Home / Sunday-mid-day / Article / Tejashree Ingawale’s moving performance of Ambebaicha Gondhal, inspired by her grandmother, has captivated Instagram with its raw devotion

Tejashree Ingawale’s moving performance of Ambebaicha Gondhal, inspired by her grandmother, has captivated Instagram with its raw devotion

Her soul-stirring rendition of Marathi bhaktigeet, Ambebaicha gondhal, has fired up Instagram. Tejashree Ingawale tells us how she was moved by her grandmother’s spirit in the moment

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Tejashree Ingawale left her job in advertising to pursue loksangeet practiced by her ancestors

Tejashree Ingawale left her job in advertising to pursue loksangeet practiced by her ancestors

On October 10, Tejashree Ingawale uploaded a video on her Instagram account (@tejashree_ingawale), singing a song that her grandmother Bhagirathi Ingawale taught her. The lokgeet and bhaktigeet singer was overwhelmed by the public response — the video has racked up over 11,000 likes in less than a fortnight.

She recalls recording the video on a sudden whim, moved by her grandmother’s spirit. “Diwali was around the corner,” she says, “I was missing my grandmother. I took a break from Diwali cleaning, and just picked up the ektara and sang to feel close to her. I did not expect the response I received.”  The 37-year-old hails from the third generation of a lineage of bhakti singers, and had grown up with fakirs and sants coming over to sing and worship with her grandparents. Her great-grandfather was, in fact, taught by Jangli Maharaj, the 19th-century sage who lived in Pune, where he continues to draw a large following.

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