Modi continues turban tradition this Republic Day with ‘halari pagdi’ gifted by Jamnagar royals
India

Modi continues turban tradition this Republic Day with ‘halari pagdi’ gifted by Jamnagar royals

PM Modi is known to don a special pagdi every year on Republic Day and Independence Day. Last year on 26 January, he wore a saffron-coloured bandhej headgear.

   
Prime Minister Narendra Modi pays homage to the martyrs at the National War Memorial on the occasion of Republic Day in New Delhi | PTI Photo

Prime Minister Narendra Modi pays homage to the martyrs at the National War Memorial on the occasion of Republic Day in New Delhi | PTI Photo

New Delhi: As India celebrated its 72nd Republic Day Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi wore a bright red bandhej (a type of tie-dye textile) headgear with yellow dots during the celebratory parade — a gift from the royal family of Jamnagar in Gujarat.

The prime minister is known to don a special pagdi, a symbol of royalty, power and status, every year on Republic Day and Independence Day. These are usually of the bandhej variety, a technique especially practiced in Rajasthan, Gujarat and parts of Uttar Pradesh.

On the 71st Republic Day last year, the PM had donned a saffron-coloured bandhej headgear.

In 2014, for his first Independence Day address as prime minister, Modi had worn a Jodhpuri bandhej turban in bright red and green. During the 2019 Independence Day celebrations, he wore one that matched the colours of the Indian flag.

The PM usually wears pagdis in warm tones of yellow, orange and red, specifically between 565 and 740 nanometres in wavelength on the spectrum of light, during these special occasions.


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PM’s ‘halari pagdi

Many took to Twitter Tuesday to praise the PM’s traditional ‘halari pagdi’ this year.

According to an ANI report, the royal family of Jamnagar holds “special respect globally”. In the 1940s, Maharaja Jamsaheb Digvijay Singh Jadeja of the Jamnagar royal family had saved some 1,000 Polish children during World War 2.

The PM’s special pagdi, along with his long white beard, also sparked speculations on social media that he was trying to emulate poet Rabindranath Tagore and novelist Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, also known a Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay, ahead of the West Bengal assembly elections this year.

Some users said his pagdi resembled the one that was worn by Indian historian and the founder of Brahmo Sabha, Raja Rammohan Roy.


Also read: 1971 to 2021 – We fought together, now Bangladesh Army marches with us on Republic Day