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 Festivals of India

In India , the celebrations of fairs and festivals form a wondrous and joyful series of events, marking the rites of passage between birth, death and renewal. There are said to be more festivals in India than there are days of the year; not unlikely in a country where small, local village rituals of worship and propitiation are celebrated with as much as fervor as are high holy days across the nation, occasions that can draw floods of people numbering half a million or more. Fairs and festivals are moments of remembrance and commemoration of the birthdays and great deeds of gods, goddesses, hero's, heroine's, gurus, prophet's and saints. They are times when people gather together, linked by ties of shared social and religious beliefs. Each of India 's many religious groups - Hindus, Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains and others - has its own such days.

Important Festivals of India for the Year 2005

View Indian Festival Calendar

January

February

March

April

Jan 14

-

Pongal

Jan 14

-

Makar Sankranti

Jan 26

-

Republic Day

Feb 14

-

Valentine's Day

Feb 20

-

Muharram (Tajiya)

Mar 08

-

Maha Shivaratri

Mar 25

-

Holi

Mar 26

-

Dhulivandan

Mar 27

-

Easter

.

Apr 09

-

Gudi Padwa

Apr 09

-

Ugadi

Apr 13

-

Baisakhi

Apr 18

-

Ram Navami

Apr 22

-

Mahavir Jayanti

Apr 22

-

Id-e-Milad

Apr 24

-

Hanuman Jayanti

May

June

July

August

May 08

-

Mother's Day

May 23

-

Buddha Purnima

Jun 19

-

Father's Day

Jul 21

-

Guru Purnima

Aug 10

-

Nag Panchami

Aug 15

-

Independence Day

Aug 19

-

Raksha Bandhan

Aug 20

-

Pateti

Aug 27

-

Janmashtami

September

October

November

December

Sep 07

-

Ganesh Chaturthi

Sep 17

-

Anant Chaturdashi

Oct 02

-

Gandhi Jayanti

Oct 12

-

Dassera

Oct 20

-

Karva Chauth

Oct 30

-

Dhanteras

Nov 01

-

Diwali

Nov 01

-

Lakshmi Puja

Nov 03

-

Bhai Dooj

Nov 04

-

Ramzan Id

Nov 15

-

Guru Nanak Jayanti

Dec 25

-

Christmas             

The ancient tradition of celebrating festivals goes back to the Vedic times of the Aryans. The Vedic scriptures and literature give many references to festivals when celebrations where carried on to honor gods, rivers, trees, mountains, the coming of monsoons, the end of winter or the first flush of spring. The celebrations included not only fasting and prayers, but also equally events of social and cultural significance. Performances of music, dance and drama took place side by side with more rugged physical activities: displays of valor and virility through chariot and boat races or wrestling matches and animal fights in which rams, wild bulls, elephants, oxen, horses and even rhinoceroses took part. Then, as always, there was much feasting and merriment to be enjoyed. There were YAJNAS (sacrificial fires), where milk, clarified butter and ghee were offered to gods before being shared between worshippers. Special foods were cooked and served, prepared from freshly harvested crops. Elaborate garlands and ropes of flowers were woven as an offering to the gods and also to be worn over festive robes and jewelry. Such an assembly provided opportunity to trade, buy and sell all manner if goods, from live stock to silks, spices and handcrafted objects of ritual or daily use.

A ncient Indians used to express these occasions through the words 'SAMAJA' (a gathering of people), 'UTSAVA' (a festival) and 'YATRA' (a pilgrimage or temple chariot procession). And though today we might use the word 'MELA' (meaning a fair) rather than a SAMAJA, it is astonishing how steadily and faithfully these traditions have endured over the centuries. Even today, festivals are symbolic of a link between the home, the villages and a larger outside world. Within the home, celebrations are expressed by the love and care given to its decoration by the women of the house; the freshly washed courtyards are embellished with designs made in flower petals, colored powder or rice flour; walls are painted with scenes from the epics is made brilliant with bits of mirrored glass; doorways are hung with auspicious mango leaves or marigold flowers. Each festival in each religion has its own particular foods and sweets appropriate to the season and crops, and days are spent in their careful preparation.



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