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Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Tripura tribals’ traditional cloth ‘Rignai Pachra’, Tripureswari temple’s ‘Pera’ get GI tag

Two Tripura products — ‘Pera’ (a sweet item) of famous Tripureswari temple and the ‘Rignai Pachra’, a traditional attire of tribal women, have accorded the geographical indication (GI) tag, Chief Minister Manik Saha said on Sunday.

Expressing his joy after two Tripura products received GI tags, the Chief Minister in his social media posts said: “I am extremely glad that ‘Pera’ (sweet or prasad) of Tripureswari temple and ‘Rignai Pachra’, a traditional cloth of tribal women, have been given the GI tag.”

He said that the ‘Pera’ (or Peda) of Tripureswari temple made of milk and sugar, and ‘Rignai Pachra’ cloth were made by the tribals, specially the women in their thousands of handwoven looms in their homes.

The famous ‘Pera’ item traditionally used as ‘prasad’ (god offering) at the Tripurasundari temple at Udaipur in Tripura’s Gomati district, 64 km south of Agartala.

More than 260-year-old Tripurasundari temple is one of the 51 holy or shaktipitha and venerated sites in India and third such temple in eastern India after Kali temple in Kolkata’s Kalighat and Kamakhya temple in Guwahati.

The ‘Rignai Pachra’ is a handwoven cloth used as tribal women’s upper garment, and also as headgear or a stole, and it is also given to others as a gift as a mark of love and respect.

(This article has been published via a syndicated feed)

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