Festivals of India 2011
Indian Festivals, celebrated by varied cultures and through their special rituals, add to the colours of the Indian Heritage. Some festivals welcome the seasons of the year, the harvest, the rains, or the full moon. Others celebrate religious occasions, the birthdays of divine beings, saints, and gurus (revered teachers), or the advent of the New Year. A number of these festivals are common to most parts of India. However, they may be called by different names in various parts of the country or may be celebrated in a different fashion.
Many festivals celebrate the various harvests; commemorate great historical figures and events, while many express devotion to the deities of different religions.
Every celebration is centered around the rituals of prayer, seeking blessings, exchanging goodwill, decorating houses, wearing new clothes, music, dance and feasting.
In India every region and every religion has something to celebrate. The festivals reflect the vigour and life-style of its people. Vibrant colours, music and festivity make the country come alive throughout the year.
The emphasis laid on the different festivals differs in different parts of the country. For instance, Navaratri is celebrated with maximum fervour in West Bengal as compared to that in other parts of the country. Holi is celebrated with gusto in the north, and although it is also observed in the western and eastern parts of India, in the south it is almost unknown. There are also a few regional festivals like Pongal in Tamil Nadu; Onam in Kerala and the various other temple festivals devoted to the specific patron Gods and Goddesses of the temples, which are celebrated exclusively in those areas, which may be limited to one or a few villages. This galaxy of festivals that exist do contribute in inter-spicing Indian life with gaiety and colour as also in giving the country the distinction of having the maximum number of holidays.
The portal for Festivals of India, www.FestivalsofIndia.in, is the stage drafted to endow the browser with rituals, traditions, legends held behind different festivals, vis-Ã -vis providing an interactive media to seek the suggestions, guidance and knowledge of our viewers. The portal has a month-wise listing of different festivals celebrated throughout India with great enthusiasm, from January to December schedule of all the festivals.
Pan India Internet Pvt. Ltd. has taken the initiative to provide www.FestivalsofIndia.in as one interactive platform that could open the door to the vivid festivals of India, providing the detailed information regarding the rituals, traditions and legends of the festivals.
India is a fascinating land of festivals where each festival is marked with a deep philosophical implication and presents an unmatched diction to the splendor of that particular carnival. Like other months, September opens its basket of varied important festivals which are celebrated unanimously all over the country.
September 2011 marks the birth anniversaries of Hindu deities like including Lord Ganesha - Ganesh Chaturthi, Goddess Radha - Radha Asthmi, etc. Various other festivals mark the end of a holy month of fasting like Paryushan Parv in Jainism while Keralites celebrate their harvest in Onam.
September corresponds to Hindu months of Bhadrapad and Ashwin. The period of first fifteen days of Ashwin month is referred as Pitr paksh in Hinduism which is dedicated to the Sraddha of departed souls in the family who had met eternity on that particular day/tithi. The month also has several important days including Teachers Day, Engineer's day, World Ozone Day, International Literacy Day etc.
Many festivals celebrate the various harvests; commemorate great historical figures and events, while many express devotion to the deities of different religions.
Every celebration is centered around the rituals of prayer, seeking blessings, exchanging goodwill, decorating houses, wearing new clothes, music, dance and feasting.
In India every region and every religion has something to celebrate. The festivals reflect the vigour and life-style of its people. Vibrant colours, music and festivity make the country come alive throughout the year.
The emphasis laid on the different festivals differs in different parts of the country. For instance, Navaratri is celebrated with maximum fervour in West Bengal as compared to that in other parts of the country. Holi is celebrated with gusto in the north, and although it is also observed in the western and eastern parts of India, in the south it is almost unknown. There are also a few regional festivals like Pongal in Tamil Nadu; Onam in Kerala and the various other temple festivals devoted to the specific patron Gods and Goddesses of the temples, which are celebrated exclusively in those areas, which may be limited to one or a few villages. This galaxy of festivals that exist do contribute in inter-spicing Indian life with gaiety and colour as also in giving the country the distinction of having the maximum number of holidays.
The portal for Festivals of India, www.FestivalsofIndia.in, is the stage drafted to endow the browser with rituals, traditions, legends held behind different festivals, vis-Ã -vis providing an interactive media to seek the suggestions, guidance and knowledge of our viewers. The portal has a month-wise listing of different festivals celebrated throughout India with great enthusiasm, from January to December schedule of all the festivals.
Pan India Internet Pvt. Ltd. has taken the initiative to provide www.FestivalsofIndia.in as one interactive platform that could open the door to the vivid festivals of India, providing the detailed information regarding the rituals, traditions and legends of the festivals.
September (Bhadrapad/Ashwin) :
India is a fascinating land of festivals where each festival is marked with a deep philosophical implication and presents an unmatched diction to the splendor of that particular carnival. Like other months, September opens its basket of varied important festivals which are celebrated unanimously all over the country.
September 2011 marks the birth anniversaries of Hindu deities like including Lord Ganesha - Ganesh Chaturthi, Goddess Radha - Radha Asthmi, etc. Various other festivals mark the end of a holy month of fasting like Paryushan Parv in Jainism while Keralites celebrate their harvest in Onam.
September corresponds to Hindu months of Bhadrapad and Ashwin. The period of first fifteen days of Ashwin month is referred as Pitr paksh in Hinduism which is dedicated to the Sraddha of departed souls in the family who had met eternity on that particular day/tithi. The month also has several important days including Teachers Day, Engineer's day, World Ozone Day, International Literacy Day etc.
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