Nearly 200 Indian
villagers have shaved their heads to mourn the death of a monkey from their
local temple.
The macaque drowned
when it fell into a pond after being chased by dogs.
Afraid that its
death may bring them bad luck, the villagers held a funeral procession and
cremated the animal according to Hindu rituals. Another 700 villagers shaved
their beards off.
Monkeys are
considered sacred by Hindus and there are temples dedicated to monkey god
Hanuman across India.
Hanuman is
generally depicted with a human body, a red monkey's face and a tail and his
followers believe that worshiping him will liberate them from fear and danger.
The dead monkey was
one of a pair that lived near a small Hanuman temple in Dakachya village in the
central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, village resident Mithun Patel said.
It drowned on 2
September and its body was discovered by the villagers the next day.
"The village elders said a monkey dying inside the village
is very inauspicious. We were afraid it might bring us bad luck, a natural
calamity," Mr Patel said.
"So we decided to propitiate the monkey's soul to
ensure nothing untoward happened in our village."
After the monkey was cremated, the local men shaved their
heads and beards as a sign of mourning.
A group of villagers also travelled to the Hindu holy town
of Haridwar to immerse the monkey's ashes in the holy river Ganges.
The customary "11th-day feast to pray for the
monkey's soul" was put off by a day and held on Sunday so that school
children could also attend, Mr Patel said.
MACAQUE MONKEYS ARE FOUND ALL OVER INDIA
Thousands of residents from four nearby villages also
participated in the feast, which cost 150,000 rupees ($2,459; £1,506) to organize.
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