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| Holi
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It is spring time in India, flowers
and fields are in bloom and the country goes wild with people
running on the streets and smearing each other with brightly
hued powders and coloured water. This is the festival of Holi,
celebrated on the day after the full moon in early March every
year.
Originally Holi is a festival to celebrate good
harvests and fertility of the land. There are many legends
concerning the origin of this spring festival. The most
popular among these concerns Prince Prahlad, the god-fearing
son of the evil King Hiranyakasipu. Prahlad did not give up
worshipping the god Vishnu in spite of fearful persecution by
his father and his demon aunt Holika, who was deputed by her
brother to kill young Prahlad. Ultimately, when Holika, who
was immune to death by fire, took Prahlad and entered a
blazing furnace built for his destruction, it was the wicked
Holika who was burnt to ashes by divine intervention, while
Prahlad came out unscathed. Before she died, she realised her
follies and begged the boy's forgiveness. As his gesture of
forgiveness, Prahlad deemed that her name would be remembered
at least one day in the year.
Holi commemorates this
event from mythology, and huge bonfires are burnt on the eve
of Holi as its symbolic representation.
This exuberant
festival is also associated with the immortal love of Krishna
and Radha. The young Krishna would complain to his mother
Yashoda about why Radha was so fair and he so dark. Yashoda
advised him to apply colour on Radha's face and see how her
complexion would change. Holi is celebrated with particular
eclat in the villages around Mathura, the birthplace of
Krishna.
Down the ages, civilisation has advanced
leaps and bounds, but the spirit of Holi remains the same.
Each year, without fail, the old and the young alike gather
into groups and indulge in a riot of colours.
Holi is
also synonymous with bhang, which is consumed by many
in the form of laddoos and ghols. One could get
away with almost anything on this day; squirting coloured
water on passers-by and dunking friends in the mud pool saying "bura na mano, Holi hai" (don't feel offended, it's
Holi). Apart from this usual fun with coloured powder and
water, Holi is marked by vibrant processions, which are
accompanied by folk songs, dances and a general sense of
abandoned vitality.
To know the other
fabulous festivals of India better you may visit the following
link:
Other
Indian Festivals
More information on India
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