Navratri ( Dusserah) begins today ..

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Dusserah or Navratri is a festival celebrated across India in different ways.Here in Karnataka Dassarah is celebrated for nine days when schools have holidays on the beginning day ( today ) and the last two days when Ayuda Pooja and Vijaya Dashami are celebrated. In Bengal it is The festival when Durga Pooja is celebrated with a lot of pomp and is the time when families get together from what I have been told by my Bengali friends.. 

Biss And Beauty Of This Festival

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Swetha Shenoy wrote:

Hello Usha gaaru, thanks for the post, Happy Navratri to you

Here in the newly formed Telangana, we do something called as 'Bathukamma' where a pot or vessal or plate is adorned with various flowers (known as saddula)Bona531871140400428370837 originaland ladies (young, old, married, unmarried) form circles and dance with clap to Bathukamma 

It is the newly recognized festival of Telangana

Happy Navratra. Indeed it is time when we are saying good bye to summer and welcome to winter. Navratra fast pure our body and prepare for winter. We are from different part of country but we are celebrating festivals at this time. What is the name of festival is meaning less. Enjoy festival season. Here in my city Ramlila has begun. Happy dushara, Durga puja and Bathukamma. Plz write more about your festival Bathukammar.

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Bathukamma is the floral festival of Telengana state, This festival falls on Mahalaya Amavasya. This festival is celebrated by the Hindu women of Telangana state. Starting from today Bathukamma festivities last for 9 days

 

Swetha Shenoy wrote:

Hello Usha gaaru, thanks for the post, Happy Navratri to you

Here in the newly formed Telangana, we do something called as 'Bathukamma' where a pot or vessal or plate is adorned with various flowers (known as saddula)Bona531871140400428370837 originaland ladies (young, old, married, unmarried) form circles and dance with clap to Bathukamma 

It is the newly recognized festival of Telangana

Beautiful!! Your post reminded me of a long forgotten tradition of Maharashtrians during Navratri. It is called Bhondla in which a decorated statue of an elephant is kept or an elephant is drawn in rangoli and decorated with flowers. Around this, women and girls make circles and go around with hands held singling traditional songs. When I was in school, we enjoyed it almost every year because after all the songs were sung, we would get a treat of lots of sweets and savouries, but first we had to guess what was in the covered dishes. If we got it right, we got double the share. But now hardly any one celebrates it for the Garba and Ras Dandiya fever has caught on to every one.

@usha manohar and all the other forum members, kindly accept my greetings on Durga Puja. It is indeed a great time for Bengalis and the Bengalis like me who stay outside Bengal miss a lot. Though in Delhi, Bihar and other cities where Bengali community is in huge number, they do celebrate the festival quite pompously. The intensity of the festive spirit is undoubtedly less than Bengal but still it is worth visiting the puja pandals.

I wish you a Happy Durga puja to you and your family members.

I am well conversant with Bengal culture because most of my friends are Bengalis. Durga Puja cannot be celebrated with the same intensity by those Bengalis who live outside Bengal because of many reasons. The major reason is all the material required for the Puja especially the Murti or the idol and Dhak players. Owing to these reasons, Bengalis who live i Outside Bengal. Of course the devotion remains the same.

 

Shampa Sadhya wrote:

@usha manohar and all the other forum members, kindly accept my greetings on Durga Puja. It is indeed a great time for Bengalis and the Bengalis like me who stay outside Bengal miss a lot. Though in Delhi, Bihar and other cities where Bengali community is in huge number, they do celebrate the festival quite pompously. The intensity of the festive spirit is undoubtedly less than Bengal but still it is worth visiting the puja pandals.

Durga Puja greetings to you too Shampa. Which city do you live in>? Because I live in Pune and there are several places where Bengalis of Pune come together and celebrate Durja Puja exactly the way they do in WB. I have several Bengali friends, grown up with many in fact  and since my father is IAF retiree, during my growing up school years we used to participate in Durga Puja celebrations each year in Pune Air Force Station. Although I do not get to participate now, I at least try to go to Durga Puja during Ashtami!

Hello @Kalyani, I am a Bengali but born and brought up in Bihar. I got married to a Bengali of Kolkata and my base shifted there from Patna. At present or to be specific for the last thirteen years I am in Delhi due to my husband's posting. I do enjoy Durga Puja here and within the pandal it is similar to the pujas of Bengal. The same was the case in Patna. Now, I miss the rest of the family, friends and that special feeling of the festival available at every corner of Bengal. I once attended Durga Puja in Mumbai and you know, once you step inside the pandal, the fervour is same. Though I don't love pandal hopping, I enjoy sitting and chatting with dear ones at any pandal. In Bengal there is a lot of variety in idols, pandals and lighting which are the x-factors of Durga Puja. Loved to know about you from your post. I too very particularly attend Ashtami puja in the morning and offer pushpanjali to Maa Durga. May the Goddess shower her blessings on you and your loved ones!

Happy Navratri and Durga Puja to everyone. I am in Kolkata and it is a beautiful time to be here. Pandals are almost ready and streets abuzz with enthusiasm,  there's this amazing feel of festivities in the air !

Once long back we were passing through Dibrugarh  Railway station during the durga pooja season on our way to Jamshedpur. Even there one could sense the festive feeling...I am sure Calcutta would be a truly great experience during the Pooja season !

Durga Pooja is the biggest festive event for a  Bengali. Many of my Bengali friends leave for Kolkata applying mass leave. Though leaving the Headquarters all at a time is not allowed in a steel making firm, Bengalis are given that privilege because of the importance of the festival  given by Bengalis.

 

The fervour of Durga Pooja is captured beautifully in the movie 'Kahani' starring Vidya Balan and shot in Kolkatta. Greetings to all.

Shampa Sadhya wrote:

Hello @Kalyani, I am a Bengali but born and brought up in Bihar. I got married to a Bengali of Kolkata and my base shifted there from Patna. At present or to be specific for the last thirteen years I am in Delhi due to my husband's posting. I do enjoy Durga Puja here and within the pandal it is similar to the pujas of Bengal. The same was the case in Patna. Now, I miss the rest of the family, friends and that special feeling of the festival available at every corner of Bengal. I once attended Durga Puja in Mumbai and you know, once you step inside the pandal, the fervour is same. Though I don't love pandal hopping, I enjoy sitting and chatting with dear ones at any pandal. In Bengal there is a lot of variety in idols, pandals and lighting which are the x-factors of Durga Puja. Loved to know about you from your post. I too very particularly attend Ashtami puja in the morning and offer pushpanjali to Maa Durga. May the Goddess shower her blessings on you and your loved ones!

Yes Shampa, I agree. The fervour inside the pandals might be the same but it is a totally different thing to have all your relatives and friends with you during the special festivities such as these! After all, festivals is all about being with your loved ones and doing all those things amongst your own people.

 

@Usha, from what I have heard from my friends, Durga Puja is the time that one must be in Kolkata and it is one of my dreams to visit Kolkata only during these days.

usha manohar wrote:

Once long back we were passing through Dibrugarh  Railway station during the durga pooja season on our way to Jamshedpur. Even there one could sense the festive feeling...I am sure Calcutta would be a truly great experience during the Pooja season !

 

Yes, it is. It starts more than a month in advance actually. Right from pre-planning to puja shopping, practicing for cultural programmes in the Pujas held in almost every street or 'para' as called in Bengali and then getting totally involved in the final five days of Puja rituals,pandal hopping,getting together with friends/ relatives and full on celebrations, it is an amazing experience altogether, here in Kolkata.

 

Lopamudra wrote:
usha manohar wrote:

Once long back we were passing through Dibrugarh  Railway station during the durga pooja season on our way to Jamshedpur. Even there one could sense the festive feeling...I am sure Calcutta would be a truly great experience during the Pooja season !

 

Yes, it is. It starts more than a month in advance actually. Right from pre-planning to puja shopping, practicing for cultural programmes in the Pujas held in almost every street or 'para' as called in Bengali and then getting totally involved in the final five days of Puja rituals,pandal hopping,getting together with friends/ relatives and full on celebrations, it is an amazing experience altogether, here in Kolkata.

 

Oh so you are from Kolkata too! THat is wonderful!

Kalyani Nandurkar wrote:
Lopamudra wrote:
usha manohar wrote:

Once long back we were passing through Dibrugarh  Railway station during the durga pooja season on our way to Jamshedpur. Even there one could sense the festive feeling...I am sure Calcutta would be a truly great experience during the Pooja season !

 

Yes, it is. It starts more than a month in advance actually. Right from pre-planning to puja shopping, practicing for cultural programmes in the Pujas held in almost every street or 'para' as called in Bengali and then getting totally involved in the final five days of Puja rituals,pandal hopping,getting together with friends/ relatives and full on celebrations, it is an amazing experience altogether, here in Kolkata.

 

Oh so you are from Kolkata too! THat is wonderful!

 

Yes Kalyani, I am and although I have stayed in different places depending on where my husband is located, during Pujas we try and drop in here, as do many other cousins and friends staying outside Kolkata. It is like a big reunion time.

 

rambabu wrote:

Bathukamma is the floral festival of Telengana state, This festival falls on Mahalaya Amavasya. This festival is celebrated by the Hindu women of Telangana state. Starting from today Bathukamma festivities last for 9 days

Festival of Telengana or Andhra Prasesh. Earlier Telengana was part of Andhra Pradesh. Do Navratra is not celebrated here in Telengana? 

 

 

@Kalyani Yes, you are right. Even for having a nice 'gup-sup' we need our dear ones with us. All my favourites stay in Kolkata so when I am away from them during Durga Puja then I miss them tremendously 

anil wrote:
rambabu wrote:

Bathukamma is the floral festival of Telengana state, This festival falls on Mahalaya Amavasya. This festival is celebrated by the Hindu women of Telangana state. Starting from today Bathukamma festivities last for 9 days

Festival of Telengana or Andhra Prasesh. Earlier Telengana was part of Andhra Pradesh. Do Navratra is not celebrated here in Telengana? 

 Navaratri is also celebrated in Telangana. But Bathukamma festival is exclusively for Women.  Yes,Earlier Telangana was a part of Andhrapradesh. After the bifurcation, Telangana has become another state and Andhra another.

 

 

First of all Happy Navratri to all, Navrarti is celbrated in India with great joy and happiness. Navratri is not only the dancing festival but it ties all of us in a single node and make a strong circle. Hope you all enjoying this navratri and Maa Durga brings all the happiness to u and ur family.

Luv Chouhan wrote:

First of all Happy Navratri to all, Navrarti is celbrated in India with great joy and happiness. Navratri is not only the dancing festival but it ties all of us in a single node and make a strong circle. Hope you all enjoying this navratri and Maa Durga brings all the happiness to u and ur family.

Thanks a lot for the Navratri greetings , it is indeed a happy occasion for all with school holidays and celebrations etc..

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Created Tuesday, 13 October 2015 03:45
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November -0001 00:00
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