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India Travel Guide :
Festivals of North India
Festivals
of North India

India is a land of myriad festivals, in rhythm with the cycle of the seasons,
with sowings and harvesting. and around them have grown legends, most depicting
the victory of good over evil. These fairs and festivals lend color and gaiety
to life and Indian calendar is marked by plethora of such big and small occasions.
Some festivals are of religious nature, others are related more to, change of
season and harvesting. They have a long past and many have undergone major modifications.
Though the enthusiasm for some also seems to be fading, nevertheless they do bring
about a change in the lifestyle of the people. Some festivals and fasts are religion
specific protocols aiming towards communication with the divine. The liveliness
of the people is reflected in the colorful vibrancy of the fairs and festivals.
Processions, prayers, new attires, dance, music etc. are elements related to any
such celebration.

The Puri-Rath Yatra, Allahabad-Kumbha, Alleppey-Boat Race, Pushkar-Camel Fair,
Goa-Carnival so on and so forth all reflect the diversity of the land and its
people but common emotion of revived vigour, joy and sharing.
Vasant
beckons spring. Scattered amongst the ripening wheat are the bright yellow flowers
of mustard. Tender blossoms appear on the mango tree and 'song is bestowed upon
the bird'. On that day everyone wears a special shade of yellow. The festival
is dedicated to Saraswati, goddess of learning and the arts.
After about
two months comes
Holi, the very end of our
cool season. It is a festival of colour, truly democratic and egalitarian. All
barriers are down, all inhibitions shed. Boys and girls, men and women of all
ages, all castes, and all classes participate. None is high and none is low. Anyhow,
when a person is plastered with colour he is not easy to identify. On the eve
of Holi bonfires are lit and Holi itself is celebrated by the throwing of colour,
by gaiety and noise, one could even say, by wild abandon. In time the festival
has also become associated with the 'Lila' of Radha and Krishna and has inspired
some of our most sensuous poetry.
Of all the seasons
it is the
Sawan (Monsoon) which has evoked
the largest number of songs. This is not strange, for summer in the plains of
North India is long and hot. As months go by anxious eyes scan the sky. It is
a time for renewal. Swings are hung at all likely places and women and children
are seen swinging high into the branches overhead accompanied by joyous singing.
Raksha Bandhan - the bracelet of protection
- is a festival belonging to the old days of chivalry. If the gift of a bracelet
sent by a girl was accepted by a man, he henceforth became her adopted brother,
pledged to support her in times of stress or war. Today it is just a ritual, though
a charming one.
Close on its heels comes
Janmashtami,
the birthday of Lord Krishna, and the most beloved of all gods. The Krishna legend
has caught the imagination of our own people and now of many abroad. Krishna is
intensely human. He's everybody's child, full of mischief. Stories of his pranks
are recounted as recent happenings. As an ardent lover, he inspires our poets
and artists, our music and dance.
Ganesh is the god of wisdom as well
as of good fortune. As a granter of boons he is worshipped at the beginning of
every prayer and auspicious occasion.
Ganesh's birthday
(Chaturthy) falls at the end of the monsoon and is marked by special
festivities after which is image is immersed in the nearest river or the sea.
Every year in autumn, at the time of the full moon the Rajputs gather
to honour Lord Brahma, the god of creation at
the temple
of Pushkar. This is the only temple dedicated to the god in the country.
The female as Shakti (Perennial Energy) has a central place in Indian
tradition and Durga is its militant form. She is the Mother and at the same time
the destroyer of evil forces. Her festival
Dussehra
heralds the new planting season and also celebrates her victory over the demon
buffalo Mahishasura. These are also the days of the Ram Lila, an enactment of
the story of Lord Rama, an incarnation of Lord Vishnu and the hero of the epic
Ramayana. It is extraordinary how this ancient story written in Sanskrit by Sage
Valmiki and the people's spoken Hindi by poet

Tulsidas
and in other languages by renowned poets has permeated the hearts of our people
and is relived year after year. On the day of Dussehra effigies of Ravana the
king of Lanka are burnt at nightfall marking the celebration of the victory of
Rama over Ravana symbolizing the victory of good over evil. 20 days later comes
Diwali, the most beautiful of all festivals.
It is dedicated to Lakshmi the goddess of prosperity. All buildings from the palatial
to the humblest are illumined with millions of twinkling oil lamps, now being
replaced by electricity, which though cleaner is not half-pretty. At dusk the
sky is lit up and air reverberates with fireworks.
States have special harvest festivals such as
Bihu
in Assam,
Onam in Kerala and
Pongal
in Tamil Nadu. The main attraction of Onam is a boat race on rivers swollen by
the monsoon. At Arnamulla the long boats compete in speed on the Pamba River where
water jousts are held. Each boat painted in the colors of its proprietor or village
is manned by a hundred oarsmen, who chant in rhythm to speed up the beat of the
paddles.

Kerala is a land of strange beliefs and of all of India it is here that pre Aryan
customs have best been preserved. North of Malabar, the feasts of
Therayattam
are held from January to March. Masked dancers execute what seems to be a synthesis
of all the different cults rendered to Devi the Great Goddess and to the ancestors.
From daybreak to dusk masked divinities dance without ceasing. At Trichur,
Pooram
the feast of the Shaivite temples is enthusiastically celebrated in April or early
May. The festival attracts millions of spectators to watch the celebrated procession
of elephants in battle formation. Musicians play all day. Beating their drums
in frantic rhythm, clashing their cymbals or blowing their bugles.
The
Muslims celebrate
Eid twice a year and is
an occasion for functions of communal harmony. There is also the Prophet's birthday.
Ramzan is a month of prayer and fasting.
The Sikhs observe the birthdays and days of martyrdom of their Gurus. The
birthdays of Buddha and Mahavira are similarly observed.
For official
and work purposes we follow the Gregorian calendar, but Hindu and Muslim festivals
are calculated according to the Lunar calendar, so the dates change every year.
Different groups of observe different New Years. For the Gujaratis Diwali marks
the eve of the New Year. The Parsis celebrate Nauroz on 21 March, the same as
in Iran. The Kashmiri Hindus New Year is the same as the 'Gudi Padwa' of Maharashtra,
the Ugadhi of Karnataka and Andhra. Everyone has a different type of celebration.
The Punjabis have Baisakhi, which falls on 13 April. Bengal and Assam observe
the 1st of Baisakhi, which falls around the same time.