Colorful Sohrai Festival Preparations Brighten Villages Near Jamshedpur
Tribal Women Decorate Mud Houses With Traditional Sohrai Paintings
Key Points:
- Villagers prepare for five-day Sohrai festival celebrating nature and cattle
- Women create wall art using clay, lime, and natural colors
- Festival highlights gratitude toward animals and agricultural prosperity
JAMSHEDPUR – Tribal villages around Jamshedpur are alive with color as residents prepare for the traditional Sohrai festival celebrating nature and livestock.
In villages such as Karandih, Sarjamda, Ranidih, Haludbani, Purihasa, Talsa, Nara, Kacha, Bedadhipa, Bagbera, and Gadra Govindpur, mud houses have been decorated like brides. The walls, coated with clay, have turned into canvases for tribal women and girls who are painting stunning Sohrai motifs using mud, lime, cow dung, and natural pigments.
These paintings portray herds of animals, trees, plants, and scenes of village life that reflect rural philosophy and seasonal change. Sohrai marks gratitude toward cattle after the harvest. Farmers bathe, oil, and decorate their livestock before offering prayers.
The festival begins a day after Diwali with bull worship and continues for five days. It honors the balance between earth, water, air, and life. Women sing group songs praying for good harvests, wealth, and family prosperity. Meanwhile, men beat drums and nagaras, filling villages with rhythmic energy.
In these villages, mornings begin with women cleaning courtyards and coating walls with cow dung and clay before painting designs in white, red, yellow, and black. Common motifs include cows, bulls, peacocks, deer, elephants, and horses.
One local woman expressed, “We wait all year for Sohrai. For five days we decorate our homes with natural colors to preserve our traditions for future generations. We do not make our cattle work during these days. We also prepare sweets like pitha and perform tribal dances.”
The vibrant celebration reflects not only devotion but also the enduring cultural identity of Jharkhand’s tribal heritage.



