The first grand worship of Goddess Durga in recorded history is said to have been celebrated
in the late 1500s. Folklores say the landlords, or zamindar, of Dinajpur and Malda initiated the
first Durga Puja in Bengal. According to another source, Raja Kangshanarayan of Taherpur or
Bhabananda Mazumdar of Nadiya organized the first Sharadiya or Autumn Durga Puja in Bengal in c.
1606.
The origin of the community puja can be credited to the twelve friends of Guptipara in Hoogly,
West Bengal, who collaborated and collected contributions from local residents to conduct the
first community puja called the 'baro-yaari' puja, or the 'twelve-pal' puja, in 1790. The
baro-yaari puja was brought to Kolkata in 1832 by Raja Harinath of Cossimbazar, who performed
the Durga Puja at his ancestral home in Murshidabad from 1824 to 1831, notes Somendra Chandra
Nandy in 'Durga Puja: A Rational Approach' published in The Statesman Festival, 1991.
The Baro-yaari puja gave way to the sarbajanin or community puja in 1910, when the Sanatan
Dharmotsahini
Sabha organized the first truly community puja in Baghbazar in Kolkata with full public
contribution,
public control, and public participation. Now the dominant mode of Bengali Durga Puja is the
'public'
version, write M. D. Muthukumaraswamy and Molly Kaushal in Folklore, Public Sphere, and Civil
Society.
The institution of the community Durga Puja in the 18th and the 19th century Bengal contributed
vigorously to the development of Hindu Bengali culture.
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