La Festa della Luce, il Deepavali, è – secondo la liturgia Induista – la celebrazione della luce sulle tenebre, del bene sul male, del sapere sull’ignoranza: mi sembrava giusto stamani, dopo che mi hanno raggiunto ancora commenti da parte di amici sul risultato delle elezioni americane, ironicamente fare tappa in un paio di templi per scattare qualche foto a quello che resta della festa celebrata una decina di giorni fa.

La festa è molto sentita tra i fedeli che dedicano preghiere e offerte a Lakshimi, dea della salute, della fortuna e della prosperità: nata dal brodo primordiale dell’oceano iniziale, Lakshimi (chiamata anche Siri, e qui vediamo affinità con la funzione di supporto vocale dei prodotti Apple), nell’epopea religiosa induista scelse Vishnu come suo eterno consorte, seguendolo sempre nelle sue trasmutazione terrene.

Foto? Qualche scatto di oggi con la Signora Tedesca a Telemetro, e via di fretta che c’ho da fare ….

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It has been more than fifty years since I began traveling across the world — and the seven seas — for work or for pleasure, always with a Leica M camera close at hand. The camera has never been an accessory; it has been a constant companion, a way of observing, remembering, and making sense of the places and people I encountered along the way. I started keeping this kind of journal some time ago, not as a diary in the traditional sense, but as a space where images and words could meet. This is not a publication driven by schedules or algorithms. At times I disappear for long stretches; then, inevitably, I return with semi-regular updates. Publishing, for me, is a mirror of my state of mind and emotions. It follows my rhythm, not the other way around. You have to take it exactly as it comes. Every photograph you see here is mine. They are fragments of a life spent moving, looking, and waiting for moments to reveal themselves — often quietly, sometimes unexpectedly. This blog is not about destinations, but about presence. About what remains when the journey slows down and the shutter finally clicks.

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