Prime Minister Narendra Modi attended a massive Bagurumba dance performance in Guwahati, Assam, featuring over 10,000 artistes from across the state. Titled 'Bagurumba Dwhou 2026', the event celebrated Bodo culture and heritage
Bagurumba is a folk dance of the Bodo community. PIC/X
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday witnessed a performance of the traditional Bagurumba dance of the Bodo community here, with over 10,000 artistes participating in the programme. Modi, who arrived in Assam on a two-day visit, had said the programme celebrates Bodo culture and reaffirmed the government's commitment to fulfilling the aspirations of the community.
"This programme celebrates the great Bodo culture. The NDA Government at the Centre and in Assam are working extensively to fulfil the vision of Bodofa Upendranath Brahma," the prime minister said in a post on X on Friday. Brahma, a revered leader of the Bodo community, died of a terminal illness in 1990 at the age of 34 and was posthumously honoured with the title 'Bodofa' (guardian of the Bodos).
Governor Lakshman Prasad Acharya and Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma, among others, accompanied Modi in witnessing the performance.
Titled 'Bagurumba Dwhou 2026', the performance was held at the Arjun Bhogeswar Baruah Stadium in the city's Sarusajai area. Over 10,000 artistes, including around 8,000 dancers from 81 assembly constituencies across 23 districts, participated in the event.
Bagurumba symbolises blooming flowers, harmony between human life and the natural world
Bagurumba, a folk dance of the Bodo community -- one of Assam's largest indigenous groups -- is deeply rooted in nature and symbolises blooming flowers and harmony between human life and the natural world. Performed traditionally by women, with men accompanying them as musicians, the dance features graceful movements imitating butterflies, birds, leaves and flowers.
The Guwahati presentation incorporates the word 'dwhou', meaning wave in the Bodo language, and was accompanied by songs in Bodo and traditional instruments such as kham, serja, sifung, jatha and japshring, several of which carry Geographical Indication tags. Closely associated with festivals like Bwisagu, the Bodo New Year, and Domasi, Bagurumba represents peace, fertility, joy and collective harmony.
The programme involved several Bodo organisations, with 25 experts training 400 master trainers in Guwahati, who then coached the artistes in their respective districts. The state government has organised similar large-scale performances of Bihu and Jhumoir dances over the past two years.
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