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Deepawali: The Indian Festival of Light

 

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Deepawali is the festival of light celebrated since times unknown

in every part of the land from a grass-thatched mud hut to a

palace and from a commercial or industrial establishment to a

shrine. Not merely Hindus or the followers of other indigenous

sects - Jains, Sikhs, Buddhists ., even Christians and

Mohammedans are enthusiastic about it, and it is not only the

door of a Christian's house or that of a Mohammedan but even that

of a chapel or a Dargah - a saint's holy burial, is often found

lit with a lamp dispelling the darkness of the darkest night, the

Amavasya in the month of Kartika - the eighth month of the Indian

calendar. Crackers, an essential feature of Deepawali

celebrations, are every youth's love, and which eye, old or

young, does not glow when a spray of multi-coloured lights

scatter over the high skies transforming into multi-forms from a

peacock to the tri-colour national flag.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/HC99/

 

More than a religious festival or the festival of a community or

race, Deepawali is perceived as the battle of light against

darkness - a tiny lamp's determination to illuminate the earth

and the sky setting them free from the all-enshrouding darkness.

Deepawali celebrates this victory of the tiny lamp, its humble

effort to fight out the gigantic darkness. People see in the

effort of the tiny lamp their own effort to wade across the ocean

of adversities, and this sense fills them with renewed confidence

and fresh vigour for the days to come.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/WJ87/

 

Indeed, Deepawali is the festival of renewing confidence in

oneself and among all. It is a festival that inspires universal

goodness and prosperity for all beyond caste and creed. Whatever

its sectarian contexts, now for centuries it has attained the

magnitude of a national festival which breathes a strange sense

of belonging to all. Whether the lamp is lit in a temple or

chapel, in a hut or palace, before the image of Christ, Mahavira,

Buddha or Lakshmi and Ganesh, or before the sacred Bir - Holy

Scripture, in a Gurdwara or at home, it is essentially a desire

for light, an intrinsic determination to combat darkness,

inherent compulsion for freeing oneself from all that is narrow,

besides a lot of shopping and display of good taste, that now

define the festival of Deepawali.

 

 

Light : The Crux Of Deepawali

 

Sectarian contexts apart, light imparts to Deepawali universal

breadth, unique magnificence and divine dimensions rarely

associated with a festival. As light is benevolent and

auspicious, light's birth, its emergence, is by itself a

celebration. Seers saw light as both the Supreme Creator, as also

the creation. Re-iterating Kabir, when Guru Nanak sang : 'Eka

noor te saba jaga upaya', that is, the entire universe is born of

one light, or when Prophet Mohammad uttered that the universe is

nothing but the extension of His 'noor' - light, they both saw

the Creator as a glow of light. It was hardly different for

Shaivites who consecrated the Supreme Being as Jyotir-linga - the

light combined with phallus, the fertility factor. This Supreme

One wished : 'Ekoham bahusyami' - I am one but wish to multiply,

and thus out of His expansion the cosmos came into being. Hardly

different from these philosophical utterances is the common man's

allegory when on a child's birth a mother sings : 'jaga ujiyaro

hoya', that is, with the child's birth, which symbolises to her

the emergence of light, 'the world is illuminated'. Alike, when a

living self passes away, the wise say : 'jyoti mein jyoti

samani', that is, the flame has merged with the Supreme Flame.

The Buddhist tradition depicts, both in scriptures and art, a

glowing flame passing off the body of Buddha to portray his Maha

Parinirvana - final extinction.

 

The Rig-Veda holds Surya, the sun-god, in highest reverence for

unless there was light even the manifest does not manifest. The

Upanishadic interpretation of the Rig-Vedic Sukta is far clearer.

Emergence of light is also the emergence of cosmos for even if

the cosmos existed it would not manifest unless there was light.

That is why the tradition re-iterated : 'Tamsoma jyotirgamaya' -

let the darkness depart and the light emerge, in which manifested

the desire of the Unmanifest. Metaphorically or otherwise, it is

by the emergence of light that the factum of Creation has been

indicated, not in India alone but also beyond. The Biblical

tradition heralds : 'let there be light and the light was there'.

Here also the Supreme One desired the emergence and once the

light was there, there was the Creation too. Maybe, the light's

relation with the Creation was just symbolic suggesting that the

world existed in light and disappeared in darkness. However,

light is God's verse that he writes on the face of the universe,

and hence, whatever is divine is endowed with light, while dark

avenues are devil's abode.

 

This light is the endless celebration, the man's as also

nature's. Perceptions, perspectives, dimensions and forms, all

are light's creation, and beauty, splendour, goodness, purity.

its finer shades. With light is associated love, optimism,

delight, festivities and everything that is auspicious, holy or

divine. In its intrinsic form light is the attainment of ultimate

knowledge and thereby of the supreme bliss, and thereafter there

is no darkness and nothing in between the seer and the seen. The

light is, thus, the ultimate vision of this world and the world

beyond, and so its celebration, a thing of this world as also of the other.

 

 

Deepawali : Its Beginning And Initial Forms

 

Historical evidences reveal that the earliest celebrations that

the semi-civilized man organised were held around light and fire,

maybe for protection against wild animals that the fire

frightened, and the light alerted against emergent dangers. Out

of this cult people, perhaps those from early civilizations,

developed their own festivals of light, independent ones

discovering the glory of light, as the Indian festival of

Deepawali, or those associated with some religious events such as

the Christmas and the New Year in the Christian world, or the

Shab-i-barat, in the Islamic. Whatever the theological contexts

attached, the primary thrust of these festivals, in whichever

degree, is the victory of light over darkness.

 

The origin of the festival of Deepawali, or Diwali - when or how

it was begun or who initiated it, is not known. The Bhandarkar

Oriental Research Institute, Pune, has made brilliant efforts in

its volume XXVI to trace the origin of Deepawali celebrations but

even such efforts could take back its origin only up to the

beginning of the Christian era, not beyond. The Hindu tradition

relates Deepawali celebrations with the event of Rama's return to

Ayodhya after his victory over Ravana but the Ramayana does not

allude to any such celebrations. Massive arrangements were made

to welcome Rama at Nandigram and every inch of land between

Nandigram and Ayodhya was leveled, sprinkled and beautified,

flags were posted on every house and all inhabitants of Ayodhya

were out on streets to welcome him with folded hands but it all

takes place during the early part of the day. In this sub-canto,

perhaps only once allusion to lamps or light is made. As

commanded Shatrughna, servants of the state rushed with oil

lamps, beds and cushions etc. to the palace where Sugriva stayed.

It seems that by the time of Valmiki auspices were carried out

only during the day and there wasn't perhaps the tradition of

holding corresponding celebrations during the night.

 

The so far known earliest text that alludes to celebrating a

night with multitudinous lights - a kind of the festival of

light, is the Kama-Sutra by sage Vatsyayana, datable to around

the 3rd-2nd century B.C. to the 1st-2nd century A.D. Most

significant among the nights that Vatsyayana recommends to

celebrate is the night of Yakshas or the Yaksha-night. Vatsyayana

ordains that on the Yaksha night the houses should be illuminated

with the light of tiny earthen lamps placed in rows close to each

wall and window ledges, and the gardens should have bonfires.

Yakshas were celestial beings fundamentally inclining to

enjoyment. Thus, Yaksha night was the festival of light and

merriment. At another place in the text Vatsyayana recommends

gambling as the sport for the Yaksha night. Thus, Vatsyayana's

Yaksha night was celebrated with light, merriment and gambling,

something that continues ever since as part of Deepawali

celebrations. The term 'Deepawali' comprises two syllable :

'dipa' and 'awali', one meaning 'lamp' and other, 'row', that is,

row of lamps, exactly with what Vatsyayana ordains Deepawali

celebrations. In their commentaries on the Kama-Sutra the Jain

Acharyas Hem Chandra and Yashodhara, too, have identified the

festival of Yaksha night as an early form of Deepawali.

Kalaratri - the deadly night, Maha Ratri - impenetrable night,

Muhka Ratri - night of initiation etc. are Yaksha Ratri type

other names by which the Puranas have addressed Deepawali.

 

In his play 'Nava-Nand', King Harsh, who had a long tenure from

606 A.D. to 648 A. D., talks of Dipotsava - festival of lamps.

The Dipotsava of King Harsh is quite similar to the modern

Deepawali. Nilamata Purana of the Kashmiri origin, composed

between 500 A. D. to 800 A. D., gives more elaborate account of

the Dipa-mala festival. All round illuminations, decorations,

especially by hoisting up festoons, feasting Brahmins and

relatives, gambling, music, passing nights in company of ladies,

wearing rich apparel and jewels and making presents of new

garments to friends, relatives, Brahmins and household were some

essential features of Deepawali celebrations. In his

Yashastilakachampoo (A. D. 959), Someshvarasuri makes special

mention of decorating houses on Deepawali. According to him, the

houses were white-washed and their tops were decorated with rows

of bright lights. In his Tahkik-i-Hind, the known traveler

Alberuni, who was in India in A. D. 1030, gives an identical

account of Deepawali celebrations. In addition, he talks of

people visiting temples, giving alms, exchanging betel leaves and

areca nuts. He also talks of gambling and some Deepawali related

legends. He says that it was considered as the day for trying

one's luck, and it was on this day that Goddess Lakshmi was

liberated from Bali's clutches. In his memoirs the Italian

traveler Nicoloi Conti gives an elaborate picture of how Indians

celebrated Deepawali, In about 1420-21 Conti was in Vijayanagara

and recorded how in temples the lamps kept lit day and night, and

on house-tops, the whole night. In his Ain-i-Akbari, Abul Fazl

circumscribes Deepawali as the festival of Vaisyas - the trading

community, but such was its popularity and attraction that Akbar

himself participated in its celebrations.

 

 

Deepawali: In New Contexts

 

Deepawali was now the most captivating annual event celebrated

with enthusiasm by both household and recluses; however, except

some ritual practices added to it, it had no mystic, mythological

or symbolic dimensions. It was still seen as the epitome of

people's endeavour to fight against darkness, which later widened

into a battle against all that was evil, dark and gloomy - the

victory of good over evil. The Marathi saint Jnyaneshvara, in

Jnyaneshvari, equating Deepawali illuminations with the light of

spiritual knowledge added to it divine dimensions. Chakradhara,

the founder of Marathi Mahanubhava sect, a social-cum-religious

organisation, prescribes for his Gosavi pupils the way of

celebrating Deepawali befitting a saint. In his

Chaturvargachintamani, a mid-13th century text, Hemadri laid the

tradition of sisters feeding their brothers on the occasion of

Deepawali. Brahma Purana and others had already prescribed

worship of Lakshmi or Mahalakshmi on Deepawali but after some

kings, such as the Kolhapur king Siddharaja, began worshipping

the goddess, the cult reached every house. In his Prabandha

Chintamani, Merutunga, a saint-cum-thinker of Gujarat, gives

elaborate details of Siddharaja worshipping the goddess with

offerings of gold, jewels, garments and camphor.

 

As reflects in the entire body of Indian theology irrespective

this or that sect, some kind of utility aspect - ethical, social,

moral., is found linked with all major religious practices and

popular beliefs. After Deepawali gained popularity among various

sects, it was also linked with hygiene, strengthened ties -

social and within the family, improved living, and inspired

charity. As per one's status and means every household was

required to repair and put in proper shape his monsoon-worn house

and disinfect it with lime-wash. The Brahma Purana acclaimed that

lighting lamps on Deepawali is as virtuous as distributing alms

equal to one's body-weight. It cautions that one should not

celebrate Deepawali unless the house has been duly cleaned and

one wears new, or at least neat and clean bejeweled clothes, and

further that it is inauspicious to eat any food unless one shares

it with those held in reverence, members of the family and the

village, and the household servants. As Holi, the other

Deepawali-like popular festival, was associated with harvesting

of one crop, Deepawali was associated with the other. Deepawali

had now a set of rituals relating to dung-heap worship and the

worship of cow-dung deified as Govardhana - the mythical mount,

the worship of which Krishna had initiated. These rituals aimed

at conserving the natural source of re-energizing agricultural

lands which rains rendered dull depriving them of their fertility power.

 

 

Introduction Of Crackers

 

By 17th-18th century the cult of celebrating Deepawali had spread

over the entire subcontinent from Himalayan hill-region, Kashmir

and Siam to deep South. It was celebrated by lighting the lamps

usually in large numbers. The use of fireworks - crackers and

sparklers, was a late addition, perhaps after the invention of

gun powder in the 14th century. As becomes evident from the

mid-17th century miniatures from the period of Shahjahan,

fireworks had emerged as part of Deepawali celebrations by then,

though their display became more popular by the 18th century.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/HF29/

 

Not restricting to crackers or sparklers, the gun powder was now

also mixed with inflammable pulps for moulding out of them

effigies of mythological figures like Ravana, Meghanatha and

others. Such effigies were put in public squares and were shot at

to put them ablaze. Maratha history contains an interesting

episode relating to such gun powder effigies. Kota rulers used to

cast, besides the effigies of Ravana, Meghanatha and others, a

model of Lanka, monkeys and a huge figure of Hanuman from this

inflammable pulp and gun powder. First of all Hanuman's tail was

put ablaze, and then it burnt entire Lanka including Ravana and

others. When at Kota, Mahadji Scindia, founder of Scindia dynasty

and one of the generals of Peshwa Madhava Rao who ruled from 1774

to 1795, witnessed the episode and highly impressed as he was, he

narrated it to the Peshwa when he was back at Pune. Later, Peshwa

asked Mahadji Scindia to get constructed the similar model of

Lanka and effigies of others including Hanuman beneath the

Parvati hill, and when they were burnt he witnessed them with his

courtiers from the Parvati temple. However later when Dashahara

and Deepawali were linked with the Rama's conquest over Ravana,

as two major events of the Rama-katha - the story of Rama, this

part of Deepawali celebrations : burning the effigies of Ravana

and others, was shifted to Dashahara, the day Rama had killed Ravana.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/book/details/IDH320/

 

 

Sectarian Status Of Deepawali

 

Hindus relate Deepawali to Rama's return to Ayodhya on completion

of his fourteen years exile in the forest exactly twenty days

after he had killed Ravana. Some astrological studies have

established that the day of Rama's return to Ayodhya was the same

as the one on which Deepawali is celebrated but when exactly the

two were linked together is not known. As discussed earlier, the

Ramayana by sage Valmiki, which tradition assigns to Rama's

life-time, does not allude to any kind of celebrations held that

night. It is the same with the Ramacharita Manasa by Tulsidasa.

The Ramacharita Manasa, too, does not talk of any kind of night

celebration, not even that people adorned their houses with light.

 

Another section of Hindus relates Deepawali to the elimination of

Narakasura, the demon king of Pragjotipura in the north-east, by

Krishna. Narakasura daily sacrificed one unmarried girl and

abducted every woman he could lay his hand on. As the legend has

it, every young girl was required to worship him and offer

herself for sacrifice. The number of women he had abducted,

before he was killed, was sixty thousand. In Bundelkhand and

several other backward parts of the land the young unmarried

girls still worship the cow-dung images of Narakasura for a

fortnight preceding Deepawali. With lamps in hands these young

worshippers of Narakasura move around the village in the form of

a procession. Krishna killed the demon and rescued all sixty

thousand women. After he was killed, the entire country was

illuminated and his effigies were burnt, a tradition of which

Deepawali is the continuum. Some traditions fix Chaturdashi as

the day of the elimination of Narakasura, and hence celebrate it

as Chhoti - small or mini Deepawali. It is sometimes called

'Naraka Chaturdashi'.

 

The Skanda Purana links Deepawali celebrations with the

destruction of the demon king Bali and Vishnu's incarnation as

Vamana, the Dwarf. As the legend has it, the demon king Bali, son

of Virochana and grandson of the legendary Prahlad, had acquired

enormous celestial powers by the observance of great austerities.

With such powers he captured all three worlds, made Lakshmi his

captive and deprived Indra and all other gods of their abodes.

Unable to win back their lost position and prestige all gods and

Indra went to Vishnu and prayed him for rescuing them from Bali's

torments. On the banks of river Narmada Bali had held a great

yajna - sacrificial ritual, to which hundreds of Brahmins were

invited. Vishnu incarnated or transformed as Vamana, a Brahmin

with the body size of a dwarf, and joined the yajna as one of the

Brahmins. On his turn, during the course of the distribution of

alms, he prayed Bali for giving him a piece of land measuring

just three strides. Bali happily granted the prayer. To make

surer Vamana prayed the demon king to take a vow as prescribed,

which Bali did.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/HJ48/

 

Thereupon Vishnu so much expanded his form that in two strides he

covered all three worlds, and with the third, pushed Bali to

nether land, his rightful place. This appears to have been the

earliest of all three Deepawali related Hindu myths for, as

becomes evident from the memoirs of Alberuni, the legend must

have been quite popular even during the early years of the

11th century when Alberuni visited India. Alberuni mentions that

people celebrated Deepawali for Lakshmi's liberation from the

clutches of Bali.

 

Jains celebrate Deepawali, or Deva Diwali, as the day of the

Nirvana - final extinction, of Mahavira, their twenty-fourth

Tirthankara. When 72, Mahavira had his Nirvana at Pavapuri, in

modern Bihar, in late night of Chaturdashi, that is, the early

morning of the Amavasya of the month of Kartika, the day on which

Deepawali is celebrated. As the Jain tradition maintains, after

the Nirvana of Lord Mahavira eighteen kings who were his

followers conferred and said :' since the light of holy knowledge

has passed away, let there be material illumination', and then

the lights were lit. The lights were lit in the morning as also

in the evening that followed. Jain Acharya Hem Chandra holds that

it was thus that the dipotsava was begun, and that the

yaksha-ratri of Vatsyayana in Kama-Sutra was conceived on the

line of the dipotsava, though with the objective of merriment.

Jains' evening celebrations have the same form as under the

common tradition including invocation of goddess Lakshmi, though

its morning part is completely different and is ritualistic. The

fast is observed on the day of Chaturdashi preceding the moment

of the Master's Nirvana. The Jains would rise in early morning,

take bath and reach the temple where they would offer last

prayers to the departing Master and would offer as oblation

Nirvana-ladu - sugar ball, something like the last mass. The

tradition is claimed to begin from the day of Mahavira's Nirvana,

which might be an exaggeration but, as becomes evident from early

texts like one of Acharya Hem Chandra, its antiquity is doubtless.

 

Sikhs celebrate Deepawali in like manner, wearing new clothes,

lighting lamps, burning crackers etc. but they have their own

context of Deepawali, and it adds to it greater significance and

auspiciousness. Sikhs celebrated Deepawali earlier also of which

clear evidence is seen during the period of the fifth Guru Arjan

Deva but it was because of the release and return of Guru

Hargobind, Sikhs' sixth pontiff, to the Golden Temple on the day

of Deepawali that it gained special significance for Sikhs.

Annoyed for feeding his rebel son prince Khurram, who later

succeeded him as Shahjahan, in his langara - community feasting,

Jahangir had arrested Guru Hargobind and imprisoned him in the

fort of Gwalior. Later, convinced by Mir, a Sufi saint, Jahangir

ordered his release. He reached Amritsar on Deepawali. Baba

Buddaji, the elder most Sikh, and other devout Sikhs lighted

lamps and illuminated Sri Harmandar Sahib, distributed food to

all, held special sabad-kirtan - musical recitation of Sri Guru

Granth Sahib, and ardas - prayer, and held special congregation.

It continued for three days, and accordingly, Sikhs celebrate

Deepawali for three days, though lighting in Sri Harmandar Sahib

and decoration continue for about a fortnight.

 

 

Deepawali : A Composite Festival

 

In most of the major festivals in other traditions of the world

celebrations stretch over a period of many days. Deepawali

celebrations stretch into a group of at least five minor

festivals and thus Deepawali is a festival of composite nature.

The first of them is Dhana-Terasa. 'Terasa' is the corrupt form

of Trio-dash, meaning thirteenth; 'Dhana' means wealth; and thus,

Dhan-Terasa means 'thirteenth, the day of wealth', that is, two

days before Deepawali which takes place on the fifteenth -

Amavasya. Dhana-Terasa marks the beginning of the Lakshmi's

welcome rites. In the evening some lamps are lighted and placed

outside the door for Yama, the god of death, for keeping him

away. Actual Deepawali shopping, especially of utensils and

jewellery, is done on Dhana-Terasa and is considered

exceptionally auspicious; these new things alternate the old. As

already discussed, Chaturdashi is celebrated as minor Deepawali

in all sects, as Naraka Chaturdashi in the Hindu tradition, and

as the day of Mahavira's Nirvana, amongst Jains. Govardhana-puja,

worship of Mount Govardhana, that takes place on the day next to

Deepawali, is another minor festival. In some parts there is the

tradition of worshipping a cow-dung model of Govardhana along

with cows, while in the other, it is celebrated as Annakuta - the

worship of the pile of the first harvested grain of the season.

 

The next day, which is 'Doja' - second day of the second half of

the month, is celebrated as Bhaiya-Doja. It is the day when

sisters put tilaka-mark on the foreheads of their brothers and

feed them with the food they prepared with their own hands, a

tradition which perhaps Acharya Hemadri had introduced in the

13th century. Bhaiya-Doja is also known as Yama-Dwitiya having

Vedic context of Yama and Yami, the son and daughter of Surya. As

is the story, Yami made a proposal to Yama for marrying her,

something common in primitive society which did not see a man and

woman as other than a male and a female. To change this position

Surya instructed Yama to turn down Yami's proposal. In the course

of time this relationship was identified as brother and sister.

Bhaiya-Doja aimed at strengthening the ties in between them.

 

 

Astronomical Significance Of Deepawali

 

Deepawali celebrations are fixed for the Amavasya night of the

month of Kartika but this Amavasya is not a mathematically

counted day. It is rather the outcome of the planetary position.

The Zodiac is divided into twelve parts having twelve Zodiac

signs, namely, Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra,

Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, and Pisces. The cycle

of the sun's movement across them is the basis for determining

both Deepawali as well as Holi, the other as much popular

festival of India. Deepawali occurs on the day when the sun

transits from Virgo, the sixth sign, into Libra, the seventh - a

planetary position on the Kartika Amavasya. From this Amavasya

the later half of the planetary year begins. The planetary

position on this day determines the prospects across the year not

only of those born under this or that zodiac sign but also of the

society in general, the nation and the world. Being linked with

the arrival of crop which equips all with buying capacity

Deepawali has special meaning for traders, and accordingly they

maintain their account books from Deepawali to Deepawali, often

maintaining this periodicity as their calendar.

 

 

Deepawali Rituals

 

Lakshmi is unanimously revered as the presiding deity of Deepawali.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/PB88/

 

In the Deepawali context Lakshmi is the presiding deity of

riches, prosperity, fertility and well-being, and here her Vishnu

contexts seem to become largely irrelevant. In its

Gautami-Mahatmya part, the Brahma-Purana perceives her as God's

grace, grace of penance and yajna, one who gives prosperity,

fame, popularity, learning, intellect, happiness, salvation,

forbearance, accomplishment of all desired, quiescence, and all

faculties of mind, and as one who herself is the water, earth,

space, light, darkness, Maya, and all that is manifest and

unmanifest. Hence, in Deepawali rituals Lakshmi is thrice

worshipped. Analogous to Kala-ratri, the first night after the

Great Deluge when the process of re-creation was commenced,

Deepawali begins its rituals with the joint worship of Lakshmi

and Ganesh, one representing the primordial energy and the other

who channeled it into creative process by controlling detriments.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/DI13/

 

The image of Ganesh, when accompanied by his consorts Riddhi and

Siddhi, has greater auspices. While Ganesh checks negatives,

Riddhi and Siddhi operate and produce results. This joint worship

of Lakshmi-Ganesh is followed by the worship of nine planets,

sixty-four Yoginis - manifest forms of primordial energy, sixteen

mothers, knowledge of architecture, Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva.

Then Lakshmi is worshipped independently without Ganesh.

Different from primordial energy she is now worshipped as the

goddess of riches and abundance. Hence, before she is worshipped

scriptures prescribe worship of Yaksha Kuber, the custodian of

riches. And finally, after one has worshipped the means of

livelihood, means of rituals and knowledge etc. Lakshmi is

worshipped again, and this time the related hymn is thrice

recited, thrice is made offering, and thrice should bow the head

as the goddess pervades all three worlds and prayers should reach them all.

 

===========================================

This article by Prof P. C. Jain and Dr. Daljeet

===========================================

 

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For further study

-------

 

Rig-Veda Samhita : edited by F. Maxmuller; English translation by

H. H. Wilson, Poona.

 

Mahabharata : Gita Press, Gorakhpur; Critical Edition, Poona;

English translation by Pratap Chandra Rai, Calcutta.

 

Valmiki Ramayana : Gita Press, Gorakhpur

 

Skanda Purana : Gita Press, Gorakhpur

 

Bhagavata Purana : Gita Press, Gorakhpur

 

Vishnupurana : Bombay; Gita Press, Gorakhpur

 

Brahma Puarana : Gita Press, Gorakhpur

 

Vayu Purana : Gita Press, Gorakhpur

 

P. C. Jain : The Magic Makers

 

Dr. Daljeet & P. C. Jain: Krishna : Raga se Viraga Tak

 

Dr. Daljeet & P. C. Jain: Sri Harmandar Sahib - Body visible of

the Invisible Supreme

 

D. O. Flaherty : Hindu Myths

 

Veronica Ions : Indian Mythology

 

Shakti M. Gupta : Festivals, Fairs and Fasts of India

 

J. N. Banarjee : The Development of Hindu Iconography

 

Bulletin of the Bhandarkara Institute of Oriental Research, Pune,

vol. 26.

 

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