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Bhopal: If first day of the Mahua Festival was about crafts and stalls, the second day belonged to stories — told not only through words but through dance, music and movement.Underway at the Madhya Pradesh Tribal Museum at Shyamal Hills in Bhopal, the second day carried a theme steeped in local legend: the life of Maharaja Chhatrasal, the brave Bundela warrior king recalled affectionately as Bundel Kesari.The evening unfolded as a special dance-drama tracing the king’s journey — from his battlefields to his courage, from his world to the values that shaped it. Rooted in Bundelkhand tradition, the performance transported viewers to a time when kings and tribes shared the same forests and fought for the same motherland.Throughout the day, the museum grounds came alive with folk dances, puppet shows and tribal performances that kept visitors thoroughly entertained.
What made them stand out was their blend of styles: some classical, some folk, and some in the Chhau tradition, where dancers use bold movements and vivid expressions to tell a story. Nearly all shared one thread — they were deep-rooted in history, revealing how people once lived in forests, how tribes celebrated and how they fought to protect what was theirs.Children in the crowd could not take their eyes off the puppet shows, laughing and pointing at every turn in the tale. The elders watched too, quietly smiling, as if what unfolded on stage was something they had seen or heard in their own childhood. It was that kind of evening. Simple. Warm. Real.





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