Gul Panag shared the experience of visit to Chennai, appeared in traditional style with family
Mumbai, September 28 (IANS). Actress Gul Panag recently visited Chennai. He shared the special moments of his visit on social media with fans on Sunday. The photos posted on Instagram are generously seen in traditional South Indian costumes with her family. Gul wore a green blouse with a white sari which he decorated with neck piece and earrings. At the same time, her husband Rishi Attari and son Nihal also adopted a traditional look in shirt and Dhoti. Along with these photos, Gul also wrote an emotional heading explaining the importance of his children’s experience and journey. Gul and her husband belong to both army families. He wrote: “My husband and I grew up as Army Army Brats (whose parents served in the army), we had to change the school and city every year. We both gave life to the ability to adopt many changes, live the spirit and the cultural diversity of India. Gul said that she and her husband want her son to get out of books and feel the culture. He said: “Our journey took place during the Onam festival, which is considered the most important festival of Kerala, but in Chennai it is also celebrated with enthusiasm.” Gul said that Nihal read at school, so it was a real opportunity for him to make it alive. The hotel staff made his experience more special. He arranged traditional clothing for him, Onam’s special festival ‘sadya’ (food served on banana leaf), traveling to Kapleshwar -Temple and Saree shopping. Gul also said he was also taught a traditional South Indian board game named Pallanguji, which has now become his family’s favorite game. He said: “It was not a classroom studies for Nihal. It was the joy of the bells of the temple, new taste and parents to see in traditional clothing.” For them, this journey was not just to see places, but to feel the culture and to take the experience of new things as well as new things at home. He said that Brats calls children whose childhood is spent in different places because their parents are in the army and that they have to change home again and again because of their work. -Ians ns/abm