectors of the Kumbh Mela. Questionnaires were filled up and the collected data
was analyzed using different statistical techniques such as Frequency, Cross Tabulation and Factor
Analysis with the aid of SPSS software, to find out various outcome of the study.
The portion of the analysis we dealt with was related to study satisfaction level of pilgrims with
facilities and arrangements. After the analysis we found that most of the pilgrims were satisfied with
the government’s arrangements for the Maha Kumbh such as basic facilities of lodging, bathing,
drinking water, information and technology, safety and security, the edible product availability and
the infrastructure.
9
We also observed that pilgrims were quite dissatisfied with the way Mela officials dealt with the
crowd management and bathing facilities but in spite of some of the odds, it was observed that the
overall satisfaction level of the pilgrims were very much satisfactory.
At last, several interpretations, conclusion and suggestions are being given after doing the complete
study on the Kumbh Mela.
10
Chapter -1
Introduction
Kumbh means a pitcher and Mela means fair in Hindi. The pilgrimage is held for about one and a
half months at each of these four places where it is believed in Hinduism that drops of nectar fell
from the Kumbh carried by gods after the sea was churned. The festival is billed as the "world’s
largest congregation of religious pilgrims”. There is no scientific method of ascertaining the number
of pilgrims, and the estimates of the number of pilgrims bathing on the most auspicious day may
vary; approximately 80 million people attended on 14 February 2013.
Mauni Amavasya traditionally attracted the largest crowds at the mela, held here every 12 years. The
current Kumbh Mela was held on 14 January 2013 at Allahabad. The day marked the second and the
biggest ShahiSnan (royal bath) of this event, with 13 akharas taking to the Sangam. 10 Feb 2013 was
the biggest bathing day at the ongoing Maha Kumbh Mela and probably the largest human gathering
on a single day. Over 30 million devotees and ascetics took holy dip on the occasion of
MauniAmavasya.
Through this survey we are going to study Socio-Economic Dynamics of Kumbh Mela 2013
with the objective:
1) To study social and economic aspects of pilgrims
2) To study satisfaction level of pilgrims with facilities
3) To study social and economic aspects of institutions
4) To study satisfaction level of institutions with facilities
Our main issue of interest is the emergence of social structure in complex groupings. The
Kumbh Mela authorities put down some bright lines on who gets to go where, when, and
how — for example, rules that govern people's movements during some religious days —
and some rules are determined by long-standing customs. Other, more informal norms
among disparate groups of people seem to emerge quickly and how cooperation among diverse
groups happens, this is a fortuitous setting.
This is also the first Big Data Kumbh, also with cell phone usage ubiquitous in India, the millions of
cell phones at the Kumbh Mela act as mobile sensors. To imagine the uses to which researchers
could put the data, consider these hypothetical ideas:
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1) The data could be used to understand how untoward incidents have been contained. After all,
the Maha KumbhMela has managed to prevent major disasters for a long time.
2) Why don't disasters spiral out of control when massive numbers of people, unfamiliar with
each other, are involved?
3) Can we spot the signatures of an incipient disaster in the data, and
4) The process by which those signals are attenuated rather than amplified?
There is much commerce, as well as charitable exchange, of goods and services at the Kumbh Mela:
1) How do vendors deal with the inevitable errors in forecasting demand?
2) Do inter-vendor communication patterns allow the collective containment of uncertainties?
3) Telecom data generated at the Kumbh Mela should provide grist to the intellectual mills of
statisticians, engineers, mathematicians, and social scientists for a long time?
Important past and future date of Kumbh Mela at their respective Venue.
Year Prayag Nashik Ujjain Haridwar
1983 Ardh Kumbh – – –
1989 Purna Kumbh – – –
1991 – Kumbh – –
1992 – – Kumbh Ardh Kumbh
1995 Ardh Kumbh – – –
1998 – – – Kumbh
2001 Purna[21] Kumbh – – –
12
Year Prayag Nashik Ujjain Haridwar
2003 – Kumbh – –
2004 – – Sihasth Ardh Kumbh
2007 Ardh Kumbh – – –
2010 – – – Kumbh
2013 Maha Kumbh – – -
2015 – Kumbh – –
2016 – – Sihasth Ardh Kumbh
2019 Ardh Kumbh – – –
2022 – – – Kumbh
Table 1.1 Important past and future date of Kumbh Mela at their respective Venue.
(Source: http://zeenews.india.com/news/uttar-pradesh/thousands-take-holy-dip-as-maha-kumbh-
begins_822770.html visited on April 25 2013)
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1.1 Elemental Meaning of Kumbh
Kumbh is the confluence of all our cultures. It is the symbol of spiritual awakening. It is the eternal
flow of humanity. It is the surge of rivers, forests and the ancient wisdom of the sages. It is the flow
of life itself. It is the symbol of the confluence of nature and humanity. Kumbh is the source of all
energy. Kumbh makes humankind realize this world and the other, sins and blessings, wisdom and
ignorance, darkness and light. Holy rivers are the symbols of the lyrical flow of humanity. Rivers are
indicators of the flow of water of life in the human body itself. In the human body that is an
embodiment of home, nothing is possible without the five elements. The elements – fire, wind,
water, earth and sky – symbolize the human body. The great sage-poet SantKabir has explained this
sublime thought in his typical manner.
The Himalaya is the abode of the soul of the gods. The Holy Ganga embarks upon its journey from
there, encompassing the forests, the mountain sages and the culture of the villages. The Yamuna is a
co-traveler as it puts an end to all sins, and it is known variously as Tripathga, Shivpuri and other
names. This is the Ganga that liberated the children of the Suryavanshi king Sagar. Its holy water is
considered nectar itself.
1.2 The Prayag Kumbh
This Kumbh is considered to be the most significant of all as it marks the direction of wisdom or
light. This is the place where the sun, symbolizing wisdom, rises.The Kumbh Mela takes place in an
approximately 4x8km area on the flood plain of the Yamuna and Ganga river and on defense land
behind the old kila at Allahabad (popularly known as parade grounds).
Creation of the universe is supposed to have originated here and it is supposed to be the center of the
earth. Prajapati Brahma, the God of Creation, is said to have created the Universe after conducting
the AshwamedhYagna at the Dashashwamedh Ghat here. The Dashashwamedh Ghat and the
Brahmeshwar Temple still exist here as if as symbols of that holy yagna, and that is another reason
for the special significance of the Prayag Kumbh. In fact Prayag and Kumbh are synonymous to each
other.
1.3 Importance and Significance of Kumbh Mela
Maha Kumbh has a mesmerizing influence over the minds of Indians as it is witness to the largest
human gathering in History for the same cause on a single day irrespective of any worldly barriers of
14
caste, creed, colour and religion. It is once in a lifetime experience seeing millions of pilgrims and
tourists from all over the world come together for a common goal-this spectacle of Faith is truly
unforgettable. This festival is held in highest regard as the ritual bath in the sacred water on this day
saturated with flower & incense fragrance amidst chanting of vedichyms and mantras liberates one
from all sufferings and miseries of Life. The Kumbh Mela considered the most sacred and greatest of
North Indian festivals where the ceremonial dip in the Holy River is an important ritual. It is
believed that bathing on this auspicious day cleanses one of all sins. The most auspicious day for the
ritual bath at Kumbh is on the day of the new moon when one gets rid of all sins and evils and is
granted salvation. One attains Moksha (meaning liberation from the cycle of Life, Death and
Rebirth).This festival will be incomplete without the presence of Sadhus and ascetics who represent
different orders (Akhadas). Sadhus like Vaishnav(Followers of Vishnu), Shaiva (flowers of Shiva).
The most interesting feature is the presence of Naga Sadhus-(known as preserver of faith). A
particular sect of sadhus initiates the ritual bath and leave after the dip in the holy water to make way
for another order. Many pilgrims gather to also take blessings from this sadhus.Significance of this
unique event is the blending of religious and cultural features. Rig Veda has a mention about the
significance of convergence of river Ganges, Yamuna and Saraswati at Prayag or Sangam.
References can be found about the significance of this ritual in VarahaPurana and MatsyaPurana as
well. There is a belief that the ashram of the leamedBharadvaja, where Lord Ram, Laxman and Sita
lived at the time of their exile, was situated at Sangam. It is said that a number of saints including the
great Shankaracharya and ChaitanyaMahaprabhu visited Sangam and observed the Kumbh Mela.
The great Indian epics such the Ramayana and Mahabharata have mentioned that a yagna was
conducted by Lord Brahma at Sangam.
1.4 History of Kumbh Mela
Kumbh derives its name from the immortal Pot of Nectar, which the Demigods (Devtas) and
Demons (Asuras) fought over, described in ancient Vedic scriptures known as the Puranas. It is these
Vedic literatures that have stood the test of time, out of which the tradition has evolved into the one
that the world now knows as The Kumbh Mela. Legend tells a tale from the bygone days of the
universe when the demigods and the demons conjointly produced the nectar of immortality. The
demigods, because cursed, were crippled of fear that eventually made them weak. The task being too
sturdy for them alone, the demigods made a mutual agreement with the demons to complete it in full
and share the nectar of immortality in half. It is said that the demigods and the demons assembled on
the shore of the milk ocean that lies in the celestial region of the cosmos. And it began!
15
For the task of churning the milk ocean, the Mandara Mountain was used as the churning rod, and
Vasuki, the king of serpents, became the rope for churning. With the demigods at Vasuki’s tail and
the demons at his head, the churning began. At first, the churning of the milk ocean produced a
deadly poison which Lord Shiva drank without being affected. As Lord Shiva drank the poison, a
few drops fell from his hands which were licked by scorpions, snakes, and similar other deadly
creatures. Also, during the churning, the Mandara Mountain began to sink deep into the ocean,
seeing which Lord Vishnu incarnated as a great tortoise and supported the mountain on His back.
Finally, many hurdles and 1000 years later, Dhanwantari appeared with the Kumbh of immortal
nectar in his hands. The demigods, being fearful of the demons' ill intent, forcibly seized the pot with
its safety entrusted onto the four Gods - Brahaspati,Surya, Shani, and Chandra. Demons, after
learning that their part of the agreement has not been kept, went after the demigods and for 12 days
and 12 nights, the chase continued. Wherever the demigods went with the pot of nectar, fierce
fighting ensued. It is believed that during this chase, a few drops fromthe Kumbh fell at four places -
Allahabad, Haridwar, Ujjain, and Nasik. There is also a prevalent legend that it was actually the
demons that were being chased by the demigods for 12 days and 12 nights, during which the drops of
elixir of immortality fell at these four places. These four places are since believed to have acquired
mystical powers. Because 12 days of Gods are equivalent to 12 years for humans; the Kumbh Mela
is celebrated once every 12 years in each of the four places - banks of river Godavari in Nasik, river
Kshipra in Ujjain, river Ganges in Haridwar, and at the Sangam of Ganges, Yamuna, and Saraswati
in Allahabad, where the drops are believed to have fallen. Millions of devout, come together to
partake in ritualistic bathing and ceremonies to cleanse themselves of all sins.
1.5 Prayag Kumbh Mela 2013
The Mela was divided into 14 sectors. Most of the year, “Kumbh City” is not an inhabited part of
Allahabad. There is no pre-existing water or electricity supply there, or any system to get rid of
human waste. But by the time the festival started this year in January, Kumbh City was a functioning
metropolis with a population larger than most permanent cities in the world and many small
countries too. The government erects vast tent encampments, some 40,000 toilets, hospitals, markets,
emergency services, food stands, supply shops, offices and hundreds of temples. The following are
some of the facts related to Kumbh Mela 2013.
Kumbh 2001 was for 44 days while Kumbh 2013 will be for 55 days (+25%).*
Country’s population was 102.87 Crore in 2001, it is estimated to be 121.02 Crore in 2011
(+17.6%)*.
16
The State population was 16.61 Crore in 2001 which has risen to 19.96 Crore in 2011
(+20%).*
Allahabad Nagar Nigam had 9.75 lakh population in 2001 which was 12.47 lakh in 2011
(+28%)*
(Source: “http://kumbhmelaallahabad.gov.in/english/kumbh_at_glance.html”, visited on 25 April 2013)
The other salient features of Kumbh Mela 2013 are as follows:
Around 10 crore people are expected to visit the Kumbh Mela in Allahabad in 2013. The
Makar Sankranti day alone will witness around 1 crore pilgrims and more than 3 crore pilgrims are
expected to take the holy dip on Mauni Amawasya on February 10.
Amongst the visitors, around 10 lakhs are expected to be foreign tourists.
The total budget for Maha Kumbh 2013 is Rs 1,200 crore, which is 200 crore more than that
of the 2001 Maha Kumbh.
The Mela would generate employment for over 6 lakh people. Rs 12,000 crore is expected to
flow into the coffers of the UP government as revenue and taxes.
18 pontoon bridges and 35,000 public toilets have been built for pilgrims.
156 km of new roads, made of chequered steel plates have been laid on the river bank.
571 km of water pipelines have been laid, 800 km of electric wires and 48 power sub-
stations been set up in the Mela area.
125 ration shops, 4 godowns opened in Mela area for pilgrims to buy grains, groceries and
vegetables.
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2,500 religious and social organisations from across the world will participate.
30,000 policemen, 30 new police stations, and 72 companies of paramilitary forces have
been deployed to provide security during the Mela.
120 CCTV cameras have been installed in Mela area and Allahabad city.
22 doctors and 120 ambulances on round-the-clock duty at the new 100- bed central hospital
in Kumbh Mela area with other facilities of doctors and medical to be provided by various institutions
setting up camp in Kumbh Mela.
50.83 sq km the total area where the Kumbh is held, almost double the size of the last mela
in 2001.
Rs 6,000 crore is the daily rent for the plush Swiss cottages set up by UP Tourism.
Hollywood celebrities Richard Gere, Michael Douglas and wife Catherine Zeta
Jones expected to visit apart from spiritual guru Dalai Lama, former US presidential candidate John
Hagelin.
Digitised Maps of the entire Mela area have been uploaded on the internet for people to
select which place they want to visit and have a dip in the holy waters.
GPS-Enabled Systems to locate their spiritual and religious heads and the camps/ashrams
that they have set up in the Mela area. To estimate exact number of crowds the government has sought
cooperation from ISRO and Remote Sensing Application Centre. They will capture photographs of the
entire Mela area every 24 hours.
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Chapter 2
Literature Review
2.1 Introduction to Literature Review
A literature review is a body of text that aims to review the critical points of current knowledge
including substantive findings as well as theoretical and methodological contributions to a particular
topic. Literature reviews are secondary sources, and do not report any new or original experimental
work. Literature review should be referred to as reviewing and analyzing the work of literature in
relation to the specified topic in research.
Most often associated with academic-oriented literature, such as a thesis, a literature review usually
precedes a research proposal and results section. Its ultimate goal is to bring the reader up to date
with current literature on a topic and forms the basis for another goal, such as future research that
may be needed in the area.
A well-structured literature review is characterized by a logical flow of ideas; current and relevant
references with consistent, appropriate referencing style; proper use of terminology; and an unbiased
and comprehensive view of the previous research on the topic.
2.2 Basic Introduction of Kumbh Mela
India is a land of spectacles, it is a land of teeming millions and a land of an ancient culture and
civilization and Kumbh Mela is the biggest religious gathering of humanity in the world. It has vast
crowds assemble as big as the millions who flocked to the north Indian city of Allahabad to bath at
the confluence where the cloudy waters of the river Ganges meet the blue waters of the river
Yamuna on the most auspicious day of those Melas. Anyone who wants to enjoy the Kumbh Mela to
the full must appreciate its many different aspects.
Faith is the key to the Kumbh Mela. It is a wonderful spectacle, a great demonstration of the variety
and vigour of Hinduism, an occasion to preach politics and conduct business, but there would be no
Kumbh Mela were it not for the faith that draws millions of pilgrims to the Sangam in Allahabad.
It is of course a great religious festival, the world's largest, but there is much more to it than just the
great bathing day, spectacular though that is. Most spectacular of all are the naked sadhus or holy
men, who career through the crowds dancing to the frenzied beat of drums and leaping in the air as
19
they charge in to the river to bathe. Then there are the sadhus to be seen on any day performing
amazing acts of asceticism. Some held his arm up so long that it was withered and his nails curved
round like talons, another one standing on one leg, and one lying on a bed of thorns.
At Kumbh Melas there is much religious teaching also, and a multitude of discourses. There are the
sadhus to be seen on any day performing amazing acts of asceticism'. They demonstrate the wide
variety of Hindu traditions, and Hinduism's tolerance too. Some of the discourses seemed to me
obscurantist, some profound, and some surprising. The devotees of the 15th Century saint Kabir told
they condemned images of the deities and maintained that washing under a tap was just as good as
bathing in the Ganges. No-one seemed to object to their unorthodox views. Perhaps that's because
Hinduism is so varied that for most Hindus there is no concept of heresy. Hindu pluralism is also
shown by the different creation myths the Mela commemorates.
The word Kumbh means an urn, and one of the several myths is the story of an urn filled with the
nectar of immortality which emerged from the primeval waters when they were being churned by
gods and demons. The urn was snatched by demons but the son of the ruler of heaven, the god
Indira, recovered it. Drops from the urn fell at the Sangam and other places in India where Kumbh
Melas are held.In India.
Politics enter into all walks of life and the Kumbh Mela is no exception. In 1989, the campaign the
Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) hoped would bring it to power on a wave of Hindu
nationalism was in full swing. The festival is a feat of organisation by the authorities and pilgrims
and in one of the tented pavilions fanatic speakers fulminating against the mosque in Ayodhya they
claimed stood on the birth place of the god Rama, and demanding that it be pulled down to be
replaced with a temple.
Mela means a fair, and as with all fairs plenty of business is done at Kumbh Melas. There are stalls
selling everything a pilgrim might need including of course the accoutrements required for pujas, or
worship. Barbers shaving heads do a roaring trade. The traditional priests who keep family records
set up their stalls and do good business updating genealogies and performing ceremonies for the
souls of the dead.
Government constructed a vast tented city, laying down miles of steel plates for roads and
constructing pontoon bridges. The administration also insured there was food for the pilgrims, and
water too - sanitation, as well as electricity. The police, not usually renowned for their gentleness,
20
were politeness personified as they shepherded millions of pilgrims down to the river banks, keeping
them in orderly queues, and insured their safety while bathing. But in this they were helped by
Indians remarkable ability to organise themselves in situations which in most other countries would
degenerate into chaos.
2.3 Historical Aspect of Kumbh Mela
Kumbh derives its name from the immortal Pot of Nectar, which the gods (Devtas) and Demons
(Asuras) fought over, described in ancient Vedic scriptures known as the Puranas. It is these Vedic
literatures that have stood the test of time, out of which the tradition has evolved into the one that the
world now knows as The Kumbh Mela. Legend tells a tale from the bygone days of the universe
when the gods and the demons conjointly produced the nectar of immortality. The gods, because
cursed, were crippled of fear that eventually made them weak. The task being too sturdy for them
alone, the gods made a mutual agreement with the demons to complete it in full and share the nectar
of immortality in half. It is said that the gods and the demons assembled on the shore of the milk
ocean that lies in the celestial region of the cosmos.
For the task of churning the milk ocean, the Mandara Mountain was used as the churning rod, and
Vasuki, the king of serpents, became the rope for churning. With the gods at Vasuki’s tail and the
demons at his head, the churning began. At first, the churning of the milk ocean produced a deadly
poison which Lord Shiva drank without being affected. As Lord Shiva drank the poison, a few drops
fell from his hands which were licked by scorpions, snakes, and similar other deadly creatures. Also,
during the churning, the Mandara Mountain began to sink deep into the ocean, seeing which Lord
Vishnu incarnated as a great tortoise and supported the mountain on His back. Finally after many
hurdles and 1000 years later, Dhanwantari appeared with the Kumbh of immortal nectar in his hands.
The gods, being fearful of the demons' ill intent, forcibly seized the pot with its safety entrusted onto
the four Gods - Brahaspati, Surya, Shani, and Chandra.
Demons, after learning that their part of the agreement has not been kept, went after the gods and for
12 days and 12 nights, the chase continued. Wherever the gods went with the pot of nectar, fierce
fighting ensued. It is believed that during this chase, a few drops from the Kumbh fell at four places -
Allahabad, Haridwar, Ujjain, and Nasik. There is also a prevalent legend that it was actually the
demons that were being chased by the gods for 12 days and 12 nights, during which the drops of
elixir of immortality fell at these four places. These four places are since believed to have acquired
mystical powers. Because 12 days of Gods are equivalent to 12 years for humans; the Kumbh Mela
21
is celebrated once every 12 years in each of the four places - banks of river Godavari in Nasik, river
Kshipra in Ujjain, river Ganges in Haridwar, and at the Sangam of Ganges, Yamuna, and Saraswati
in Allahabad, where the drops are believed to have fallen. Millions of devout, come together to
partake in ritualistic bathing and ceremonies to cleanse themselves of all sins.
2.4 Significance of Kumbh Mela
Kumbh Mela is not just a mere festivity like Diwali and Holi, but holds lot of importance for people
in India. People look up to Kumbh Mela with highest regard, as this event gives them a golden
opportunity to liberate themselves from the miseries and sufferings of life. It enables them to take a
holy dip in the sacred water and wash away all the sins they have committed in the past. People
come from different parts of the country to be a part of this sacred ceremony.
It is believed that taking a holy dip in water paves way for attainment of Moksha. However, it is of
paramount importance that the person who is performing the rituals has complete faith and trust in
the power of divinity. Mentions have been made about the Kumbha Mela in the Brahma Purana and
Vishnu Purana, which clearly state that a person who performs the bathing ceremony during the
month of Magh at Prayag (Allahabad) derives manifold benefits, which surpasses the reward
obtained by performing numerous Ashvamedha rituals.
Rig Veda has a mention about the significance of convergence of river Ganges, Yamuna and
Saraswati at Prayag or Sangam. References can be found about the significance of this ritual in
VarahaPurana and MatsyaPurana as well. There is a belief that the ashram of the learned Bharadvaja,
where Lord Ram, Laxman and Sita lived at the time of their exile, was situated at Sangam. It is said
that a number of saints including the great Shankaracharya and ChaitanyaMahaprabhu visited
Sangam and observed the Kumbh Mela. The great Indian epics such the Ramayana and Mahabharata
have mentioned that a yagna was conducted by Lord Brahma at Sangam.
2.5 Different Forms of Kumbh
We shall not dwell upon the literary meaning of the word Kumbh, but we would like to mention the
synonyms and origins. The Kumbh is a pitcher. Kumbh is the human body, it is the abdomen, and
the sea, earth, sun and Vishnu are synonyms of Kumbh. The pitcher, sea, river, ponds and the well
are symbols of Kumbh as the water from these places is covered from all sides. The sky has the
cover of the wind, the sun covers the entire universe with its light, and the human body is covered
22
with cells and tissues. That is why it is Kumbh. Desire, that is longing, is also Kumbh. God Vishnu is
also Kumbh as He pervades the entire creation, and the creation pervades in Him.
2.6 Significance of Tirthraj Prayag
The significance of Prayag is widely known in the terrestrial and celestial universe. By bathing in the
holy waters of the Sangam one is ridden of all sins. The devout is granted all his desires. This is the
significance of an ordinary bath, and hence the importance of a bath during the Kumbh is manifold.
It cannot be described and has to be experienced to be known.
2.7 Rituals of Kumbh
Kumbh Mela, is the largest human gathering which is attended by millions of people on a earth
irrespective of all worldly barriers of caste, creed, region. The Kumbh Mela has wielded a mesmeric
influence over the minds and the imagination of the ordinary Indian.
Devotees believe simply by bathing in the Ganga zone is freed from their past sins (karma), and thus
one becomes eligible for liberation from the cycle of birth and death. Other activities include
religious discussions, devotional singing, mass feeding of holy men and women and the poor, and
religious assemblies where doctrines are debated and standardized.
Kumbh Mela (especially the Prayag Kumbh Mela) is the most sacred of all the Hindu pilgrimages.
Millions of holy men and women (saints, monks, and sadhus) attend this spectacle of faith.
This holy event with such tremendous faith has gained international fame. Famous ancient traveler.
Huen Tsang of China was the first to mention Kumbha Mela in his diary. His diary mentions the
celebration of 75 days of Hindu month of Magha (January-February), which witnessed half a million
devotee including sadhus, common man, rich & famous & kings.
2.8 Kalpvaas
Kalpvaas has a special significance in Prayag. It holds special significance in the month of Magh,
and it lasts from the 11th day of the month of Paush till the 12th day of the month of Magh. Kalpavas
is marked by patience, non-violence and devotion, and meals are to be partaken only once a day. It is
believed that kalpvaasis who fulfill all the vows get reborn as a king.
2.9 Akhara
In Hinduism, Akhara (also akhada) is an association of different sects of Sadhus Vairaghis yogis or
Hindu Renunciates. Its history dates back to the eighth century when AdiShankaracharya established
23
seven Akharas, Mahanirvani, Niranjani, Atal, Avahan, Agni and AnandAkhara. Some yogis link
these akharas to Gorakhnath rather than to Shankaracharya. Today there are 3 major Akharas (Juna,
Mahanirvani and Niranjani) and 3 minor Akharas (Atal affiliated with Mahanirvani, Anand affiliated
with Niranjan). Furthermore there is one small BrahmachariAkhara named Agni. There also
numerous minor Akhara's usually set up by disciples as an affiliate to the major group or sometimes
due to disagreements on succession or Gurudev of an Akhara. The biggest Akhara - based on the
number of Sadhus is Juna, followed by Niranjani and Mahanirvani. Akharas are classified into
different Sampradayas based on their traditional systems. An Akhara is divided in 8 davas
(divisions) and 52 marhis (centres). Each Marhi is governed by a Mahant. The top administrative
body of the Akhara is Shree Panch (the body of five),
representing Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, Shakti and Ganesha. It is elected on every Kumbh Mela and the
body holds its post for 4 years. The head of the Akhara is the Acharya Mahamandaleshwar, followed
by other Mahamandaleshwaras, Mandaleshwaras and Shree Mahants.
2.10 Organization and Plan of Maha Kumbh mela
The Kumbh Mela takes place in an approximately 4x8km area on the flood plain of the Yamuna and
Ganga river and on defense land behind the old kila at Allahabad (popularly known as parade
grounds). Mapped into 4 zones, Arail (N Bank), Jhusi (W bank), Parade grounds, Upper Bandh and
lower Bandh. With the parade ground being government and institutional area and Upper Bandh and
Lower Bndh the sites of maximum activity (also closest to holiest spot: sangam). Parade grounds are
the current defense lands behind the sangam and will hold all the government offices. Kumbh Nagri
is notified by the UP government as an official 76th district of Uttar Pradesh, all the laws and
regulations that pertain to the rest of UP’s 75 districts are applicable in the Kumbh.This year Ganges
has settled in such a way that greater land area is on the Western side (Jhusi) than the Eastern side
(Kila/ upper/lower Bandh side_ as is usually the case. Planning is done with an assumed 20%
increase in population from the Ardha Kumbh numbers (they did not remember the number). Amin
or tehsildars are the chief layout makers of the Kumbh. They head to the field everyday and mark out
the entire city. Most often they do this before the town planners draw up the map. Town planners say
they often navigate around the work already done on site in their plans. This year the area of the
mela extends almost 2 km up river on the Ganges to reduce the density of the Kumbh Nagri.
Government area is situated on the parade ground. It houses:
Offices of a majority of government departments: jal, health, electricity PWD, Police.
24
ATM, internet access kiosks, ONGC offices, cell phone towers, and also bank branches.
Expected number of visitors: 14th Jan: 1crore 13 lakh, 27th Jan 55 lakhs 10th Feb. 3.25
crores.
Approximately 1 crore population (check) rumoured to be staying as residents. However,
people tell me that Mela authorities exaggerate numbers. Estimated population counts still
underway by Tourism Department.
On 20th Oct, the Ganges fully receded and final flood plain mapped. Layout work
commenced.
2.10.1 Sectors Planning
A total of 14 administrative sectors are planned this year. Each sector represents an administrative
district. Police, health and other departments have a different number of sectors. Sectors are mapped
according to population density. It is calculated at 20% more than the ardhakumbh. Each sector has
roughly the same amount of residents. The large sectors on the periphery of the nagri are large as
they have a lower density of occupancy. They are waiting to adjust size of sectors based on
population predictions by Tourism department. Sector 8,9,7 are largely residential, Sector 12 is
largely open ground. The sectors closer to sangam are smaller as these are high density areas.
Boundaries of the sectors are defined by 1) the river bank edge (i.e. where the sandy bank ends and
the mainland starts—usually characterized by an elevation difference) 2) the water edge 3) existing
roads (Ref: Chief Townplanner) Each sector has its small zone of shops. Rules, building bye laws etc
apply to the Kumbh Nagri but it has a lot of special provisions that are passed by the committee
created for it. Masterplan of Allahabad has special provisions for Kumbh accounted in it. Kumbh
mela is one of twenty land uses on the master plan.
2.10.2 Pontoons Bridge
17 Pontoon bridges are proposed across the Ganges and two across the Yamuna. 2692 new pontoons
being built. There are 1510 old ones.Bridges are made of “Pontoon (“Pipa” is the Hindi name for the
floating iron cylinders). They are 8’ wide and 32’ long. These pieces are reused in different festivals,
the last time they used them for the Kumbh Mela at Haridwar four years ago. The pipas are made of
a thin layer of iron that keeps a large volume of air inside. All governmental / public funding, 30%
funding of roads borne by Central Govt and 70% state. Each pontoon (pippa) it cost is 3.5 lakhs
rupees. The daily payment for each worker is 250 rupees per day.
25
2.10.3 Architecture Of The Nagri
Entire Nagri is constructed largely out of bamboo, cloth and tin. More permanent VVIP areas and
hospitals are in plywood. The sandy banks of the Ganges are leveled by tractors at the cost of the
government. There are a total of 13 contractors who build the makeshift architecture on the
government side. Akharas often get a discount. But individual groups can choose to bring in their
own contractors – a lot of the tourist operators have their own teams. Lalooji and Sons (LJS) is a
historic company who supplies everything from the tin to the beds and blankets. They set up melas in
Haridvar, Nasik, etc and have stores and offices all over. Akharas are given a significant discount
based on their relationship with the contractors. The rent of each plot is 1000 rupees per tent.
The supply of material for government areas is also from registered contractors. E.g. forest
department will provide all the bamboo poles.
2.10.4 Public Health Program
22 administrative sectors for health.This is not a medical facility but a health program. Here again
facilities are divided between 1) Permanent: with existing hospitals such as GT hospital being
improved 2) Temporary: hospitals and related facilities created at Kumbh. No serious illnesses are
treated at Kumbh they are ambulanced to the town hospital. There are three wings that fall under this
department 1) Public Health: which does sanitation work and has check posts for infectious diseases.
They also check food and water samples on a regular basis. 2) Clinic: dealing with medical treatment
3) Vector Borne Disease Control Unit: which is largely the anti fly unit. Staff for the Health
Department is drawn from hospitals all across UP. Lower level and first aid staff are drawn from
government schemes like Aganwadis (child care centers). They also hire the lower ranks of staff like
sweepers and laborers. Medical supplies and equipment procurement is handled by the Purchase
department. Infectious disease control and health checks.
One, 100 bed hospital at parade ground: this will be made of plywood. Ten hospitals of 20 bed each
across sectors these will be made with tin, tents. The entire hospital is made by Lalooji and Sons who
hold a monopoly over the construction of the Nagri.
12 sectors will be serviced by sweeper gangs who will sweep the areas free of night soil and waste
(image of carts the garbage is carted in). Laborers dig large pits in available open areas and on the
outskirts (wherever they can find space I am told). They also liberally spray these pits with DDT and
26
other chemicals to prevent spread of bacteria etc. Each gang consists of 11 sweepers, one of whom is
in charge of them. There will be 9000 sweepers at Kumbh this year.
There are expected to be 35,000-45,000 toilets created at Kumbh. Toilets are constructed in tin shed
and a cement platform with the Indian style toilet is made within it. Plastic pipes lead into a pit dug
behind the toilet rows. The pit is lined with bricks but I am to understand that a lot of them end up
being just pits. Pits are covered with a lattice of bamboo and covered with dry grass to allow gasses
to escape. Mud is placed on them. Extra pits are made for overflows. In sandy areas – tin barrels are
placed upside down to act as septic tanks as otherwise the sewage rises up through the sandy soil. A
large number of the visitors are villagers who refuse to use toilets as they are unaccustomed to them.
They squat in any available open land. Their night soil is swept up every day and taken to pits and
buried. I can see this as a huge problem: already areas in between two tin compounds or near existing
drainage canals are lined with human feces. 2000-2500 pits are dug for garbage and night soil
(environmental nightmare!), I am told the sweepers also act as scavengers and remove plastic and
other recyclable refuse as they dig the pits. Here again expected funding is 30% from Central
Government and 70% from state.
2.10.5 Flow Of Capital And Goods
There are a number of shops that are present in the Kumbh Nagri. There is a planned shopping zone
called Meena Bazzar which is in the central government area / parade area. Other than that there are
several shops in each sector. The shops are auctioned off by the Mela Adhikari office.There are an
estimated 1000-1200 shops on auction. Memorable stalls are the Prayag Dairy and Loknath Misthan
Bhavan who run multiple stalls. There are various kinds of shops that have different rental or
licensing prices: 1) shops in Meena Bazzar 2) Exhibition cum Sales areas 3) shops in sectors 4)
shops along main arteries 5) peddlar shops. A large amount of informal selling takes place as well.
2.10.6 Kinds Of Goods Sold At Kumbh
Dry goods stores
Milk, milk products and bread (Parag Dairy is the chief supplier and there is a separate
administrative department for milk and food products).
Mithai and kachori stalls: Popular stalls-Loknath Mishthan Bhandar. Sulakilal Shrinath and
Sons
Clothes (woolens, bedding etc)
27
Stoves and dung cakes to burn on stoves are under production on the Kumbh site
Brand items such as coke, Nescafe etc are all present but are through local store owners who get
the respective agents to supply for the Kumbh
Companies such as hero honda etc have stalls that advertise, but not sell products.
Meena Bazzar: this is the specified area allocated for small shops at Sangam and generally has a
clothes market where a large number of Tibetans and Kashmiris sell goods.
Religious goods: texts, prayer beads, other things required for rituals, music cds and cassettes,
religious idols and posters. These include Buddhists as well.
2.10.7 Police Arrangements
30 police outposts planned
Police forces are arriving in three batches15th oct, 15th nov, 15th dec
Reserve police force drawn from stations and lines all across UP
Training session being conducted in batches. Currently the trainers are being trained who
will then train the remaining regiments.
3 types of police forces – central reserve police force, Uttar Pradesh police and paramilitary
will be present at the Kumbh
On main bathing days police stand and pull people out of the water as soon as they take a dip
Crowd control through a system of mazes—making people walk as much as possible. These
are adjusted according to the main bathing dates and expected audiences
Police are in charge of parking and vehicular movement.
Traffic will be stopped 7km before the Kumbh Nagri and people will have to walk.
2.10.8 Safety Strategies during Kumbh
Water of the river is controlled from upriver (possibly haridwar) to keep it calf deep and
thus minimize chances of drowning.
Elaborate systems of mazes ensure that crowds do not stampede towards the river on main
bathing dates. There is a calculation of expected numbers for each day and the pattern of
cutoffs and points of cutoffs will be changed to match estimated numbers.
Vehicular traffic is cut off 7 km ahead and you have to walk into the site.
Special permits are required to be in main sangam area on key bathing dates.
Electricity is cut off during the day so as to prevent accidents.
28
2.11 Factors Considered For Estimation Of Pilgrim And Resource/Infrastructure
Planning:
Kumbh 2001 was for 44 days while Kumbh 2013 will be for 55 days (+25%).
Country’s population was 102.87 Crore in 2001, it is estimated to be 121.02 Crore in 2011
(+17.6%).
The State population was 16.61 Crore in 2001 which has risen to 19.96 Crore in 2011
(+20%).
Allahabad Nagar Nigam had 9.75 lakh population in 2001 which was 12.47 lakh in 2011
(+28%).
Estimated Pilgrims During Kumbh 2013
S.
NO.Bathing Days
Kumbh 2001 Kumbh 2013
Dates Estimated Visitors Dates Projected Visitors
1 MakarSankranti 14.1.200
1
100 Lac 14.1.2013 110 Lac
2 PaushPurnima 09.1.200
1
50 Lac 27.1.2013 55 Lac
3 MauniAmawasya 24.1.200
1
276 Lac 10.2.2013 305 Lac
4 VasantPanchami 29.1.200
1
175 Lac 15.2.2013 193 Lac
5 MaghiPurnima 08.2.200
1
150 Lac 25.2.2013 165 Lac
6 MahaShivratri 21.2.200
1
50 Lac 10.3.2013 55 Lac
Table 2.1 Estimated Pilgrims During Kumbh Mela 2013
29
Infrastructure & Services Being Provided During Kumbh-2013 Mela
Sl.
No.
Service/
Infrastructure
Unit Kumbh-
2001
Ardh Kumbh -
2007
Kumbh-
2013
1 Area Hectar
e
1495.31 1613.80 1936.56
2 sectors No. 11 11 14
3 Parking Lots No. 35 44 99
Fig 2.2 Comparison of Services Provided During Kumbh Mela
POLICE
Sl.
No.
Service/ Infrastructure Unit Kumbh-
2001
Ardh Kumbh -
2007
Kumbh-
2013
1 Police Stations No. 28 28 30
2 State Police Personnel No. 9965 10913 12461
3 PAC No. 35 45 46
4 Central Para Military
Personnel
No. 7 40 40
5 CCTV Camera No. 0 19 85
6 Variable Signage Board No. 0 0 30
7 Fire Station No. 28 28 30
Fig 2.3 Police Services Provided During Kumbh Mela
30
PWD
Sl.
No.
Service/
Infrastructure
Unit Kumbh-
2001
Ardh Kumbh -
2007
Kumbh-
2013
1 Length of roads laid Km 96.40 116.50 156.20
2 No of Pontoon bridges No. 13 14 18
Fig 2.4 Services Provided By PWD during Kumbh Mela
JAL NIGAM
Sl.
No.
Service/ Infrastructure Unit Kumbh-
2001
Ardh Kumbh -
2007
Kumbh-
2013
1 KLs of drinking water
supply
KLs 56000 76000 80000*
2 length of Pipelines Km 340 458 550
3 No of connections No. 15430 18523 20000
4 No of active tube wells No. 28 38 40
5 No of OHT in operations No. 2 2 5
Fig 2.5 Services Provided By Jal Nigam During Kumbh Mela
POWER
Sl.
No.
Service/ Infrastructure Unit Kumbh-
2001
Ardh Kumbh
-2007
Kumbh-
2013
1 KWh of power consumed(Load) KWH 18 Mva 23 Mva 30Mva*
2 Length of electricity lines Km 565 665 770
3 No of Street light Points No. 16865 18000 22000
4 No of private connections No. 69489 94000 130,000*
31
5 No of Substations in
operation(various categories)
No. 49 62 73
Fig 2.6 Services Provided By Electricity Board During Kumbh Mela
HEALTH AND SANITATION
Sl.
No.
Service/ Infrastructure Unit Kumbh-
2001
Ardh Kumbh
-2007
Kumbh-
2013
1 No of Allopathic hospitals No. 14 14 14
2 No of Homeopathy hospitals No. 07 07 12
3 No of Ayurvedic hospitals No. 10 10 12
4 No of beds in mela areas No. 360 360 370
5 No of Toilets No.
Individual 20481 17000 35000*
public toilets
Sulabh Complex (10
Seaters)
20 105 340
Trench Pattern 17100 12875 7500 (PRAI
TYPE)
Non-conventional
Toilets
0 0 1000*
Fig 2.7 Health and Sanitation Services Provided During Kumbh Mela
FOOD AND CIVIL SUPPLIES
Sl.
No.
Service/ Infrastructure Unit Kumbh-
2001
Ardh Kumbh -
2007
Kumbh-
2013
1 No of ration cards issued No. 127000 117481 200000*
32
2 Allotment of Wheat MT 13500 10000 16200
3 Allotment of Rice MT 7800 5000 9600
4 Allotment of Sugar MT 5000 - 6000
5 Allotment of K Oil KL 11000 6600 13200
6 PDS shops in the mela area No. 107 107 125
7 Allotment of milk KL 118 84.2 400
8 Milk Distribution shops in
mela area
No. 106 98 150
Fig 2.8 Food and Civil Services Provided During Kumbh Mela
ROADWAYS
Sl.
No.
Service/ Infrastructure Unit Kumbh-
2001
Ardh Kumbh -
2007
Kumbh-
2013
1 No of Temporary bus
stations
No. 4 4 5
2 No of buses in
operation(Reg.)
No. 776 798 892
3 No of buses in
operation(Spl)
No. 2824 2202 3608
4 No of Pilgrims Lac 36.64 46.78 90.00*
Fig 2.9 Roadways Services Provided During Kumbh Mela
RAILWAYS
Sl.
No.
Service/ Infrastructure Unit Kumbh-
2001
Ardh Kumbh -
2007
Kumbh-
2013
33
1 No of stations in
operation
No. 7 N/A 7
2 No of trains No. 600 N/A 750
Fig 2.10 Railways Services Provided During Kumbh Mela
2.12 Others Services Offered At Maha Kumbh
* Accommodation during the Kumbh Mela
* Allahabad Sightseeing
* Transportation Facility by Bus / Qualis or Innova on exclusive or sharing basis (As per
Guest's Requirement)
* Paramedic Staff trained for Camp Deal.
* English Speaking Guide
* Meals on Full board
* Camp OM at Kumbh will offer daily Yoga Classes by our Yoga instructor KARAN
GURJI and we will be offering AyurvedicPanchakarma Treatments.
CAMP CHARGES
PARTICULARSSINGLE
INRDOUBLE INR SINGLE USD
DOUBLE USD
Deluxe Tent Attached Toilet
Rs. 6,600/- Rs. 8,800/- $ 120 $ 160
Semi Deluxe Tent Common Toilet
Rs. 4,400/- Rs. 5,550/- $ 80 $ 100
Standard Tent Common Toilet
Rs. 3,300/- Rs. 3,800/- $ 60 $ 70
Fig 2.11 Camp Charges During Kumbh Mela
FOR EXTRA BED:
PARTICULARS INR USDDeluxe Tent attached Toilet Rs. 2,200/- $ 40
34
Semi Deluxe Tent Common Toilet Rs. 1,350/- $ 25Standard Tent Common Toilet Rs. 1,100/- $ 20
Fig 2.12 Extra Bed During Kumbh Mela
Cost Include:
There will be basic facilities provided such as mattress, quilts, sleeping bags, etc.
Sufficient lights will be provided for all the tents outside and inside.
Semi Deluxe and Standard Tent Toilets will be common for every twenty five set of tents.
There will be separate dining facility to be provided for all the two hundred tents, where we are
serving all three meals pure vegetarian without onion and garlic.
We will have water filtration plant such as commercial Aqua Guard or R-O system installed at
dining hall.
TRANSPORT CHARGES
PARTICULARS Vehicle INR USDAllahabad Railway Station to Camp Om Tata Indigo (3 Seater) Rs. 1,650/- $ 30Allahabad Railway Station to Camp Om Toyota Innova (5 Seater) Rs. 2,200/- $ 40Allahabad Airport to Camp Om Tata Indigo (3 Seater) Rs. 2,200/- $ 40Allahabad Airport to Camp Om Toyota Innova (5 Seater) Rs. 3,300/- $ 60Allahabad to Varanasi Tata Indigo (3 Seater) Rs. 3,800/- $ 70Allahabad to Varanasi Toyota Innova (5 Seater) Rs. 6,100/- $ 110
Fig 2.13 Transport Charges During Kumbh Mela
Estimated Pilgrims during Kumbh 2013
S.
NO.Bathing Days
Kumbh 2001 Kumbh 2013
Dates Estimated Visitors Dates Projected Visitors
35
1 MakarSankranti 14.1.200
1
100 Lac 14.1.2013 110 Lac
2 PaushPurnima 09.1.200
1
50 Lac 27.1.2013 55 Lac
3 MauniAmawasya 24.1.200
1
276 Lac 10.2.2013 305 Lac
4 VasantPanchami 29.1.200
1
175 Lac 15.2.2013 193 Lac
5 MaghiPurnima 08.2.200
1
150 Lac 25.2.2013 165 Lac
6 MahaShivratri 21.2.200
1
50 Lac 10.3.2013 55 Lac
Table 2.14 Estimated Pilgrims during Kumbh Mela 2013
(Source: “http://kumbhmelaallahabad.gov.in/english/kumbh_at_glance.html”, as assessed on April
25 2013)
2.13 The World of the Kumbh Mela: Inside the Largest Single Gathering of Humanity
At the confluence of the Yamuna, Ganges and (mythical) Saraswati Rivers, as many as 100 million
people will participate over the next month in an ancient Hindu festival known as the Kumbh Mela.
The pilgrimage, which dates back millennia, occurs in 12-year cycles — in 2001, the Indian
government estimated a staggering 70 million congregated by the Ganges’ banks to ritually bathe in
its sacred waters.
(Source: Tharur, 2013, Jan 15, Times World)
2.14 Kumbh Mela brings economic prosperity
Kumbh Mela, the biggest congregation of the world, would generate heightened economic activity in
multiple sectors leading to a huge income levels to government agencies and to individual traders.
According to a paper published by Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India
36
(ASSOCHAM), tourism, hotel, transport, health and infrastructure sectors would receive additional
boost during the Kumbh Mela event. According to an estimate, the state government alone would
generate Rs 12,000 crores of revenue because of the Kumbh Mela. Although the Kumbh Mela is
spiritual and religious in nature, associated economic activities would generate employment
opportunities for over six lakh workers across many sectors including eco-tourism.
The ASSOCHAM, the apex trade association of India, has published its findings of a study assessing
the impact of Kumbh Mela on various sectors in a paper titled ‘Maha Kumbh Mela 2013 – Possible
Revenue Generation Resources for Uttar Pradesh’. The assessment has detailed the impact of the
Mela on both organized and unorganized sectors. The paper suggests that the overall business in the
course of the two months of the Kumbh Mela could be worth between Rs 12,000 to Rs 15,000 crore.
The study provides sector-wise break-up of revenue estimates and employment generation statistics.
The Maha Kumbh will begin on January 27 and conclude on February 25. The piligrimage will
attract a large number of foreign tourists from as far apart as Australia, UK, Canada, Malaysia,
Singapore, South Africa, New Zealand, Mauritius, Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka. The hospitality
industry in the region is targeting 100 per cent occupancy across the board in small, budget and
luxury hotels during the Maha Kumbh. Apart from UP, states like Rajasthan (Jaipur, Jabalpur,
Udaipur, Bhilwara, Kota), Uttarkhand (Nainital, Mussoorie, Aulli, Dehradun, Haridwar, Ranikhet,
Almora), Punjab (Amrtisar, Ludhiana) and Himachal Pradesh (Shimla, Kufri, Manali, Panchkula),
will majorly benefit from the enhanced revenue generation with a large number of national and
foreign tourists expected to explore other destinations.
Uttar Pradesh Tourism and the Railways are likely to share in a revenue bonanza of a whopping Rs
1,500 crore along with airports and private hospitals by offering attractive tours and medical tourism
packages to the tourists and piligrims. The employment generation figures due to Kumbh are likely
going to be as follow: Hotels 2.5 lakh jobs; Airlines and airports 1.5 lakh; Tour operators 45,000,
Eco-tourism and medical tourism 50,000 and Skilled and unskilled workers for construction/
renovation 85,000. Add 55,000 new jobs in the unorganised sector comprising tour guides, taxi
drivers, interpreters, volunteers, etc and the employment generation potential of the festival stands at
a massive 6.35 lakh jobs. The Maha-Kumbh, a sacred Hindu pilgrimage, is thus expected to generate
direct and indirect business activities, the fruits of which would hopefully benefit the masses of Uttar
Pradesh.
(Source: “http://www.mediasyndicate.in/medsyn/20130111150638”, as assessed on 25 April 2013)
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2.15 Socio-Economic Impact of Maha Kumbh on Local Economy
Hinduism has established a Socio-Economic Ecosystem by celebrating various religious festivals for
whole year! The scale and economics of Maha Kumbh Mela has mind-blowing figures. According
to ASSOCHAM-India Report there will be at least 10 times more revenue generation on capital
investment (arrangements and temporary infrastructure), see data below:
Pilgrims and tourist (expected): 100 millions
Jobs (temporary) creation locally: 635,000
Investment by government: $220 million USD
Expected Revenue generation: INR 12000 Crores (~ $ 2.2 billion)
About Foreign Tourist:
Foreign Tourists (Expected) – 1 million
Number of tourists also opting for Tour Packages for visiting other tourist destinations –
500,000
Amount (Expected ) of expenditure per tourist – $ 500
Total Revenue from Tour Packages = 500,000 X 500 = $ 250 million
BBC report the economics of India’s Kumbh Mela has provided following arrangements for
pilgrims and tourists:
Temporary tent city – 20000 Sq Km
Food Grain Procured – 30000 Tonnes
Toilets built- 40000
Total length of water pipes laid – 550 Km
Policeman on Duty – 30000
(Source: “http://globindian.wordpress.com/2013/01/21/maha-kumbh-holy-dip-2013-largest-
human-gathering-on-the-earth/” as assessed on 25 April 2013)
2.16 Management, Maha Kumbh Style
Nearly 10 crore pilgrims, compared to eight crore during the Purna Kumbh twelve years ago, are
estimated to take a holy dip during the 55-day event this year, says a senior health officer at the mela.
“Our biggest challenge is how to manage the enormous quantities of human waste that accumulate
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daily... We also have to prevent any outbreak of epidemic,” he adds. About 45,000 toilets have been
set up, and the challenge is to ensure uninterrupted water supply, sanitation and electricity, all for
free.
Thanks to efficient management, Kumbhnagari, the temporary township set up near Allahabad, has
remained a clean, largely polythene-free place, despite the enormous numbers of a floating
population that has no stake in its upkeep. The great river itself, particularly at the Sangam — the
confluence of the Ganga, Yamuna and mythical Saraswati — remains somewhat polluted along the
20-odd bathing ghats. Compared to 2001, the Kumbh Mela area has increased from about 1,500
hectares to 2,000 hectares. The number of sectors increased from 11 to 14, and parking lots from 35
to 99. In fact, Allahabad city seems to overflow with human beings.
“There is hardly a household in the city — whether Hindu, Muslim, Christian or Sikh — which has
not hosted some pilgrim acquaintances from near or far,” says a resident. The February 10 stampede
at Allahabad railway station, in which nearly 40 perished, took many by surprise as the mela area
remained incident-free despite brimming with 2-3 crore people.
The temporary township of Kumbhnagari has no fewer than 30 police stations, as many fire stations,
38 hospitals with 370 beds, and even courts and magistrates. Nearly 14,000 policemen, six ‘lost-and-
found’ centres and 100 CCTVs have been deployed for crowd management. “It is a very prestigious
posting for any administrator and bureaucrat in Uttar Pradesh to head the Kumbh Mela and prove his
or her professional competence,” says an official.
To facilitate pilgrims’ progress, a 156-km road network and 18 temporary pontoon bridges across the
river were built at the township. Set up two months ahead of the event, the township will eventually
disappear until the next Kumbh comes around.
(Source: Pandit, 2013 Feb 28. Business Style, Management, Maha Kumbh Style)
2.17 Healthcare at the Kumbh Mela
This Kumbh is arguably the largest human gathering of all time, swelling to 30 million on the holiest
day of the festival, and totaling to as much as 100 million over the course of the entire 55-day event.
By those estimates, if the Kumbh were a nation, it would be the 12 th most populous in the world.
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Delivering health care to 100 million people is an enormous task anywhere, but it’s even more
challenging when the city – and hence its hospitals – must be temporary. By the end of March, the
entire city will have been dismantled. By the time the monsoons arrive, almost the entire area of the
Kumbh will be reclaimed by the rising rivers.
Ten sector hospitals are constructed specifically for the Mela. Each of these clinics comprises a
collection of large tents that house an outpatient clinic and a 20-bed inpatient unit. The hospitals
operate 24/7 throughout the duration of the festival, though workload peaks with population surges
around the most auspicious bathing days. Each day between 500 and 800 patients arrive and are seen
– briefly – by one of the physicians on duty. These doctors come from government clinics from
around the state and are assigned to the Mela for two months apiece. The doctors work in 8-hour
shifts, have no official days off, and sleep in tents that are pitched adjacent to the clinic. Each
hospital has a pharmacy with over 90 drugs that are provided free of charge.
The centre piece of this healthcare delivery system is the central hospital in sector 2. Here patients
can be seen by a range of specialists, including orthopaedics, surgery, and obstetrics. There is a 100-
bed inpatient unit and a 2-bed ICU. Diagnostic tools such as X-ray, ultrasound and
electrocardiograms are available. Dr Srivastava, who supervises the entire healthcare delivery system
of the Mela is based here, and receives daily reports on the number of patients seen at each of the
smaller sector hospitals.
Connecting these hospitals is a fleet of more than 100 ambulances which are responsible for
transferring patients who need specialized care from the sector hospitals to the central hospital. The
ambulances, like the doctors who staff the hospitals, have been drafted from community health
centers across the state. Each ambulance arrives with its own driver, who is then provided with
accommodation at the Mela. The drivers, who receive no additional training for the Kumbh, seem to
take great pride in their work.
During our visits to the hospitals, we noted that the doctors manning the outpatient posts see up to
800 patients a day – and many times that figure on bathing day – and are clearly overstretched. Lines
of patients preclude even a cursory medical examination. No vital signs are documented and there
are no stethoscopes in sight. On the other hand, inpatient units were almost uniformly unoccupied.
Row after row of hospital beds, neatly folded red blankets, and I.V. poles stand untouched. On our
visit two days before the peak bathing day, we saw only the occasional hospitalized patient – a
testament to excess capacity in the system.
Sources:
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(Kazi, 2013 Febraury. Ephemeral Hospitals, Enduring Insights: Healthcare at the Kumbh)
( “http://fxbkumbh.wordpress.com/2013/02/11/ephemeral-hospitals-enduring-insights-healthcare-at-
the-kumbh/” as assessed on 25 April 2013)
2.18 Kumbh Mela, A Sacred Geography
Between 2000 and 2010, the population of Delhi burgeoned from 15 million to 22 million while
Shanghai's population swelled from 14 to 20 million. Compare that to the recent rise of an
impromptu city near Allahabad in India: In the week after January 14, 2013, the first day of the
Maha Kumbh Mela festival — during which Hindus gather for a sacred bath at the confluence of the
Ganga and Yamuna rivers — around 10 million people had gathered there.
When the event ends five weeks later, approximately 100 million people would have moved into and
out of Allahabad. (I say "approximately" because the precise numbers are difficult to come by.) It
took 60 years for the population of Istanbul to grow from one to 10 million, and 50 years in the case
of Lagos. At Allahabad, though, the population rose from zero to 10 million, give or take a few
million, in just a week's time.
That's a slightly unfair comparison because the local government isn't going to put in place all the
fixtures of a functional metropolis. However, it's only partly unfair. The Indian authorities do have to
pull off the creation of a huge temporary tent city with minimal mishap. An enormous amount of
urban planning, civil engineering, governance and adjudication, and maintenance of public goods —
physical ones like toilets as well as intangibles such as law and order — and plans to deal with
unexpected events goes into the creation of this city. Those are pretty much the main elements
surrounding the creation of any city in the world.
There will also be a reasonably efficient dissolution of the city when the Kumbh Mela ends in late
February, but that's another story. Some cities have declined over time, but I can't even imagine what
it would take for one of the world's major metropolises to unwind.
The mammoth people flows at Allahabad got me excited when two colleagues at Harvard University,
religion professor Diana Eck and design professor Rahul Mehrotra, broached the idea of studying the
Maha Kumbh Mela some months ago. As a child growing up in India, I had read about the festival,
but had never entertained the idea of visiting it or studying it. Having lived outside India for over
two decades, I now find myself in a position to revisit the event, intellectually and physically.
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The flows of humanity that my colleagues and I will study during the five weeks of the KumbhMela
will shed light on similar events, such as responses to unexpected events, disasters, and the like, that
will take decades to unfold in other metropolises. Some researchers are social anthropologists, in
effect, following key officials during the Mela to unmask the processes that allow efficient and rapid
decision making. In a sense, the festival is a laboratory setting that scientists of all sorts constantly
look for. While there are other large gatherings of folks, such as the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca, those
are a tenth of the size in terms of the number of participants.
Another issue of interest is the emergence of social structure in complex groupings. The KumbhMela
authorities put down some bright lines on who gets to go where, when, and how — for example,
rules that govern people's movements during some religious days — and some rules are determined
by long-standing customs. Other, more informal norms among disparate groups of people seem to
emerge quickly. To those interested in how cooperation among diverse groups happens, this is a
fortuitous setting.
This is also the first Big Data Kumbh, as I call it. With cellphone usage ubiquitous in India, the
millions of cell phones at the Kumbh Mela will act as mobile sensors. My colleagues and I have
undertaken, with the help of local cellular providers and government authorities, to amass, arguably,
the biggest ever telecom data set.
To imagine the uses to which researchers could put the data, consider these hypothetical ideas. The
data could be used to understand how untoward incidents have been contained. After all, the Maha
Kumbh Mela has managed to prevent major disasters for a long time. Why don't disasters spiral out
of control when massive numbers of people, unfamiliar with each other, are involved? Can we spot
the signatures of an incipient disaster in the data, and the process by which those signals are
attenuated rather than amplified?
There is much commerce, as well as charitable exchange, of goods and services at the Kumbh Mela.
How do vendors deal with the inevitable errors in forecasting demand? Do inter-vendor
communication patterns allow the collective containment of uncertainties? Indeed, the telecom data
generated at the Kumbh Mela should provide grist to the intellectual mills of statisticians, engineers,
mathematicians, and social scientists for a long time, and allow us to model the use of this kind of
Big Data.
(Source: Eck, 2013 February. Harmony Book, Kumbh Mela, A sacred Geography)
2.19 The Construction of the Kumbh Mela
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Hindu religious tradition is often portrayed as established and unchanging by its adherents as well as
outside observers. Each of these groups can have good reasons to assert this, for Hindus, it reflects
the conviction that their religious practices are rooted in antiquity, whereas for (polemical) outsiders
it is evidence for the lack of any meaningful progress. Yet these assumptions ill explain the workings
of any religious community – which not only constantly changes in response to its times, but also
finds ways to clothe these changes in the garb of tradition. Both of these phenomena can be seen in
the Kumbha Mela, a Hindu festival that is widely believed to be the world's largest religious
gathering. The Kumbha Mela's tone and content have been profoundly altered in the recent past,
spurred by changing social, economic, and political conditions. As the real‐life KumbhaMela has
been ‘constructed’ through this process of change, one sees the corresponding ‘construction’ of the
sources (textual, mythical, and historical) to provide it with its roots, location, and raison d'être.
These ‘constructed’ sources root the Kumbha Mela in the distant past, both to give it the authority of
antiquity and to portray the festival as unchanging, but these new sources reflect these new forces.
These forces have transformed the Kumbha Mela from a theater for ascetic military power into a
government‐controlled mass religious festival, and this government control is now being challenged
by Hindu nationalists. The constant feature throughout the festival's history has been the way it has
served as a stage on which groups can enact and contest for authority.
(Source: Lochtefeld, 2013 February, “The Construction of the Kumbha Mela,” South Asian Popular
Culture)
2.20 Researches in Kumbh Mela
The KumbhMela is a Hindu religious festival that occurs every twelve years at the confluence of the
Ganga and Yamuna Rivers in the city of Allahabad. Since its inception early in the first millennium
CE, the KumbhMela has become the largest public gathering in the world; today it draws tens of
millions of pilgrims over the course of a few weeks to bathe in the auspicious rivers. The Mela
provides a forum for both individual and collective expressions of faith as pilgrims, religious
teachers, and followers of monastic orders converge from all parts of India. The next iteration of the
festival will take place from January 27-February 25, 2013.
The Mela inspires interdisciplinary research in a number of complementary fields. Pilgrimage and
religious studies, public health, design, communications, business, and infrastructure engineering
converge at this festival, producing a complex atmosphere that can be understood through rigorous
documentation and mapping, both on-site and in post-field processing. We consider the KumbhMela
to be a case study, or prototype, for a concept we would like to call the pop-up mega-city. This
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spatial model can be extended to situations outside of religious pilgrimage: understanding the spatial,
social, and logistical elements of the Kumbh Mela through interdisciplinary research will allow us to
propose the deployment of these systems in a variety of places and situations, in particular camps for
refugees of war and natural disasters.
The underlying structure of the Mela emerges in the creation of a temporary city to house its many
pilgrims. This city is laid out on a grid, constructed and deconstructed within a matter of weeks;
within the grid, multiple aspects of contemporary urbanism come to fruition, including spatial
zoning, an electricity grid, food and water distribution, physical infrastructure construction, mass
vaccinations, public gathering spaces, and nighttime social events. The ultimate goal of the pilgrims
is to bathe at the convergence of the rivers: even this act is organized into a larger procession, where
pilgrims are given specific times and opportunities to bathe based on their social status. When the
festival is not in session, the ground on which the city sits is used for different forms of agriculture.
(Source: Mehrotra Feb 2013, Times of India)
2.21 Researches at Kumbh Mela by the Researcher of Harvard University
Life at the Kumbh Mela can be heard long before it can be seen. Two hours before dawn, the
nonstop soundtrack of the world’s largest human gathering drifts up to an oasis of tents on a dusty
hill overlooking the site of the Hindu festival. At the camp, a group of Harvard professors, students,
and researchers fumbles its way into a few rented jeeps in the 5 a.m. darkness. As the fleet of
vehicles makes its descent, the narrow road suddenly opens onto a view of the Kumbh Mela, a
temporary tent city of millions of faithful Hindus, many of them already making their way to the
banks of the Ganges River to bathe in its life-affirming waters.
Normally, a crowd of Westerners wandering through the streets of the Kumbh would draw attention.
But when the group arrives at the Ganga, as the sacred river is known, its presence hardly causes a
stir.
Still, it’s a curious sight. How did three dozen Harvardians — undergraduates and graduate students,
case writers and professors, architects and anthropologists, doctors and documentarians — end up
among millions of pilgrims?
For one week in January, this sacred spot where the Ganges, the Yamuna, and the mythical Saraswati
rivers meet has become a spot for a meeting of Harvard minds. An interdisciplinary team
spearheaded by the South Asia Institute (SAI) arrived at the Kumbh on Jan. 18 with an ambitious
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plan to “map the metabolism of the city.” The confluence of northern India’s holiest rivers holds a
special significance for the millions of worshippers who attend the Kumbh, but the Harvard team is
just as interested in the tent city that springs up alongside the water.
“This idea of a megacity being set up on a temporary basis for 55 days, it’s just an incredible feat,”
said Rahul Mehrotra, one of the project’s leaders and a professor of urban design and planning at the
Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD). “It’s an intersection of the visible, the invisible, the
sacred, and the profane. Everything is colliding.”
Held every 12 years, the KumbhMela in Allahabad is a centuries-old Hindu pilgrimage with origins
in the first century CE. The gathering temporarily transforms an empty floodplain into one of the
biggest cities in the world.
For much of the year, this area actually is covered by the Ganges. Only in October can the Kumbh
Mela’s administrators and planners ascertain the lay of the land that they actually can use for the
gathering. (As one guru put it while holding forth in an ashram, “The Ganga gives what she will
give.”)
By early January, a temporary city roughly the size of Cambridge has sprung up in the dusty sand to
house hundreds of thousands of sadhus, or holy men, and millions of their followers for six weeks.
On the main bathing days, planners expect upwards of 30 million visitors, and such days often draw
media coverage for their sheer scale, devotion, and spectacle. But perhaps more impressive is the
fact that the regular rhythms of life can exist at the temporary Kumbh, from a steady supply of water
and electricity to the building of colorful, organic neighborhoods within each sector.
“Our concern is to look at this in a much larger context, and not look only at the spectacular and the
exotic,” said Diana Eck, a professor of comparative religion and Indian studies and Fredric Wertham
Professor of Law and Psychiatry in Society, who co-taught a course on the Kumbh with Mehrotra in
the fall. “The life of this mela — as a marketplace, as a place of teaching, of entertainment, of
evening performances — is something that goes on every day.” (Mela is a Sanskrit word for
gathering or marketplace.)
With that in mind, teams of professors, researchers, and students from across Harvard are meeting
under one roof at the Kumbh to explore myriad issues related to rapid urbanization, public health,
business, and religious expression at this year’s festival. The teams are studying everything from the
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way marketplaces operate, to the use and types of toilets at the Kumbh, to the allocation of living
space within different akharas, or sects.
The mela’s lessons, researchers hope, could be applied in many situations. Public health workers and
doctors from Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) and Harvard Medical School (HMS) see the
Kumbh as a model showing how to support mass migrations of people into small areas in the event
of a war or natural disaster. Urban planners from GSD, working with Mehrotra, view the gathering
as an example of how India — whose smaller cities are expected to grow dramatically in the coming
years — can best support the natural, democratic development of communities. A Harvard Business
School team dropped in for research, hoping to turn the Kumbh into one of its trademark case
studies. And Eck, a leading scholar of India’s pilgrimage tradition, sees the Kumbh as an opportunity
to wed Hinduism’s longstanding reverence for the natural environment and its sacred rivers to a
growing campaign to clean up the Ganges.
A whirlwind week at the Kumbh makes for a chaotic experience, but one that should prove fruitful
for the type of ambitious multidisciplinary work that SAI fosters, said associate director Meena
Hewett. As South Asia expands rapidly in both population and influence, Harvard can take the lead
in understanding the region, she said. (SAI’s influence has recently grown as well. Under the
leadership of director and Harvard Business School Professor TarunKhanna since 2010, it was
recently upgraded from an initiative to an institute within Harvard.)
“I think Harvard has a lot to learn” from South Asia, Hewett said. “One thing you’ll hear from all
faculty is the issue of scalability. It’s very easy to transform the lives of one or two individuals. But
when you’re working on issues that affect 2 billion people, the impact is huge. The KumbhMela is a
microcosm of the region.”
2.21.1 A lesson on urban planning of Kumbh Mela
If you wanted to jury-rig your own local version of Google Maps, you might end up with something
like the Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD) team gathered one January morning, already
sweltering under the rising Indian sun.
But GSD professor Rahul Mehrotra and his colleagues and students were going where Google
hasn’t: into the heart of the Maha Kumbh Mela, India’s “ephemeral city,” an impressive grid of
colorful, tent-lined streets that pops up every 12 years to accommodate the world’s largest gathering
of Hindu pilgrims.
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Instead of using a “Street View” van to capture the 360-degree sweep of the city’s streets, the
graduate students would be deployed to take panoramic shots on DSLR cameras. And in lieu of high-
resolution satellites that capture aerial photographs, the team had a high-powered handheld camera
mounted to a kite and flown high in the air.
Each akhara is allotted space by the Kumbh’s administrators before the event begins, and each
maintains a high degree of control over how it organizes its “neighborhood.” Photo by Felipe
Vera/Courtesy of GSD India Initiative
Their equipment may have been modest, but the group’s ambitions were big: to map the mela, or
gathering, as comprehensively as possible, from its informal back roads and infrastructure grid to the
flow of people and resources in and out of the Kumbh, which accommodates up to 80 million
pilgrims on peak days.
The Kumbh’s surprisingly orderly feel is a result, he believes, not just of the pilgrims’ respect for the
sacred space, but also of the city planners’ careful decision-making: wide central roads, well-spaced
public toilets, and the casual but pervasive presence of 10,000 police officers.
“Cities in India are often not about grand design, they’re about grand adjustment,” Mehrotra said
later. “In Indian cities, a lot of the landscape is a kind of temporary landscape,” a phenomenon he
calls temporal urbanism. While Indian cities may neglect the slums springing up organically within
them, the Kumbh Mela has found a way to make the temporary nature of its housing and
infrastructure work.
“At the Kumbh, [the city’s administrators] use infrastructure as a way to organize and deploy order
in the city, and then they allow within these blocks incredible chaos,” Mehrotra said. The result is a
lesson in “how infrastructure can be used as a tool to neutralize differences and still let differences
thrive.”
“If we value pluralism and we value coexistence, then these become important lessons,” he said. It’s
a common refrain for Mehrotra, whose work as an architect in India, prior to his Harvard
appointment, included projects as diverse as the conservation of the TajMahal and the design of
public toilets.
That pluralism was on full display once the sector four team left the main margs, or roads, and
entered the city-block space designated to members of the JunaAkhara, one of the largest and most
powerful sects at the Kumbh. Each akhara is allotted space by the Kumbh’s administrators before the
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event begins, and each maintains a high degree of control over how it organizes its “neighborhood.”
In the JunaAkhara area, flashing lights, displays of ornamental weapons garlanded with marigolds,
and a crowded network of alleys winding among the tents created a vibe that seemed a world apart
from the quiet, sparse, and open space of the ashram next door.
That diversity can thrive within these enclaves is one of the Kumbh’s lessons for urban planners,
especially those who study temporary spaces, such as refugee camps or slums.
“Refugee camps, some of them last for 20, 30, 40 years, but they become soulless,” Mehrotra said.
Refugees are housed in a repetitive pattern of tents; ethnic groups’ identities are “neutralized” to
prevent infighting within the camps.
“What’s interesting about the kumbh is that the neutralizing instruments are the grid, the roads, the
things that are shared by everyone,” Mehrotra said. “But then every Akhara is a community of
50,000 people who are allowed individual expression, and they all have their own internal logic in
terms of the way they’re organized. And that creates a module, a neighborhood; it creates a sense of
community — which never happens in refugee camps.”
“It’s much more clean and neat than what you would expect,” said Felipe Vera, a Chilean design
student. The Kumbh’s surprisingly orderly feel is a result, he believes, not just of the pilgrims’
respect for the sacred space, but also of the city planners’ careful decision-making. Photo by
VineetDiwadkar/Courtesy of GSD India Initiative
Since joining the GSD faculty in 2010, Mehrotra has been taking groups of students from Harvard’s
Schools to sites in Mumbai as part of his studio workshop in “extreme urbanism.” He soon realized
that whatever his students’ backgrounds — law, public policy, business, design — they often arrived
with preconceptions of how Mumbai functioned and how it should change, baggage that “took a
whole semester to unpack,” he says.
After all, the clinic didn’t even exist four months ago, when the land it stood on was still covered in
water. Back in the fall, Singh received a call from the planners of the Maha Kumbh Mela, India’s
massive religious gathering held every 12 years, saying he would be needed to staff one of the
festival’s dozens of hospitals and clinics, which would be built — like everything else in this
temporary city — virtually overnight. By early January, clinics like Singh’s were up and running,
ready to serve the millions of Hindu pilgrims who would be coming through to worship, as well a
curious Harvard researcher or two.
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“This is really impressive,” said Gregg Greenough, an emergency physician and assistant professor
of global health and population at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH), as he toured the clinic.
“In my department, we only have 10 beds.”
Greenough found himself at the Kumbh as part of a research team run by Harvard’s FXB Center for
Health and Human Rights, which planned to monitor all kinds of public health concerns at the
Kumbh, from the provision of pre-hospital care (how quickly those new ambulances navigated the
Kumbh’s crowded footbridges) to the management and care of lost children (a big problem in a
crowd of millions speaking dozens of languages) to the quality of the drinking water and public
toilets at the festival.
The massive amounts of data and dozens of public health lessons will also be used back at Harvard,
where student interest in global health extends well beyond the confines of HSPH. The Harvard
Global Health Institute (HGHI), a kind of University-wide think tank on health education across
disciplines and one of two major funders of the project, along with the South Asia Institute, is
planning a series of case studies based on Harvard research at the Kumbh. They’re hoping to create a
permanent archive of research materials on the festival and its history, some of which they have
already gathered in an online bibliography.
Sources:
(Katie K, 2013 January 21. Harvard Gazette: Inside India’s pop-up city: Harvard team maps the
Kumbh Mela, the world’s largest gathering)
(Katie K, 2013, March1. Harvard Gazette: Tracking disease in a tent city: Public health researchers
follow outbreaks in real time at India’s Kumbh Mela)
2.22 Kumbh Mela; 80 Million Pilgrim March
Kumbh Mela, the festival is a full-scale assault on the germs, garbage and human waste being
generated in the temporary megacity that has been constructed to deal with the crowds. To combat
disease-carrying flies, 400 laborers will spray 28 tons of bleaching powder, along with the
insecticide DDT, over 250 garbage pits and open drains during the course of the two-month
extravaganza. They will work alongside 6,000 cleaners in green baseball caps who sweep up 56 tons
of garbage a day and bury human waste left in the open (a common practice in rural India) in 4,000
chemically treated pits.
The festival, which started on Jan. 14 and runs to March 10, is believed to be at least two millennia
old. It attracts an eclectic stew of Hindu holy men, Bollywood stars, ordinary pilgrims and curious
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tourists who come to bathe in the Ganges, India's holiest river, where drops of the nectar of
immortality are believed to have been spilled from a pitcher by the gods at creation.
Allahabad benefits from "centuries of experience" staging Kumbh events, he adds. Every year, the
city hosts the Magh Kumbh, which is one-sixth the size of the current festival. (Magh is the 11th
month of the Hindu calendar and falls between January and February.)
Once the bridges were in place, workers toiled around the clock to install a temporary electricity
grid. It had 100,000 connection points, 45 diesel generators, 52 substations and 22,000 posts carrying
2,081 miles of cable with it.
Temporary road surfaces were put down using 99 miles of double steel plating to enable cars to
move on land that cannot bear much of a load. Some 25,000 street lamps were added to the site,
which totals 22 square miles.
Some 466 miles of piping were laid to provide 27,000 connections to ground water, with the capacity
to generate 21 million gallons a day. About 30,000 toilets with closed waste pits were installed, with
9,000 to be added by Feb. 10, when the largest crowds are expected. There are five new sewage
treatment plants .Many of the staff at the festival, including 250 doctors and 400 paramedics in the
15 field hospitals, are seconded from elsewhere in the state. So are the 14,000 police officers on
patrol.
So far the biggest test for the emergency services was a fire caused by a cooking accident in a tent on
Jan. 25. The incident was reported on one of three dedicated emergency lines, and the response was
coordinated from a central police control room staffed by 70 officers. Firefighters from the 30 on-site
fire crews used mobile backpack extinguishers to tackle the blaze, which officials say was out within
15 minutes. Six people were badly burned and were airlifted to a specialized hospital in New Delhi.
(Source: 2013 February. Walstreet Journal “80 Million Pilgrim March)
2.23 Business Worth of Kumbh Mela 2013
Airlines, hotels, tour operators and Uttar Pradesh in general are likely to reap a windfall during the
Maha Kumbh Mela in the state with the government likely to see its coffers swelling by Rs 12,000
crore, according to an industry body.
50
ASSOCHAM's paper -- 'Maha Kumbh Mela 2013- Possible Revenue Generation Resources for Uttar
Pradesh' -- says that the pilgrimage would generate additional employment opportunities for over six
lakh workers in sectors spanning airlines and airports, hotels, tours, infrastructure and also trigger a
surge in medical and eco-tourism.
The unorganized sector also stands to gain substantially from the Maha Kumbh, says the Associated
Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM).
A large number of foreign tourists are expected to attend the Kumbh Mela
with ASSOCHAM Secretary General DS Rawat saying that visitors would be arriving from as far
apart as Australia, UK, Canada, Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa, New Zealand, Mauritius,
Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka.
The hospitality industry in the region is targeting 100 per cent occupancy across the board in small,
budget and luxury hotels during the Maha Kumbh.
"Apart from UP, states like Rajasthan (Jaipur, Jabalpur, Udaipur, Bhilwara, Kota), Uttarkhand
(Nainital, Mussoorie, Aulli, Dehradun, Haridwar, Ranikhet, Almora), Punjab (Amrtisar, Ludhiana)
and Himachal Pradesh( Shimla, Kufri, Manali, Panchkula), too, will majorly benefit from the
enhanced revenue generation with a large number of foreign tourists expected to explore other
destination.
Uttar Pradesh Tourism and the Railways are likely to share in a revenue bonanza of a whopping Rs
1,500 crore along with airports and private hospitals by offering attractive tours and medical tourism
packages to the foreign and domestic visitors thronging the region, the ASSOCHAM paper says.
The Maha-Kumbh will generate much direct and indirect business activities, the fruits of which
would hopefully benefit the masses of Uttar Pradesh, The paper suggests that the overall business in
the course of the two months of the Kumbh Mela could be worth between Rs 12,000 to Rs 15,000
crore.
According to the sector-wise break-up devised by ASSOCHAM, the Kumbh employment generation
figures are likely going to be as follow: Hotels 2.5 lakh jobs; Airlines and airports 1.5 lakh; Tour
operators 45,000, Eco-tourism and medical tourism 50,000 and Skilled and unskilled workers for
construction/ renovation 85,000.
Add 55,000 new jobs in the unorganised sector comprising tour guides, taxi drivers, interpreters,
volunteers, etc and the employment generation potential of the festival stands at a massive 6.35 lakh
jobs.
51
(Source: 2013, Jan 12.The Economic Times: Kumbh Mela: 'Overall business could be worth
between Rs 12,000 to Rs 15,000 crore)
2.24 Opportunities for Corporate Market in Kumbh Mela 2013
For dozens of companies such as JCB, the world's largest religious celebration held every 12 years
is sheer marketing nirvana. The Kumbh Mela has always been a big business opportunity, but this
time companies are going the extra distance to promote their brands by using traditional
entertainment and modern technology to connect with consumers, be it middle class pilgrims or ash-
smeared sadhus.
"Not only are companies becoming more concerned about consumers at the Kumbh grounds but they
are also realising the importance of subtlety for their services and promotions," says Pradeep
Kashyap, CEO of rural marketing consultancy MART.
Mobile service provider Vodafone India, for instance, is reaching out to consumers by screening
films and providing musical ear-muffs, wired with in-built speakers that play devotional songs.
GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare has a basketball ring at its stall for people to shoot hoops
and win free biscuits with their cups of Horlicks while cosmetics company Emami Ltd has set up
massage kiosks for pilgrims to experience its Navratna Oil brand. It has also introduced stilt-walkers
to hand out dry sampling packs.
According to Infinity Advertising Services, the official advertising firm for the 2013 Kumbh Mela,
about 52 companies are at the fair this year. Allahabad is not their only opportunity to reach out to
rural consumers: India has about 25,000 rural fairs each year and companies use around one-tenth of
them to expand their rural presence.
"It takes organisers 60 days to set up this mela, which has an estimated population equal to that of
any of the four metros. This has always been a great place for companies to market their products,"
says Kashyap. All experts agree there is big money at the Maha Kumbh. According to an Associated
Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM) report, this year's fair is likely to
bump up Uttar Pradesh's coffers by Rs 12,000 crore, apart from generating employment for airlines,
airports, tour operators and a host of other sectors. Government officials estimate up to 30 million
people take a dip at the Sangam - the confluence of the Ganga, Yamuna and the mythical Saraswati
52
rivers - on the main Shahi Snan days. With such massive numbers of people, the Kumbh Mela is the
subject of a Harvard University case study on the logistics behind the "pop-up mega-city" that comes
up in Allahabad during the religious festival. As the Kumbh Mela goes up market, visitors do not
have to grunge it out in makeshift tents anymore. For about Rs 11,000 a night, they can stay in
luxury tents offering all the creature comforts they want from tiled bathrooms to buffet breakfasts.
(Source: 2013, March 3. Business Today: How Corporate India is making the most of the Maha
Kumbh)
2.25 ASSOCHAM Analysis on Job Prospects in Maha Kumbh Mela 2013
Sector No. of Persons
Airlines & Airports 1.5 lakhs
Hotel Industry 2.5 lakhs
Tour Operators 45,000
Eco Tourism & Medical Tourism 50,000
Skilled & Unskilled Workforce
Construction/ Up gradation 85,000
Unorganized Sector
(Tourist Guides, Taxi Drivers,
Interpreters, Volunteers etc.) 55,000
Total 6.35 lakhs
Table 2.15 Job opportunities in Kumbh Mela 2013
(Source: “http://mappingthemela.wordpress.com/2013/01/16/mahakumbha-a-boon-for-business-
sector/”, as assessed on 25 April 2013)
53
54
Chapter 3
Research Methodology
3.1 Introduction
Research methodology is a way to systematically solve the research problem. In it we study the
various steps that are generally adopted by a researcher in studying his research problem along with
the logic behind them. The research question here is to study the social and economic aspects of the
Kumbh Mela 2013 from the point of view of pilgrims as well as institution. And also, it is voluntary
to measure the satisfaction level of the pilgrims towards the facilities and arrangements of made by
the government.
3.2 Research questions
The research question here is to study the social and economic aspects of the Kumbh Mela 2013
from the point of view of pilgrims as well as institution. And also, it is voluntary to measure the
satisfaction level of the pilgrims towards the facilities and arrangements made by the government.
3.3 Objective of the research
The main objective of the research is to analyze the social and economic aspect of the Kumbh Mela
2013, held at Allahabad. We tried to explore that whether the services rendered by the governments
were satisfying the needs of the Kalpvasis or not? The pocket size of the pilgrims and institution in
the Kumbh Mela was also included as a part of the study. The aim was also to study the social and
demographic aspects of the pilgrims who resided in the Mela premises atleast for a week.
3.4 Scope of the Research
The Kumbh Mela is considered as the biggest gathering of humans at a time on the planet. It was
given an authorization of a district for 2 months period. The estimated worth of Maha Kumbh Mela
2013 was 1500 crore Rupees, creating around 6.5 lakhs jobs, and therefore justifying the scope of the
study. Therefore, there was a vast scope to study the social and economic aspects of the demography,
which was actually attracting the researchers from all over the world.
55
3.5 Field of Study
Our study is in following areas:
I. Various facilities provided by the government
II. Duration of their stay in Kumbh Mela
III. Pilgrims family background
IV. Means of transportation with in Mela area
V. Role of self-help groups
VI. Availability of essential products in Mela area
VII. Purpose of pilgrims visit to Kumbh Mela
VIII. Expected expenditure of both pilgrims and vendors during Kumbh Mela.
IX. Instruction boards in Mela area
X. Security system of Mela area
XI. What is the booking system of vendors to provide facilities to pilgrims
XII. Information about Kumbh Mela on its official website.
XIII. Management of crowd
XIV. Transport facilities in Mela area
XV. Cleanliness of Mela area
56
3.6 Research Process
I. The research problem: To study the social and economic aspects of Kumbh Mela 2013.
The purpose of this study is to check the satisfaction level of Pilgrims who came for various
locations to attend Maha Kumbh 2013 as well as of the institutions which establish their
business in the event. It was also done to check the support of Government and Non-
Government Organizations in maintaining the event.
II. Extensive literature survey: This is the most important part of any research because it
gives us the understanding to do our research in the right direction. So we undertake
extensive literature survey connected with the problem. For this purpose, we go to the
abstracting and indexing journals and published or unpublished bibliographies. We tapped
academic journals, newspapers, books etc.
III. Research design: For our research we obtain the information from extensive Literature
Review and Survey. As the purpose of our research study is that of exploration that why we
chose a flexible research design which provides opportunity for considering many different
aspects of a problem. The questionnaire will be prepared and will be filled by directly
interviewing the pilgrims. Convenience sampling will adopted for data collection.
Afterwards the data will be analyzed using graphical depiction and cross tabulation tools in
SPPS software.
a) Determining sample design: As the total geographical area of interest is big, we
chose Convenience Sampling. The subjects are selected just because they are easiest
to recruit for the study and the researcher did not consider selecting subjects that are
representative of the entire population. a) Target Population: The conduction of the
survey took place by considering the Pilgrims of the Maha Kumbh 2013 as the target
responders for Demographic Profiling and the Institution members for the
Institutional Questionnaire.
b) Sample Size and Sample Technique: The sample chosen for our Project is
Convenience sample. When population elements are selected for inclusion in the
sample based on the ease of access, it can be called convenience sampling. The
sample size for the survey was taken to be around 2000.
57
IV. Collecting the data: Questionnaire technique was used for the purpose of data collection.
Close ended questionnaire were framed and we interviewed pilgrims from different sectors
of the Kumbh Mela premises to get detail and unbiased desired information.
Questionnaire Format: The Questionnaire designed for the survey is divided into following
parts-
1) Demographic Profiling- This part contained questions related to Age, Gender,
Location, etc.
2) Income & Expenditure- This part contained questions related to money spent
throughout the Mela.
3) Satisfaction level for various services- In this part 37 questions were asked on 3 point
Likert scale according to how much the respondents are satisfied with various services.
Satisfied Neutral Dissatisfied
Table 3.1- Likert Scale to check Satisfaction Level.
V. Execution of the project: To execute our project a very important step is research process.
Approximately 4 months for our project. We divide our time such a manner that we are able
to complete our research within predetermined time.
Literature Review one and half month
Sampling of questionnaire 15 days
Plot survey and design final questionnaire 20 days
Final survey on 24th February 2013
Analysis of data 1 month
VII. Analysis of data: After the data have been collected, we turn to the task of analyzing them.
For the analysis of data we have done number of closely related operations such as
establishment of categories, the application of these categories to raw data through coding,
tabulation and then drawing statistical inferences. Thus, we have classified the raw data into
some purposeful and usable categories. The SPSS software was used to serve the purpose. The
following process of analysis was adopted.
58
Coding & Editing is done to to facilitate interpretation of data in SPSS.
Tabulation operation we do for the getting data in the form of tables. Analysis work after
tabulation is generally based on the computation of various percentages, coefficients, etc., by
applying various well defined statistical formulae.
Statistical Inferences: The collected data will be analyzed using following statistical tools
with the help of SPSS :
a) Frequency analysis and Graphical depiction: In statistics the frequency (or absolute
frequency) of an event is the number of times the event occurred in an experiment or study.
These frequencies are often graphically represented in histograms. The relative
frequency (or empirical probability) of an event refers to the absolute
frequency normalized by the total number of events. The data will also be depicted in terms
of pie chart, bar graphs etc.
b) Cross Tabulation: Cross tabulation (or crosstabs for short) is a statistical process that
summarizes categorical data to create a contingency table.
c) .Factor Analysis: Factor analysis a technique that is used for data reduction. It is used to
find factors among observed variables. In other words, if your data contains many variables,
you can use factor analysis to reduce the number of variables. Factor analysis groups
variables with similar characteristics together. With factor analysis you can produce a small
number of factors from a large number of variables which is capable of explaining the
observed variance in the larger number of variables. The reduced factors can also be used for
further analysis.
VIII. Conclusion and Suggestions– After performing analysis of various aspects of the project, the
final conclusion is taken out of the findings to solve the actual Research problem. In this
section the conclusions were drawn on the basis of the data analysis. The entire project was
then compiled in the form of a report.
59
Chapter-4
Analysis and Interpretation
4.1 Factor Analysis
Factor analysis is a method of data reduction. It does this by seeking underlying unobservable
(latent) variables that are reflected in the observed variables (manifest variables). There are many
different methods that can be used to conduct a factor analysis (such as principal axis factor,
maximum likelihood, generalized least squares, unweighted least squares), There are also many
different types of rotations that can be done after the initial extraction of factors, including
orthogonal rotations, such as varimax and equimax, which impose the restriction that the factors
cannot be correlated, and oblique rotations, such as promax, which allow the factors to be correlated
with one another. You also need to determine the number of factors that you want to extract. Given
the number of factor analytic techniques and options, it is not surprising that different analysts could
reach very different results analyzing the same data set. However, all analysts are looking for simple
structure. Simple structure is pattern of results such that each variable loads highly onto one and
only one factor.
Factor analysis is a technique that requires a large sample size. Factor analysis is based on the
correlation matrix of the variables involved, and correlations usually need a large sample size before
they stabilize. Tabachnick and Fidell (2001, page 588) cite Comrey and Lee's (1992) advise
regarding sample size: 50 cases is very poor, 100 is poor, 200 is fair, 300 is good, 500 is very good,
and 1000 or more is excellent. As a rule of thumb, a bare minimum of 10 observations per variable
is necessary to avoid computational difficulties
(Source:- http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/spss/output/principal_components_files/M255.SAV)
60
4.1.1 KMO and Bartlett’s Test
Table 4.1- Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin Measure
Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin Measure of Sampling Adequacy - This measure varies between 0 and 1, and
values closer to 1 are better. A value of .5 is a suggested minimum. Taken together, these tests
provide a minimum standard which should be passed before a factor analysis (or a principal
components analysis) should be conducted.
From the above table we can see that the value of KMO=0.758 which is above the minimum standard required of KMO’s value to be 0.5. Thus the minimum standard required to be passed before conducting Factor Analysis is attained.
61
KMO and Bartlett's Test
Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin Measure of Sampling Adequacy. .758
Bartlett's Test of Sphericity Approx. Chi-Square 2.018E4
df 630
Sig. .000
62
4.1.2 Total Variance Matrix4.1.2 Total Variance Explained
Component
Initial Eigenvalues b
Extraction Sums of Squared
Loadingsf
Rotation Sums of Squared
Loadingsg
Totalc
% of
Varianced
Cumulativee
% Total
% of
Variance
Cumulative
% Total
% of
Variance
Cumulative
%
1 6.341 17.615 17.615 6.341 17.615 17.615 3.363 9.343 9.343
2 3.512 9.756 27.370 3.512 9.756 27.370 3.303 9.174 18.517
3 2.840 7.889 35.259 2.840 7.889 35.259 3.133 8.703 27.220
4 2.301 6.393 41.652 2.301 6.393 41.652 2.695 7.487 34.707
5 1.781 4.948 46.600 1.781 4.948 46.600 2.301 6.392 41.099
6 1.552 4.312 50.912 1.552 4.312 50.912 2.220 6.165 47.264
7 1.396 3.879 54.791 1.396 3.879 54.791 2.187 6.075 53.339
8 1.229 3.415 58.206 1.229 3.415 58.206 1.752 4.867 58.206
9 1.192 3.310 61.516
10 1.168 3.245 64.761
11 1.086 3.016 67.777
12 .979 2.721 70.498
13 .888 2.467 72.965
14 .831 2.309 75.274
15 .779 2.165 77.439
16 .726 2.016 79.454
17 .650 1.806 81.261
18 .621 1.724 82.985
19 .558 1.550 84.535
20 .530 1.471 86.006
21 .492 1.366 87.372
22 .461 1.282 88.653
23 .449 1.248 89.901
24 .406 1.128 91.029
25 .367 1.019 92.047
26 .354 .984 93.032
27 .344 .957 93.988
28 .329 .915 94.903
29 .297 .825 95.729
30 .277 .769 96.497
31 .247 .687 97.184
32 .231 .641 97.825
A. Factor - The Initial Number of factors used is Eight (8) as assigned by us.
b. Initial Eigen values - Eigen values are the variances of the factors. Because we conducted our
factor analysis on the correlation matrix, the variables are standardized, which means that the each
variable has a variance of 1, and the total variance is equal to the number of variables used in the
analysis, in this case, 36.
c. Total - This column contains the eigen values. The first factor will always account for the most
variance (and hence have the highest eigen value), and the next factor will account for as much of the
left over variance as it can, and so on. Hence, each successive factor will account for less and less
variance.
d. % of Variance - This column contains the percent of total variance accounted for by each factor.
e. Cumulative % - This column contains the cumulative percentage of variance accounted for by the
current and all preceding factors. For example, the eight rows show a value of 58.206%. This
means that the first eight factors together account for 58.206% of the total variance.
f. Extraction Sums of Squared Loadings - The number of rows in this panel of the table
correspond to the number of factors retained. In this example, we requested that eight factors be
retained, so there are eight rows, one for each retained factor. The values in this panel of the table
the left panel of the table, because they are based on the common variance, which is always smaller
than the total variance are calculated in the same way as the values in the left panel, except that here
the values are based on the common variance. The values in this panel of the table will always be
lower than the values in.
g. Rotation Sums of Squared Loadings - The values in this panel of the table represent the
distribution of the variance after the varimax rotation. Varimax rotation tries to maximize the
variance of each of the factors, so the total amount of variance accounted for is redistributed over the
eight extracted factors.
63
.
4.1.3 Rotated Component Matrixa
Component
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Wood availability at
public places for
bon-fire
.787
Management of
crowd.750
Availability of
Boating facility.747
Availability of
Transportation.703
64
Traffic Management
System.619
Government Ration
Shops
Website developed
for Kumbh Mela.746
Display panel
regularly updating
information about
train running status
.705
Display panel
regularly updating
information about
bus status
.663
Availability of
updated information
about Kumbh Mela
on website
.624
Ease of website
accessibility.565
Railway reservations
services
Support of police .753
Security of self and
belongings.651
Lost and found
guidance.607
Communication and
Announcements.586
Efficiency of
Electricity supply.570
Police and
government
personnel’s
imparting the right
information
65
Conditions of Roads .697
Conditions of
Pontoon Bridges.689
Medical facilities
( Number of
Hospitals,
Availability of
services and
medicine)
.645
Drinking water
facilities.521
Adequacy of price
for essential
products
.775
Quality of products
as per the price paid.766
Availability of
Variety of products.533
Efficiency of
Banking facilities.741
Availability of Fire
fighting facilities.580
Efficiency of Postal
services
Availability of
essential products
Display boards
indicating directions
to specific locations
or ashrams
.727
Adequate number of
Signboards and
directions
.587
Availability of fuel
for cooking
66
Proper Bathing
facility
Quality of network
for your mobile.660
Sanitation facilities -.592
ATM’s functioning
Extraction Method: Principal Component
Analysis.
Rotation Method: Varimax with Kaiser
Normalization.
Table 4.3- Rotated component Matrix
a. Rotation converged in 11 iterations.
4.1.4 -Rotated Component Matrix After Adjustment
Factors Component Variables 1 2 3 4 5
Administrative Services
Wood availability at public places for bon-fire
0.7872
Management of crowd 0.7501
Availability of Boating facility 0.7469
Availability of Transportation 0.7027
Traffic Management System 0.6193 Adequate number of Signboards and directions
0.5873
Information Technology
Website developed for Kumbh Mela 0.7456 Display boards indicating directions to specific locations or ashrams
0.7274
Display panel regularly updating 0.7054
67
information about train running statusDisplay panel regularly updating information about bus status
0.6631
Availability of updated information about Kumbh Mela on website
0.6239
Ease of website accessibility 0.5655
Quality of network for your mobile 0.6599 Safety and Security
Support of police 0.7525
Security of self and belongings 0.6506
Availability of Fire fighting facilities 0.5799
Communication and Announcements 0.5864
Efficiency of Electricity supply 0.5699
Basic Amenities
Conditions of Roads 0.6972
Conditions of Pontoon Bridges 0.6889
Efficiency of Banking facilities 0.7411 Medical facilities ( Number of Hospitals, Availability of services and medicine)
0.645
Drinking water facilities 0.5212 Product & Pricing
Adequacy of price for essential products 0.775
Quality of products as per the price paid 0.766
Availability of Variety of products 0.533
Table 4.4- Rotated Component Matrix after adjustment
4.1.5 Analysis of Rotated Component Matix After Adjustment
a- Rotated Factor Matrix - This table contains the rotated factor loadings (factor pattern matrix),
which represent both how the variables are weighted for each factor but also the correlation between
the variables and the factor. Because these are correlations, possible values range from -1 to +1. On
the Coefficient Display Format, we used the option suppress absolute value less than point five (0.5),
which tells SPSS not to print any of the correlations that are 0.5 or less. This makes the output easier
to read by removing the clutter of low correlations that are probably not meaningful anyway.
b- Factor - The columns under this heading are the rotated factors that have been extracted. Five
factors were extracted (the eight factors that we requested). These are the factors that analysts are
most interested in and try to name. For example, the first factor is called "Administrative Services"
because items like "Wood availability at public places for bon-fire", "Management of crowd" and
“Availability of Transportation” load highly on it. The second factor might be called "Information
Technology" because items like "Website developed for Kumbh Mela" and "Display panel regularly
68
updating information about train running status" load highly on it. The same procedure is followed
for the third, fourth and fifth factors.
69
4.2 Reliability Analysis
Reliability analysis allows you to study the properties of measurement scales and the items that make
them up. The Reliability Analysis procedure calculates a number of commonly used measures of
scale reliability and also provides information about the relationships between individual items in the
scale. Interclass correlation coefficients can be used to compute interrater reliability estimates.
One way to think of reliability is that other things being equal, a person should get the same score on
the questionnaire if they complete it at two different points in time. Another way to look at reliability
is to say that two people who are the same in usual way to look at reliability is based on the idea that
individual items (or set of items) should produce results consistence with the overall questionnaire.
To Obtain a Reliability Analysis
This feature requires the Statistics Base option.
From the menus choose:
Analyze > Scale > Reliability Analysis...
Select two or more variables as potential components of an additive scale.
Choose a model from the Model drop-down list.
70
4.2.1 Scale: Administrative Services (Table 4.5)
4.2.1.1 Case Processing Summary
N %
Cases Valid 1377 98.9
Excludeda 16 1.1
Total 1393 100.0
a. Listwise deletion based on all variables in the procedure.
4.2.1.2 Reliability Statistics
Cronbach's Alpha N of Items
.724 6
4.2.1.3 Item-Total Statistics
Scale Mean if
Item Deleted
Scale Variance
if Item Deleted
Corrected Item-
Total
Correlation
Cronbach's
Alpha if Item
Deleted
Wood availability at
public places for bon-fire8.1721 6.673 .578 .651
Availability of
Transportation8.1220 6.628 .548 .658
Traffic Management
System8.2963 6.757 .513 .669
Availability of Boating
facility8.2600 6.543 .559 .654
Management of crowd 8.1946 6.118 .572 .647
Adequate number of
Signboards and directions8.5991 9.271 -.030 .793
Table 4.5
AnalysisIn the above case of Administrative Services, the percentage of valid cases is 98.9 and the value of
Cronbach's Alpha is also more than 0.5, here it being 0.724, hence the questions asked has a greater
amount of reliability in proving the efficiency of administrative services.
71
4.2.2 Scale: Information Technology (Table 4.6)
4.2.2.1 Case Processing Summary
N %
Cases Valid 1344 96.5
Excludeda 49 3.5
Total 1393 100.0
a. List wise deletion based on all variables in the procedure.
4.2.2.2 Reliability Statistics
Cronbach's Alpha N of Items
.716 7
72
4.2.2.3Item-Total Statistics
Scale Mean if
Item Deleted
Scale Variance
if Item Deleted
Corrected Item-
Total
Correlation
Cronbach's Alpha
if Item Deleted
Website developed for
Kumbh Mela9.5739 5.884 .522 .662
Display panel regularly
updating information about
train running status
9.6252 5.280 .603 .634
Display panel regularly
updating information about
bus status
9.5575 5.606 .469 .673
Availability of updated
information about Kumbh
Mela on website
9.4824 5.549 .611 .638
Ease of website
accessibility9.4600 5.631 .560 .650
Quality of network for
your mobile9.6967 7.511 -.051 .787
Display boards indicating
directions to specific
locations or ashrams
9.8289 6.204 .348 .702
Table 4.6
Analysis
In the above case of Information Technology, the percentage of valid cases is 96.5 and the value of
Cronbach's Alpha is also more than 0.5, here it being 0.716, hence the questions asked has a good
amount of reliability in proving the effectiveness of Information Technology at the Mela.
73
4.2.3 Scale: Safety and Security (Table 4.7)
4.2.3.1 Case Processing Summary
N %
Cases Valid 1380 99.1
Excludeda 13 .9
Total 1393 100.0
a. Listwise deletion based on all variables in the procedure.
4.2.3.2 Reliability Statistics
Cronbach's Alpha N of Items
.691 5
74
4.2.3.3 Item-Total Statistics
Scale Mean if
Item Deleted
Scale Variance
if Item Deleted
Corrected
Item-Total
Correlation
Cronbach's
Alpha if Item
Deleted
Communication and
Announcements5.2370 2.658 .449 .640
Security of self and
belongings5.2333 2.397 .574 .583
Support of police 5.2848 2.508 .556 .595
Availability of Fire
fighting facilities5.0362 2.949 .245 .726
Efficiency of Electricity
supply5.2348 2.654 .433 .647
Table 4.7
Analysis
In the above case of Information Technology, the percentage of valid cases is 99.1 and the value of
Cronbach's Alpha is also more than 0.5, here it being 0.691, hence the questions asked has a
significant relevance in proving the effectiveness of Safety and Security stronghold at the
Kumbhmela,2013.
4.2.4 Scale: Basic Amenities (Table 4.8)
4.2.4.1 Case Processing Summary
N %
Cases Valid 1369 98.3
Excludeda 24 1.7
Total 1393 100.0
a. Listwise deletion based on all variables in the procedure.
4.2.4.2 Reliability Statistics
Cronbach's Alpha N of Items
.673 5
75
4.2.4.3 Item-Total Statistics
Scale Mean if
Item Deleted
Scale Variance
if Item Deleted
Corrected
Item-Total
Correlation
Cronbach's
Alpha if Item
Deleted
Conditions of Roads 5.3842 2.509 .483 .596
Conditions of Pontoon
Bridges5.3652 2.614 .493 .589
Efficiency of Banking
facilities5.2615 3.396 .169 .726
Medical facilities
( Number of Hospitals,
Availability of services
and medicine)
5.5091 2.807 .537 .577
Drinking water facilities 5.5771 2.980 .504 .597
Table 4.8
Analysis
In the above case of Basic Amenities, the percentage of valid cases is 98.3 and the value of
Cronbach's Alpha is also more than 0.5, here it being 0.673, hence the questions asked are reliable in
proving the effectiveness of the Basic Amenities available at the Kumbhmela, 2013.
4.2.5 Scale: Product and Pricing (Table 4.9)
76
4.2.5.1 Case Processing Summary
N %
Cases Valid 1391 99.9
Excludeda 2 .1
Total 1393 100.0
a. Listwise deletion based on all variables in the procedure.
4.2.5.2 Reliability Statistics
Cronbach's Alpha N of Items
.712 3
4.2.5.3 Item-Total Statistics
Scale Mean if
Item Deleted
Scale Variance
if Item Deleted
Corrected
Item-Total
Correlation
Cronbach's
Alpha if Item
Deleted
Availability of Variety of
products3.3091 2.012 .424 .740
Adequacy of price for
essential products3.0582 1.567 .593 .540
Quality of products as per
the price paid3.1280 1.604 .583 .553
Table 4.9
Analysis
In the above case of Product and Pricing, the percentage of valid cases is 99.9 and the value of
Cronbach's Alpha is also more than 0.5, here it being 0.71, hence the questions asked are reliable in
proving the balance between the various products available at the Kumbh Mela, 2013 and their
respective pricing which were charged from the customers.
Chapter 5
Conclusion & Suggestions
After the analysis of the collected data explaining the satisfaction level of kalpwasis, we can
conclude the following:
I. Most of the people seemed to be satisfied with the administrative services provided by the
government such as management of crowd, by providing adequate number of Pontoon
Bridges, a large area for lodging and very viable traffic management system.
II. The analysis shows that with the advancement in information technology, Kumbh Mela had
not remained untouched. In the factor analysis test seven variables were joined together for
the information technology, which is the maximum in comparison to other factors.
77
III. The display panels regularly updating information about trains and buses, the website of
Kumbh Mela and the quality of mobile network were important information technology
tools which proved to be of significant help for the kalpwasis. They also gave a satisfactory
remark for these services.
IV. There was also a Lost and Found service available which was efficient enough to help the
people with any respective inconveniences faced by them.
V. The bathing Ghats were well maintained for providing better facilities and were
large .enough to accommodate lakhs of pilgrims taking bath at the same time.
VI. Sufficient number of drinking water points were made at the Kumbh Mela so that none
would face any kind of drinking water problems..
VII. Several health camps and even private hospitals were set up at various points in different
sectors at the Kumbh Mela to avoid any kind of medical emergency.
VIII. Administrative services regarding maintaining hygiene and sanitation were very efficient
and highly appreciated by the people.
IX. Dissatisfaction prevailed among the people present at the Kumbh Mela regarding the high
prices charged from them for products of basic necessities.
X. Overall satisfaction level among the people present at the Kumbh Mela was high regarding
all the services and facilities available to them during their span of stay.
On the basis of the entire study and survey conducted, the following suggestions can be helpful for
the future in order to provide more hassle free Kumbh Mela in future.
I. Pricing of the products should have been more reasonable so that pilgrims from different
strata of the society could avail them..
II. Variety and quality of the products available needed to be improved.
III. The drainage facilities needs to be improved by the organizations and waste of the camps
should not be dumped just outside the camps.
IV. The lost and found services had a scope of better communicating with the people.
V. .Awareness about the Kumbh Mela website should have been promoted by the
administrators among the visitors to make them realize its utility.
78
VI. Mobile network facilities should be improved to maintain the connectivity among the
people.
VII. Mobile charging points should have been made available at various locations in the
premises.
VIII. . The organizations must depute more and more volunteers to help the pilgrims during the
Snans and Parvs.
.
References
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Dhruv K, 2013 Febraury. Ephemeral Hospitals, Enduring Insights: Healthcare at the Kumbh
Eck D.L, 2013 February. Harmony Book, Kumbh Mela, A sacred Geography
Katie K, 2013, March1. Harvard Gazette: Tracking disease in a tent city: Public health
researchers follow outbreaks in real time at India’s Kumbh Mela
Katie K, 2013 January 21. Harvard Gazette: Inside India’s pop-up city: Harvard team maps
the Kumbh Mela, the world’s largest gathering
79
Lochtefeld L, 2013 February, “The Construction of the Kumbha Mela,” South Asian Popular
Culture) Vol. 2, pp. 103-126.
Mehrotra R, Feb 2013. Times of India: Research Prospects of Kumbh Mela
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worth between Rs 12,000 to Rs 15,000 crore
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Verma G, 2013, March 3. Business Today: How Corporate India is making the most of the
Maha Kumbh
Wesley J, 2013 February. Walstreet Journal: 80 Million Pilgrim March
2013, January. Maha Kumbh (Holy Dip) 2013: Largest Human Gathering on the Earth.
Retrieved on 25 April 2013, from “http://globindian.wordpress.com/2013/01/21/maha-
kumbh-holy-dip-2013-largest-human-gathering-on-the-earth/”
2013, January 11. Kumbh Mela Brings Economic Prosperity. Retrieved on April 25 2013,
from “http://www.mediasyndicate.in/medsyn/20130111150638”
Kazi D. Ephemeral Hospitals, Enduring Insights: Healthcare at the Kumbh,. Retrieved on
April 26 2013, from “http://fxbkumbh.wordpress.com/2013/02/11/ephemeral-hospitals-
enduring-insights-healthcare-at-the-kumbh/” http://kumbhmelaallahabad.gov.in,”
Kumbh Mela and Urban Economics. Retrieved on 26 April 2013,from
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Kumbh Mela 2013 at a Glance. Retrieved on April 25 2013, from
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81
Annexure 1
Questionnaire on Demographics
Annexure 2
82
Questionnaire on Institutions
83
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