Bhilwara: Harni Kalan village celebrates its Holi in a way that immediately stands out in Rajasthan, a state where the crackle of Holika Dahan bonfires is usually the festival’s defining sound. In Harni, there is no pyre built from cut wood, no ritual fire lit to mark the climax. Instead, the village gathers to worship a silver Holi and a golden Bhakt Prahlad—a tradition born not from novelty, but from necessity after fire turned celebration into catastrophe.The shift began 65 to 70 years ago, after a massive fire during Holika Dahan that escalated into disputes and forced the community to confront what the ritual had started to cost them.Sohanlal Teli and Gheesalal Jat recalled how the fire damaged crops, fences, and livestock, and led to disputes in the village. It was then that the village panch and elders met to find a solution. After much deliberation, it was decided that instead of Holika Dahan, villagers would raise funds to carve Holika out of approximately 500gms of silver and a gold Bhakt Prahlad from 10 gms of gold. Since then, Harni Kalan celebrate Holi with a grand procession and musical bands with the festive rituals at Charbhujanath temple. The decision was not framed as abandoning faith, but as protecting it—preserving the meaning of Holi while removing the element that had repeatedly harmed the village. The elders’ meeting at the temple became the moment Harni replaced bonfire with symbols crafted to be carried, worshipped, and returned—without flames, without smoke, without the risk of a spark jumping into fields or homes. Temple priest Gopal Lal Sharma said, “Now our village is known for its unique tradition where silver Holi and gold Prahlad are worshipped.”
Silver Holi, golden Prahlad: Raj village that shunned fire | Jaipur News