Sunday, November 6, 2011

The Important Holidays of India - India History - World History


There are many holidays and festivals in India. I will discuss the four important holidays of Holi, Diwali, Dussera, and Basanto commemorate.

Holi: The Fire Festival

The Hindu Fire Festival, called Holi or Basaat is celebrated

in India on the fifteenth day of the Light Half of the Moon, in the

Hindu month of Phalguna (March). Holi is a spring festival for

Hindus. It is celebrated before the monsoon, the great rainstorms

which come each year.

Holi is a joyous holiday and is celebrated by Hindus of all

ages. Boys and girls squirt water pistols, sometimes large pumps

filled with saffron or red-colored water. The Hindus favorite

colors are red, crimson and saffron.

In Bengal, the Holi festival is associated with the life of

Krishna, a Hindu god. In Bengal the colored powders are used

without the water, for the fun. Before indulging in a feast in

honor of Holi, the children change out of their sporty clothes that

are covered in red and put on fresh, clean garments. It is

customary to exchange gifts in honor of this spring festival.

Diwali: The Festival of Lights

The Hindu New Year, Diwali, is celebrated on the last night of

autumn, in October or November. It is a holiday which is

celebrated throughout India. It comes at the end of the monsoon

rains, when the weather is nice and mild, and lasts for five days.

For this holiday, daughters return to their parents' homes,

houses are cleared, walls are decorated with designs drawn in white

rice flour water and then colored. Business account books are

closed and new ones are opened ceremoniously, new clothes are worn

and friends are entertained. Before the festival, special food is

prepared to be offered in the Hindu temples.

In preparation and in honor of this festival of lights clay

saucers are filled with mustard oil and floating cotton wicks,

giving a soft, glowing light to the homes. These lights are called

chirags, and are placed on the window sills and rooftops of houses;

along the roads, and on the banks of rivers and streams.

Women and girls who live in the sacred city of Banares, take

their chirags to the banks of the Ganges River. They quietly light

them and put them in the river to float along the water. They hope

for their clay boats to float to the other side with the wicks

still lit. If they remain lit, it is a sign of good luck.

The reason for the lights is to direct Lakshmi; goddess of

prosperity to every home. There are a few versions of the origin

of this festival. In the northern part of India, it is associated

with the autumn season and the harvest. They believe that Lakshmi

returns to the plains and lowlands every autumn, after her stay in

high country during the summer months. She visits people's homes

on that night and needs the light to guide her way. By assuring

that she reaches their homes they are assuring that their blessings

will be great and meaningful.

Dussera: The Victories of Rama

During the ten day Festival of the Divine Mother a pageant is

presented in every city, town or village throughout northern India.

The pageant is presented for two hours each day, ten days in a

row.

This annual pageant is called Ram Lila, based on the famous and

sacred Hindu epic Ramayana, which consists of 24,000 stanzas.

The Ram Lila shows some happening of the great epic that are

well known to all Hindus, adults and children. Every year the

people in India gather in the market places and watch the Ram Lila

with excitement as if they are seeing it for the first time. Towns

compete to see who will put on a richer display of costumes and

better music.

The pageant's story concerns mainly the events in the wars

between Rama, the seventh incarnation of the Lord Vishnu, the

Preserver, and Ravan, the cruel demon with ten faces and twenty

hands, who threatened to conquer the earth below and the gods in

heaven. Rama's forces were under the command of General Hanuman,

a monkey. Hanuman led great victories over enemies of mankind and

gods. The most exciting part of the pageant is a battle scene with

Hanuman.

The ten day pageant ends with the death of Ravana, who is

burned in effigy. An image of the dead demon is made of bamboo and

colored paper, and is placed on a platform and blown up with

fireworks. The audience stamps their feet and this symbolizes

victory for Rama over Ravana; good over evil.

Basanta: The First Day of Spring

On the first day of spring, in the Muslim calendar, Basanta is

celebrated. Basanta, which in Sanskrit means yellow, is the sacred

color of India and is the symbol of spring. On this festival

everyone wears yellow on parts of their clothing.

Hindu poets of ancient days wrote poems about spring. Many of

them were to Basanta, and in some way connected the arrival of

spring with Saraswati, Brahma's wife, the goddess of the sixty-four

arts and sciences.

On this holiday, the family fasts until noon and then they go

to a field for a picnic lunch and enjoy the outdoors. Offering of

white mango bloom or any white flower is brought for Saraswati.

This begins the season when boys and their fathers like to fly

their flat tailless kites made of colored tissue paper and bamboo.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

1. Millen, Nina, Children's Festivals From Many Lands. New York: Friendship Press, 1964.

2. Dobler, Lavinia, Customs and Holidays Around the World. New York: Fleet Publishing Co., 1962.

3. Gaer, Joseph, Holidays Around the World. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1953.




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