Wednesday 31 March 2021

The Bonfire Festival is Holi



Is there any story or myth around those celebrations? Write about various myths around bonfire. 


India is considered as a cultural country.  Many of the traditions that traditionally run in India are still followed.  This picture above is an example of a bonfire.  Because Holika Dahan is celebrated in India.  And another festival like it is Diwali.  In which the fire is lit.  So we will discuss about it in our blog today.  So why is the Holika Dahan program celebrated.  What are the things associated with Holika Dahan?  Which religious legends are associated with this festival?  Are such festivals celebrated in countries other than India?  We will discuss all that here in this blog.

The festival of colours Holi is spread out over two days every year. On the first day, a bonfire is created which is also known as Holika Dahan (burning of demon Holika) or Chhoti Holi. On the second day, Rangwali Holi is celebrated. However, in some places, Holi is played for five days- the fifth day is called Ranga Panchami.


Holika Dahan 2021: Muhurta

According to Hindu scriptures Holika Dahan, which is also known as Holika Deepak or Chhoti Holi, should be done during Pradosh Kaal (which starts after sunset) while Purnimasi Tithi is prevailing. Bhadra prevails during the first half of Purnimasi Tithi and all good work should be avoided when Bhadra prevails.


Holika Dahan Muhurta is from 06:37 pm to 08:56 pm (Duration: 02 hours 20 mins)


Differents storys:



1 ) Krishna and Radharani

The Holi of Braj is famous all over India for its intimate connection with the divine deities and their love plays.

It is said that when Krishna was a young boy, he asked the reason for his dark color while Radha was so fair.

His mother Yashoda playfully suggested that he should smear color on Radha’s face too and change her complexion to any color he wanted.

Captivated by the idea, Krishna proceeded to do so and thus, introduced the play of colors on Holi.

( Explanation. Even today, Holi is one of the most important festival of Braj, where the men of Nandgaon and women of Barsana play ‘latthmar Holi’ in the remembrance of the playful throw of colors by Krishna on ‘Gopis’ and their resistance. )


2 ) Sacrifice of Kamadeva

According to Hindu mythology, the world is looked after the Trinity of Gods – Lord Brahma, the creator; Lord Vishnu, the nurturer; and Lord Shiva, the destroyer.

According to a legend, Goddess Sati, the daughter of Daksha Prajapati, one of the first sons of Lord Brahma, married Lord Shiva against the wishes of her father.

Thus, Daksha did not invite her and her husband to a grand yagya arranged by him.

When Sati came to know about the event in her father’s house, she thought it to be a slip of mind and proceeded to participate in the event despite the warnings of her husband.

But once she reached there, she realized her fault and was infuriated by the insult of her husband.

As a penance for her disobedience, she entered the fire. When Lord Shiva came to know of her sudden demise, he was furious. Even after he controlled his anger, he started a severe meditation and renounced all work.

The world’s balance soon crumbled in his absence and Sati took rebirth as Goddess Parvati to try and win Lord Shiva’s heart and wake him up from his trance. She tried all ways to get the attention of Shiva.

When she had exhausted all her feminine ways, she invoked the help of Kamadava, the Indian cupid-god, who agreed to help her in the cause of the world despite the risks involved. He shot his love-arrow on Shiva’s heart.

Disturbed in his trance, Lord Shiva opened his third eye that fired anger and instantly incinerated Kamadeva. It is said that it was on the day of Holi that Kamadeva had sacrificed himself for the good of all beings.

Later, when Lord Shiva realized his mistake, he granted Kamadeva immortality in invisible form.

( Moral of the story: This incident of burning off kama is called kamadahana or Holi. As the lust was won over by Lord Shiva the kamadahana or Holi festival is celebrated as an event associating with the Bliss of God. So following kamadahana during holi, people put the powders on themselves and others remembering this victory over lust. )


3 ) Invincible Dhundhi

During the reign of Prithu, there was a terrible ogress called Dhundhi, who loved to devour innocent children.

She had performed severe penances and had won several boons from the deities that made her almost invincible. However, due to a curse of Lord Shiva, she was not so immune to the pranks and abuses of young boys as she was to weapons and arrows.

One day, the courageous boys of the village decided to get rid of her forever and chase her away from the village forever.

They got intoxicated on bhaang and drunk and then followed Dhundi to the limits of the village, beating drums, making loud noise, shouting obscenities and hurling insults at her and continued doing this until she left the village for good.

( Explanation:This is the reason that even today young boys are allowed to indulge themselves in rowdiness, using rude words and intoxication on Holi.


4 ) Bhakt Prahlad & Holika



Who is Holika?

Holika was a demoness, sister of King Hiranyakashipu and aunt of Prahlad. On the night before holi, the pyre is lit, signifying Holika Dahan. People sing and dance around the fire. The next day people play Holi, the popular festival of colours.

Are you wondering why a demoness is worshiped during the festival? It is believed that Holika was created to ward off all fears. She was a symbol of power, wealth and prosperity and could bestow those to her worshippers. Hence, Holika is worshipped along with Prahlada before Holika Dahan.


There was a mighty demon king named Hirnakashyipu who had won all the three worlds of heaven, earth and hell and had thus, become very proud. He assumed that he could defeat even Lord Vishnu with his valor. He went to the extent that he had enforced a law that everybody would worship him instead of gods and deities.

However, his little son Prahlad refused to accept his commands and continued to worship Lord Vishnu with complete devotion. Infuriated by this defiance of his son, he ordered his soldiers to throw him down a hill. Praying fervently and having full faith in Lord Vishnu, Prahlad did not retract from his word. True to his faith, Lord Vishnu rescued him at the last moment.

Flustered by this news, Hirnakashyipu invoked the help of his sister Holika, who had a boon that she could walk through the fire unharmed to do away with his son.

The wicked aunt agreed to the evil desires of his brother and entered the fire with her nephew Prahlad.

However, the brother and sister had forgot that Holika could only enter the fire alone or she would perish. Thus, blessed by Lord Vishnu, the child Prahlad remained unharmed but Holika got burnt and died instantly.

Holi is thus celebrated to commemorate the death of the evil aunt, after whom the festival is named, and the new life granted to Prahlad for his devotion and faith. To this day, cow dung is hurled into the fire and obscenities are shouted at the Holi fire at some places to insult Holika.

( Moral of the Holika story: Those who love God shall be saved, and they that torture the devotee of God shall be reduced to ashes. When Holika was burnt, people abused her and sang the glories of the Lord and of His great devotee, Prahlad. In imitation of that, people even today use abusive language, but unfortunately forget to sing the praises of the Lord and His devotee! )



What are the rituals around such celebrations? 


Holikadahan festival in my village.






The Holika Dahan program is celebrated in most of the villages in India.  Holika Dahan is celebrated in every village.  There are many beliefs behind it.  There are many different legends.  So the Holika Dahan program was also celebrated in my village.  About which I will tell you a little.

Holika Dahan is celebrated with great fanfare in Dharuka village.  In the morning the little boys of the village go out to gather firewood and prepare to light Holi.  Talked to a few elders of the village and asked why the Holika Dahan program is celebrated.  So his only answer was that when Prahlad was sitting on the fire bed to light the Holika and the Holika was burnt.  This festival is celebrated in remembrance of the victory of truth over falsehood.  In the evening all the people gather where the Holi is to be lit and light the Holi and shoot rounds around it.  Puts in Holi lit as prasadi of dates and daliya.  Couples who are married walk around pouring water in the kalash.  All the joy squeals with the sound of drums.  Finally all go home with prasadi.

So this is how Holika Dahan is celebrated in every village.  There is also a belief behind the lighting of Holi that when Holi is lit, the direction in which the smoke goes can tell what the year will be like.  With so many different beliefs, villagers celebrate Holika Dahan.  This type of Holika Dahan is also celebrated in cities.  Not only in India but there are many countries in which Born Fire Festival is celebrated.  So what are those countries?  And why are such festivals celebrated in those countries?  Let's talk about it.


What is Bonfair? 

A bonfire is a large and controlled outdoor fire, used either for informal disposal of burnable waste material or as part of a celebration.


How many countries celebrate Bonfire? Why? 


Australia

Canada

France

India

Iran

Iraq

Ireland

Israel

Italy

Japan

Luxembourg

Nepal

Nordic Countries

Lithuania

Poland

Romania

Slavic Europe

Czech/Slovak Republic

Turkey

United Kingdom

Scotland

United States


Top 10 fire festivals around the world

By Reuters Staff


1. Guy Fawkes Night (Bonfire Night) - England

“Remember, remember the fifth of November - gunpowder, treason and plot” goes the nursery rhyme, chanted in the run-up to Guy Fawkes Night (November 5). It goes back to 1605 when Guy Fawkes, one of the members of the Gunpowder Plot, was arrested while guarding explosives in the House of Lords, London. With the plot to blow up the House of Lords - and kill King James I - foiled, Londoners lit bonfires around the city in celebration.

The bonfire tradition continues to this day, and usually there’s an effigy of Guy Fawkes placed at the centre of it. One of the biggest celebrations is in the town of Lewes in Sussex where, in recent years, effigies of various current figures, including those from the UK banking world, have been burned.


2. Daizenji Tamataregu Shrine’s “Oniyo” - Fukuoka, Japan

Fukuoka, capital of Fukuoka Prefecture on Kyushu Island, is one of Japan’s largest cities and hosts one of its oldest fire festivals. Daizenji Tamataregu Shrine’s “Oniyo” (Fire Festival) is a ceremony to drive away evil spirits that has been practiced for 1,600 years. It’s held in early January each year. A “devil fire” that has been guarded at the temple is transferred - at around 9 p.m. on the seventh day (January 7) - to six massive torches measuring one meter in diameter and 15 meters long.

The torches are transported around the grounds of the shrine by a group of men in loincloths. It sounds like a potential health-and-safety issue, but it’s considered to be good luck if embers or ash from the torches fall on them.


3. Jeongwol Daeboreum Deulbul Festival - Jeju, S. Korea

In early February, the Jeongwol Daeboreum Deulbul Festival takes place on the island of Jeju off the coast of South Korea. It’s a fairly new festival, younger than 20 years old, but its origins go back to the time when families kept cows.

To keep the grass grazeable, farmers set fire to the fields in the mountains to destroy old grass and kill harmful insects. Today, a hilltop is set alight to pray for health and a good harvest in the coming year. There’s a torchlight march, straw-rope making competition and deumdol (rock) lifting.


4. Diwali - India

The best-known Hindu festival is known as the “festival of lights.” Diwali (or Deepavali) means “rows of lighted lamps” and, during this time, houses, shops and public places are decorated with diyas (small earthenware oil lamps), elaborate feasts are prepared and spectacular fireworks displays light up the skies.

The five-day festival (November 13-17 this year) celebrates the triumph of good over evil and is celebrated throughout India and around the world (in Singapore, Trinidad and Tobago, Mauritius, Myanmar and London among many others).


5. Samhain 2012 - Out of the Darkness - Altoona, Florida, USA

More than 500 pagans gather in Florida for the state’s largest pagan festival. Running from October 31 to November 4 at Camp Ocala, each day is filled with feasting, rituals, drumming, dancing and live entertainment.

The main ritual in 2012 is centred around the “Burning Times” when so-called “witches” were put to death.


6. Quema del Diablo (Burning of the Devil) - Guatemala

In early December Guatemalans ready themselves for the Christmas season by...driving the devil from their homes and burning him in the streets! For centuries - at least since the 1700s - the traditional ceremony has been performed to chase bad spirits from homes and neighborhoods.

By watching bonfires, firework displays and burning devil figures in the streets, locals say they are spiritually cleansing themselves. The tradition is best experienced in Guatemala City and Antigua, but many towns throughout Guatemala host similar ceremonies


7. Ottery St Mary - Devon, England


In the small town of Ottery St Mary, the bonfire and fireworks are not the focal point of the community’s celebrations. This November 5, it will be the local townspeople carrying flaming barrels of tar through the streets. In a tradition that predates even 1605 it is said, 17 barrels are carried, starting in the afternoon, with small barrels for boys, medium barrels for youths and women and big ones for the men.

Traditionally, the barrels are set on fire at pubs and hotels around the town and a strict schedule is followed until midnight when the final barrel is carried in the square.


8. Up Helly Aa, Lerwick - Shetland Islands, Scotland

If you’ve ever wanted to see Vikings, this is the festival to see! Described as a Northern Mardi Gras, its origins stretch back 1,200 years, although the festival started in the 1870s. It’s held on the last Tuesday of January (January 29 in 2013). On that evening, nearly 1,000 men march in ranks, carrying fencing posts topped in paraffin-soaked sacking. At 7:30 p.m. a rocket cresting over the Town Hall marks the start.

Torches are lit, bands start playing and the men march with the Guizer Jarl (the head of the festival) who stands at the helm of a longship. Dragged to the burning site, the Guizer Jarl will leave his ship for it to be set alight. As the longship is engulfed by flames, the Vikings sing “The Norseman’s Home” before heading to halls for feasts of mutton soup, bannocks and plenty of warming drinks.

9. Bonfire Night - Newfoundland, Canada

When English and Irish people, in search of a better life, crossed the Atlantic Ocean to Canada, they took their traditions with them. The English took Guy Fawkes Night, the Irish took Samhain and over time the traditions merged into Mischief Week.

With a belief that certain types of naughty behaviour (soaping windows, taking pins from gate hinges or stealing old tires for bonfires) is permitted at this time, many of Newfoundland & Labrador’s close-knit communities hold bonfires and celebrations.


10. Sadeh - Iran

Sadeh (or Jashn-e Sadeh) is an ancient Zoroastrian festival. While it refers to 100 days and nights before the New Year (Nowruz, which falls on the Vernal Equinox, March 20 or 21), it is celebrated 50 days earlier - around the end of January. It honours the discovery of fire that defeated the forces of darkness and cold.

Traditionally, festivities went on for three days and gifts of food were given to the poor. Today, Zoroastrians light bonfires, perform religious rituals around them and thank God for his blessings. It’s usually celebrated in the Kushk-e Varjavand gardens in Karaj (in Tehran province) where members of the Zoroastrian community congregate for the festivities.

Sunday 28 March 2021

When God is a Traveller by Arundhathi Subramaniam


When God is a Traveller  by Arundhathi Subramaniam





"Fire is His head, the sun and moon His eyes, space His ears, the Vedas His speech, the wind His breath, the universe His heart. From His feet the Earth has originated. Verily, He is4 the inner self of all beings".

    In the above quote, Lord Shiva is mentioned.  As we know, Indian culture includes many gods.  Lord Shiva is known as Mahadev and Parvati is known as the form of Shakti.  Lord Shiva is known as the god of gods.  The history of which we see a lot.  Many stories of Lord Shiva and Parvati are prevalent.  One of them we will discuss here in this poem. So poem is "When God is a Traveller" by Arundhathi Subramaniam. Who is Arundhathi Subramaniam? 

About Arundhathi Subramaniam:



According to wikipedia:

    Arundhathi Subramaniam is an Indian poet, writer, critic, curator, translator, Journalist, writing in  English. Arundhathi Subramaniam's volume of poetry, When God is a Traveller (2014) was the Season Choice of the Poetry Book Society, shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize. She is the recipient of various awards and fellowships, including the inaugural Khushwant Singh Prize, the Raza Award for Poetry, the Zee Women's Award for Literature, the International Piero Bigongiari Prize in Italy, the Mystic Kalinga award, the Charles Wallace, Visiting Arts and Homi Bhabha Fellowships, among others.

    As prose writer, her books include 
The Book of Buddha, a bestselling biography of a contemporary mystic, 
Sadhguru: More Than a Life and most recently,
Adiyogi: The Source of Yoga (co-authored with Sadhguru). 
As editor, her most recent book is the Penguin anthology of sacred poetry, Eating God.

Awards:

Khushwant Singh Memorial Prize for Poetry:For When God is Traveller
Mystic Kalinga Literary Award:
2020 - Sahitya Akademi Award for English - When God is a Traveller 

    She wrote poems on the natural environment.  She has composed many poems on the elements of nature.  In which she  has composed poems based on the ancient God.  Her compositions are very famous and good. So she also gets awards in these poems.  One of which we will discuss today is the poem Waiting for God.  So what is this poem?  And what is in it? 'When God is a Traveller' in the poem he has tried to whiten the elements of nature by talking to Karthik.


"When God is a Traveller"



Trust the god back from his travels, his voice wholegrain (and chamomile), 
his wisdom neem, his peacock, sweaty-plumed, drowsing in the shadows.

Trust him who sits wordless on park benches listening to the cries of children fading into the dusk, 
his gaze emptied of vagrancy, his heart of ownership.

Trust him who has seen enough— revolutions, promises, the desperate light of shopping malls, hospital rooms, manifestos, theologies, the iron taste of blood, the great craters in the middle of love. 

Trust him who no longer begrudges his brother his prize, his parents their partisanship.  

Trust him whose race is run, whose journey remains, who stands fluid-stemmed knowing he is the tree that bears fruit, festive with sun.

Trust him who recognizes you— auspicious, abundant, battle-scarred, alive— and knows from where you come. 

Trust the god ready to circle the world all over again this time for no reason at all other than to see it through your eyes.

    The poem is about some part of Nature. so nature is a metaphor of which things are happening with us .The poem when God is traveller is a very different kind of Title but poem and its meanings are very different. Basically, There are so many people who give his own idea about this poem. The poem has a very unique title  as we know that the God is traveller but the poet has a very different perseptive of the poem that's how she got the Sahitya academy 2021 award.


About the poem:




    When God is a Traveller" actually contains 22 poems from the “Deeper in Transit” section of her book "Where I Live (2009), thus there is substantial overlap in poems between books. Still, there are 29 new poems in this book, and it is a beautiful hardcover with very attractive cover art, making it a nice little book of poetry to carry around - and it is reasonably priced. The 22 duplicate poems are worth reading again, anyway. Writing about gods, goddesses, and heroines as well as daily life, and a favourite topic of writing on writing, this little book is well worth reading and travelling along the various textual references which lead to empty space, which is the terrain of gods, goddesses, and heroines.

    In the poem which gives the book its title, “When God is a Traveller,” Subramaniam muses about Kartikeya/Murga/Subramania, my namesake.” Kartikeya/Murga/Subramania is known by all those names, as well as Skanda, and is the son of Śiva, in some legends of him alone, as Gaṇeśha is born of Pārvatī alone, but also often considered the son of both Śiva and Pārvatī. Subramania is the god of war who is also known as Guhā (cave, secret) or Guruguhā (cave-teacher) as he renounces war in some legends and retreats to the mountains. Arundhathi Subramaniam writes in this poem.
This poem is based on the myth of Lord Kartikeya. Kartikeya , also known as Skanda, Kumara, MURUGAN and Subrahmanya, is the Hindu god of war. He is a son of Parvati and Shiva, brother of Ganesha, and a god whose life story has many version in Hinduism.

   This poem is based on the incident between Lord Ganesha and Lord Kartikeya that who is elder ?

   Lord Shiva and his consort Parvati had two sons named Kartikeya (Kartika) and Ganesha (Vinayaka). The elder was Kartikeya and the younger Ganesha. In South India Kartikeya is popularly known as Lord Subramanya.
Arundhati Subramaniam's poetry takes us on a journey through different situations, emotions, beliefs, stigmas and compelled you to open the aperture of deep-seated lyrical self underneath our heart.
In 'When God is a Traveller', Subramaniam weaves metaphors, metaphors that are distinctly hers, into language that is simultaneously fluid and simple. Everydayness is woven as a metaphor rife with allusions to the deeper meanings of life. At first glance, the poems from this collection come across as beautiful but not .
Many readings of this award-winning text exist but they highlight the religious aspect of the text. While it undoubtedly adheres to a certain religious context, it differs widely in terms of the figures of the Hindu pantheon represented, that is, the ones within the text are not really the most popular of the Hindu gods. Moreover, what Subramaniam does is that she uses these figures but challenges the canonical religious stories through her representations, as can be observed in the poem ‘Benaras’, an underappreciated piece. She tries to highlight the personal side of one’s religious beliefs, for instance in the poem ‘How Some Hindus Find Their Personal Gods’.

    Finally, what especially stands out in Subramaniam’s poetry collection is the imagery. Even when the meaning of the poems eludes the reader, the meaning-making processes remain accessible through the vivid images constructed, which interact with each other to produce meaning. In this text, the meaning is created through the words as well as through the imagery. This gives it a subliminal quality of sorts.

Central Theme of this poem:


Morality is one of the theme of this poem..Morality reflected in character. Through the character of lord Kartikeya poet reflect the morality of life. Kartikeya was intrigue by his brother but he kindly accepted each and everything. 

If we look at the theme of the poem,Wandering, digging, falling, coming to terms with unsettlement and uncertainty, finiteness and fallibility, exploring intersections between the sacred and the sensual, searching for ways to step in and out of stories, cycles and frames - these are some of the recurrent themes.

These poems explore various ambivalences - around human intimacy with its bottlenecks and surprises, life in a Third World megapolis, myth, the politics of culture and gender, and the persistent trope of the existential journey.

Conclusion:


    That is why it can be said that every man has something important in his life.  The way Kartikeya is worshiped in the south is not Ganesha.  In that way each person has a place of his own.  God also reveals the value of injustice to each other in this way, then what to talk about man?  Jealousy is also present in man.  So Subramaniam used the elements of nature as an ornament and Kartik presented this poem of God to us well.  In which Kartikeya's journey and Ganesha's ingenuity were talked about.  Every man is struggling with something in his life.  So in this poem which shows what kind of struggles he has to face in his life, we see that, what kind of work to do?  What to do  How much effort to make?  Work until success!  We find the answers to many such questions in this poem.  Every man needs to bring out the power that lies in him.  Any competition that requires the power to make one's own goals meaningful.  Even if it means getting to work at the right time.  This poem explains the importance of nature and the importance of struggling in life is presented very nicely.If we look at the theme of the poem,Wandering, digging, falling, coming to terms with unsettlement and uncertainty, finiteness and fallibility, exploring intersections between the sacred and the sensual, searching for ways to step in and out of stories, cycles and frames - these are some of the recurrent themes.

Words:1595

Thanks.



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