Experience the Colorful Chaos: Kathmandu’s Holi Festival and Cultural Richness Revealed
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When Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital, explodes into a vibrant wash of color, it’s a scene made for TV. On streets where millennia of tradition mingle with everyday life, the world of gods and humans unfurls in the series’ final chapter.

EBS 1TV’s World Theme Travel airs the fourth episode, Kathmandu: A Giant Canvas, on April 16 as the finale of its Gods and Humans: Nepal series. Following the old royal city of Patan and Kathmandu’s winding alleys, the episode spotlights the region’s colorful culture, deep-rooted faith and lively festivals — the places where tradition and daily life are most tightly woven.
First stop: Patan, nicknamed the “living museum.” At Patan Durbar Square, centuries stack up from the Licchavi era through the Malla dynasty. Narrow alleys still use the ancient communal water systems called hiti, a reminder that the past isn’t shelved — it’s part of how people live now.
Farther down the lanes, the cameras catch everyday meals. At Dalli Market, vendors flip Nepalese pancakes called bara and prepare the raw-meat dish kuchila, showing how food is central to daily life. The episode also visits Kumari Ghar, where the living goddess Kumari is revered, exploring how Nepal’s unique beliefs and rituals continue to thrive.
The program also captures Maha Shivaratri, one of Hinduism’s biggest festivals. Sadhus — holy men who smear ash over their bodies and perform austere rituals — gather in the streets for the “Great Night of Shiva.” People sip masala chai through the night, and the city takes on the vibe of a single, sprawling ceremony.
Elsewhere in Kathmandu’s alleys, the bamboo flute murali drifts through the air, and worshippers flock to shops selling the black Shaligram stone, a symbol of Vishnu. Religion, music and daily life blend seamlessly, giving the city its unmistakable character.
The episode’s showstopper is Holi, the festival of colors. As spring deepens, Kathmandu turns into a giant canvas of powdered pigments and splashing water. People smear color on faces and douse one another as they celebrate — a moment when social, religious and ethnic lines blur and strangers become friends.
With cries of “Holi hai!” ringing out, even strangers can feel like neighbors. That spontaneous mixing of classes and communities captures Kathmandu’s essence: a place where ancient tradition and modern life coexist effortlessly.
World Theme Travel — Gods and Humans: Nepal wraps up with this fourth episode. From snowy peaks to bustling streets, and from sacred rituals to everyday routines, the series traces lives that reveal Nepal’s many-layered charm. Kathmandu: A Giant Canvas airs April 16 at 8:40 p.m. on EBS 1TV.











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