One of the most popular of India's festivals is Dussehra.The festival is also celebrated with intense fervour and zest.The festivities commence on the first night in the month of Ashwin (September-October).
It is significant that the Lord invoked the blessings of the divine mother, Goddess Durga, before actually going out to battle. In burning the effigies the people are asked to burn the evil within them, and thus follow the path of virtue and goodness, bearing in mind the instance of Ravana, who despite all his might and majesty was destroyed for his evil ways. It must be remembered that Ravana was a great scholar and an ardent devotee of Lord Shiva, but the very powers that were bestowed on him for his steadfast devotion proved to be his undoing, due to his gross misuse of the same. Every region observes this 10 day festival in a special way.
In North India it is Ram Lila and consists of plays, recitations and music which recall the life of the legendary hero, Ram. In Delhi, many amateur troupes perform plas based on this epic story. On the tenth day, an elaborat procession leads to the Ram Lila grounds where immense cracker-stuffed effigies of the demon Ravana and his brother and son explode to the chhers of thousands of spectactors.
In Kulu, the celebrations have a different flavor.Mysore, it is celbrated with a pomp and pageantry reminiscent of medieval times. In Benagal and other parts of eastern India, Dussehra is celebrated as Durga Puja. Devotees wear new clothes and entertain with music, dance and drama. On the last day, images of the warrior goddess are taken out in procession immersed in a river or the sea.
In the south, the festival is celebrated as 'Navaratri'. The ten days are devoted to the worship of goddess Durga, who occupies a special position in the Hindu pantheon of gods and goddesses. She is 'Shakti', the cosmic energy which animates all beings. Beautiful idols of the Mother Goddess are worshipped in elaborate pandals for nine days, and on the ninth day, these are carried out in procession for immersion (visarjan) in a river or pond. Dolls and trinkets are artistically arranged in tiers by young girls. Friends and relatives visit each other's homes to exhange greetings.
In Tamil Nadu, the first three days are dedicated to the worship of Lakshmi, Goddess of wealth and prosperity, the next three days to Saraswati, Goddess of learning and arts and the last three days to Shakti (Durga). In Punjab, Navaratri is taken as a period of fasting. In Gujarat, the evenings and nights are occasions for the fascinating Garba dance. The women dance around an earthen lamp while singing devotional songs accompanied by rhythmic clapping of hands.
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