Pujabarshiki Sananda 2012
Durga Puja, also called Durgotsava, is an annual Hindu festival in the Indian subcontinent that reveres the goddess Durga. It is particularly popular in West Bengal. Issuu is a digital publishing platform that makes it simple to publish magazines, catalogs, newspapers, books, and more online. Easily share your publications and get. Durga Puja Wikipedia. Durga Puja. Also called. Akaal Bodhan, Durgotsava Bengali pronunciation durotb, Durgotsava helpinfo, Sharadotsav, Dussahara. Observed by. Bengali ,Odia, Maithils1 and Assamese as a socio cultural and religious festival2Type. Hindu. Celebrations. Family and other social gatherings, shopping and gift giving, feasting, pandal visiting, lighting decorations, cultural events, idol immersion etc. Observances. Ceremonial worship of goddess Durga. Begins. Sixth day of Ashwin shukla paksha3Seventh day of Ashwin shukla paksha in BiharEnds. Tenth day of Ashwina shukla paksha32. September 3. 0 September. October 1. 9 October. Pujabarshiki Sananda 2012' title='Pujabarshiki Sananda 2012' />Book info 125 Megabytes and Good Quality Book Courtesy All Magazine India Book Review Kishor Bharati Sharadia 2017 1424 is Monthly Edition of Kishore Bharati. NATOK SAMAGRA Vol 2 by Manoj Mitra, Publisher Mitra Ghosh, ISBN 8172932537. Frequencyannual. Related to. Mahalaya, Navratri, Dussehra. Durga idol prepared for Durga Puja. Durga Puja, also called Durgotsava, is an annual Hindu festival in the Indian subcontinent that reveres the goddess Durga. It is particularly popular in West Bengal, Bihar67, Odisha, Assam, Tripura, Bangladesh and the diaspora from this region, and also in Nepal where it is called Dashain. The festival is observed in the Hindu calendar month of Ashvin, typically September or October of the Gregorian calendar, and is a multi day festival that features elaborate temple and stage decorations pandals, scripture recitation, performance arts, revelry, and processions. It is a major festival in the Shaktism tradition of Hinduism across India and Shakta Hindu diaspora. Durga Puja festival marks the battle of goddess Durga with the shape shifting, deceptive and powerful buffalo demon Mahishasura, and her emerging victorious. Thus, the festival epitomises the victory of Good over Evil, but it also is in part a harvest festival that marks the goddess as the motherly power behind all of life and creation. The Durga Puja festival dates coincide with Vijayadashami Dussehra observed by other traditions of Hinduism, where the Ram Lila is enacted, victory of Rama is marked and effigies of demon Ravana are burnt instead. The primary goddess revered during Durga Puja is Durga, but her stage and celebrations feature other major deities of Hinduism such as goddess Lakshmi goddess of wealth, prosperity, Saraswati goddess of knowledge and music, Ganesha god of good beginnings and Kartikeya god of war. The latter two are considered to be children of Durga Parvati. The Hindu god Shiva, as Durgas husband, is also revered during this festival. The festival begins on the first day with Mahalaya, marking Durgas advent in her battle against evil. Starting with the sixth day Sasthi, the goddess is welcomed, festive Durga worship and celebrations begin in elaborately decorated temples and pandals hosting the statues. Lakshmi and Saraswati are revered on the following days. The festival ends of the tenth day of Vijaya Dashami, when with drum beats of music and chants, Shakta Hindu communities start a procession carrying the colorful clay statues to a river or ocean and immerse them, as a form of goodbye and her return to divine cosmos and Mount Kailash. The festival is an old tradition of Hinduism, though it is unclear how and in which century the festival began. Surviving manuscripts from the 1. Durga puja, while historical records suggest royalty and wealthy families were sponsoring major Durga Puja public festivities since at least the 1. The prominence of Durga Puja increased during the British Raj in its provinces of Bengal and Assam. Durga Puja has been a ten day festival, of which the last five are typically special and an annual holiday in regions such as West Bengal and Tripura where it is particularly popular. In the contemporary era, the importance of Durga Puja is as much as a social festival as a religious one wherever it is observed. This is an idol of Durga Goddess also known as Parvati. Hindus worship idols and this is one of it which is hugely celebrated among the Hindus. This photo was captured at Ram Krishna Ashram Rishra at the third day of the four day celebration. In West Bengal, Assam, Odisha, Durga Puja is also called Akalbodhan, untimely awakening of Durga, Sharadiya Pujo autumnal worship, Sharodotsab Bengali, festival of autumn, Maha Pujo grand puja, Maayer Pujo worship of the Mother, Durga Pujo, or merely as Puja or Pujo. In Bangladesh, Durga Puja used to be celebrated as Bhagabati Puja. Durga Puja is also called Navaratri Puja elsewhere in India, such as in Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Kerala, and Maharashtra,2. Kullu Dussehra in Kullu Valley, Himachal Pradesh,2. Mysore Dussehra in Mysore, Karnataka,2. Bommai Golu in Tamil Nadu and Bommala koluvu in Andhra Pradesh. HistoryeditFurther information Durga. Durga is an ancient deity of Hinduism, according to archeological and textual evidence available. However, the origins of Durga Puja are unclear and undocumented. Surviving manuscripts from the 1. Durga Puja, while historical records suggest royalty and wealthy families were sponsoring major Durga Puja public festivities since at least the 1. The 1. 1th or 1. 2th century Jainism text Yasatilaka by Somadeva mentions a festival and annual dates dedicated to a warrior goddess, celebrated by the king and his armed forces, and the description mirrors attributes of a Durga Puja. The word Durga, and related terms appear in the Vedic literature, such as in the Rigveda hymns 4. Atharvaveda. 3. 13. A deity named Durgi appears in section 1. Taittiriya Aranyaka. While the Vedic literature uses the word Durga, the description therein lacks the legendary details about her or about Durga puja that is found in later Hindu literature. The Dadhimati Mata Temple of Rajasthan preserves a Durga related inscription from chapter 1. Mba International Business Projects Pdf here. Devi Mahatmya. The temple inscription has been dated by modern methods to 6. CE. 3. 6A key text associated with Durga Puja observations is Devi Mahatmya, which is recited during the festival. Durga was likely well established before the time this Hindu text was composed, which scholars variously estimate to between 4. CE. The Devi Mahatmya mythology describes the nature of demonic forces symbolized by Mahishasura as shape shifting, deceptive and adapting in nature, in form and in strategy to create difficulties and achieve their evil ends. Durga calmly understands and counters the evil in order to achieve her solemn goals. Durga, in her various forms, appears as an independent deity in the Epics period of ancient India, that is the centuries around the start of the common era. Both Yudhisthira and Arjuna characters of the Mahabharata invoke hymns to Durga. She appears in Harivamsa in the form of Vishnus eulogy, and in Pradyumna prayer. The prominent mention of Durga in this popular epics may have led to her worship. The Indian texts that mention the Durga Puja festival are inconsistent. The King Suratha legend found in some version of the Puranas mention it to be a spring festival, while the Devi Bhagavata Purana and two other Shakta Puranas mention it to be an autumn festival. The more ancient Ramayana manuscripts are also inconsistent. Versions of Ramayana found in North, West and South India describe the Hindu god Rama to be remembering the Surya the Sun god before his battle with the demon Ravana, but the Bengali manuscripts of Ramayana such as by the 1. Krttivasa describe Rama to be worshipping Durga.