From northern India, a singular sufi ‘seduction’

by JEFF LUNDEN

PHOTO/Roysten Abel

The Manganiyar Seduction begins in almost complete darkness — light bulbs faintly illuminate 36 human-sized rectangular boxes on a large four-tier set. Then the sound of a khamacha, an Indian stringed instrument, breaks the silence.

A formerly nomadic group, they live in Rajasthan, a desert region in India, and have a kind of hybrid faith themselves.

“They have the Muslim saints and they worship Allah,” Abel says. “And then they also have their … Hindu goddesses. And they sing to both,” he says. “Like, there would not be any difference if they were to sing a Sufi Islam mystic song or if they were to sing a Hindu mystic song. It would be with the equal amount of devotion.”

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