In India, people had fun rubbing cow feces on their faces and throwing them at each other like snowballs

The Last Days of Diwali, the Dung Festival, one of the most important local events in India, were celebrated by local people rubbing cow feces on each other's faces.
Moments of celebrating people throwing cow dung at each other like snowballs were also captured.


The Last Days of Diwali, the fertilizer Festival, which is one of the most important local events in India, were again the scene of familiar images. Animal excrement collected in trailers pulled by cows was piled in front of temples, accompanied primarily by Hindu priests.

THEY THREW IT LIKE SNOWBALLS 


Indians gathered in rural areas took cow dung in their hands throughout the festival, rubbing it in each other's faces and throwing it at each other like snowballs.


MEAT CUTTING WAS BANNED


According to the belief of the natives, the god named Beereshwara Swamy was born in cow excrement. In India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a Hindu nationalist, had recently banned meat slaughter for a long time in many Indian states, pressing for greater protection of animals.