Diwali in Shillong: A sparkly, crackling affair
In Shillong, Diwali doesn’t just arrive—it barges in like an overenthusiastic relative, hands full of sweets, lights, and a penchant for chaos.
The capital city has transformed into a glittering, bustling carnival with crowded markets, dazzling lights on houses and bursting of loud firecrackers that rings in your ears for a while.
You don’t walk through the markets—you shuffle, elbow-to-elbow with people haggling over diyas, kids eyeing sparkler stashes, and laddoos and the eternal soan papdis.
Shillongites take the “festival of lights” very seriously. Houses don’t just get lit up; they’re decked out like they’re competing with each other. Kids scamper around, throwing firecrackers on roads, compelling pedestrians to watch every step to avoid being at the receiving end.
Stray dogs run for cover and pets at home, except for the adventurous ones, find the safest corner of the house, giving up food and their evening walks with their owners.
Bursting crackers is less a tradition and more a citywide symphony of booms, pops, and the occasional eardrum piercing sutli bomb also known as atom bomb (not the one credited to Robert Oppenheimer).
Every year, there’s that one neighbourhood uncle who swears he’s mastered the “rocket bomb”, only to send it spinning into another neighbour’s house.
By the end of Diwali, Shillong will turn into a hazy, happy mess—streets littered with cracker wrappers, and markets finally catching their breath.
Everyone’s stuffed with sweets, so much so that the blood sugar levels show a spike, slightly deaf from the firecrackers, grinning, exhausted but satisfied.
Wishing all a safe and prosperous Diwali.
Manipur Rajbari of Shillong: A historical hook
Long before Shillong became this state’s capital, it briefly stood at the crossroads of Manipur’s destiny. The Manipur Rajbari, recently demolished, was more than a residence; it was the site of a defining political moment in India’s post-Independence history.
It was here, on September 21, 1949, that Maharaja Bodhchandra Singh of Manipur signed the Instrument of Accession, merging his kingdom with the Indian Union. The event, reported in The Shillong Times edition of September 27, 1949, carried the headline: “Manipur ‘Annexed’ by New Delhi — Maharaja Signs Agreement at Shillong.” That front page now reads like a time capsule — a reminder of how Shillong once played host to a moment that reshaped the Northeast’s political map.
The Rajbari, built to house the Manipur royal family during their stays in the hill capital, stood as a living trace of that transition — an intersection of monarchy, diplomacy and identity. Over decades, its walls bore silent witness to visits, ceremonies, and cultural exchanges between the two hill states.
With its demolition, Shillong has lost not just an old structure, but a tangible link to the story of India’s unification — a historical hook pulled abruptly from the city’s layered memory.





