Kolkata: Lakhs of people offered ''tarpan'' on the auspicious Mahalaya across West Bengal on Thursday, while Durga Puja festivities this year are going to start more than a month later in an unusual departure from the traditional seven-day gap.
The day started with lakhs of people paying obeisance to their forefathers on the banks of Hooghly and other rivers and water bodies across the state amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
The early morning rendition of Mahishasur Mardini -- a collection of shlokas and songs dedicated to Goddess Durga -- was aired on the All India Radio (AIR), marking the beginning of the festive season.
Mahishasur Mardini was the first broadcast as a live programme on AIR in the early 1930s. Since then it has become a Mahalaya morning ''ritual''.
River traffic police kept a strict vigil along the various ghats of Hooghly to prevent any untoward incident. Adequate security measures have been taken at the 18 ghats in Kolkata where devotees are offering ''tarpan'', officials said.
With the day marking the end of Pitri Pakshya, elders of the family paid homage to their ancestors by performing tarpan, a ritual in which water is offered to the ancestor's souls.
Senior officers of Kolkata Police have been posted at the ghats while civic police volunteers have been deployed to manage social distancing.
Vehicular movements on the roads around the ghats have also been restricted, police said.