Welcome to Khagol Mandal, Gateway to the Cosmos

Every Wednesday evening, a group of people meet at Sadhana Vidyalaya in Sion, Mumbai, to consider matters relating to the sky. This meeting, from 6.30 pm to 8.30 pm, gives them a glimpse into the movement of planets and stars, meteors and comets, and the many ways in which they’re studied.

On Sunday evenings, another similarly inclined group meets at the Vidya Prabodhini School in Nashik from 6 pm to 8 pm.

These meetings have been taking place since 1985, when a group of friends got together and formed an organisation called Khagol Mandal. Its mission is to popularise astronomy. Earlier this year, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) recognised this group’s efforts and gave them a grant for their ‘Astronomers on Foot’ programme.

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“Khagol Mandal was set up by a group of six people led by Dilip Joshi,” to Abhay Deshpande, the group’s honorary coordinator. “Four of them were from a non-science background, and two of them from science. We provide a forum where people can interact with each other, bringing their queries and discoveries and discoveries about astronomy, they can listen to lectures, go on trips where we see the sky through the telescope, and have questions answered by scientists.”

He said that about 25 people regularly attend its Mumbai meetings and around 40, the ones at Nashik. Khagol Mandal also conducts “dozens of programmes and sky shows” attended by numerous others.

The astronomers on foot

When they first began, Khagol Mandal was active in six different centres: Mumbai, Thane, Panvel, Dombivli, Badlapur and Nashik. In 1995, they merged the centres in the Mumbai region, and the one in Nashik extended its activities to areas adjoining the district.

In this setup, they have identified the coastal belt of Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts as the focus of their ‘Astronomers on Foot’ programme. They also plan to cover the tribal areas of Malegaon and Nandurbar.

This project will: