What's new

colorful festives of India

Santa sand art in Puri Beach, Orissa

10r7gd3.jpg


wve1yh.jpg


Christmas celebration in Kerala

2cmnd6p.jpg


ta4jd2.jpg


21eb5on.jpg


Celebration in Amritsar, Punjab

35mpmih.jpg
 
Eid is not a festival of India, please ensure that.
Its a festival of Islam.

And who is talking about Eid in India, when there are riots while celebrating (During slaughtering the cow).
are u for real ???? :confused:
 
Eid is not a festival of India, please ensure that.
Its a festival of Islam.

And who is talking about Eid in India, when there are riots while celebrating (During slaughtering the cow).

lool I'm sorry to burst your bubble but we used to get a 'dibba' full of 'savvaiya' from our Muslim neighbours in Ramadan plus had a holiday on Eid day.

I'm sorry if your guys don't get to celebrate any non-Islamic festivals but we celebrate everything from Christmas [Christian festical] to Eid [Muslim festival] to Baisakhi [Sikh festival] to Diwali [Hindu & Sikh festival].
 
Karwa Chauth

Karva Chauth (Hindi: करवा चौथ, Punjabi: ਕਰਵਾ ਚੌਥ, Urdu: کروا چوتھ) is an annual one-day festival celebrated by Hindu and some Sikh women in North India and parts of Pakistan in which married women fast from sunrise to moonrise for the safety and longevity of their husbands. The fast is observed in the states of Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana, Indian Punjab, Rajasthan and Gujarat. The festival falls on the fourth day after the full moon, in the Hindu lunisolar calendar month of Kartik, following the Autumnal Equinox. Sometimes, unmarried women observe the fast for their fiances or desired husbands.


or87jn.gif


lzdhc.jpg


2myx1ls.jpg


33fgnqg.jpg


a4bk88.jpg
 
Raksha Bandhan

Raksha Bandhan (Hindi: रक्षाबंधन, the bond of protection), or Rakhi (राखी), is a festival primarily observed in North India, which celebrates the relationship between brothers and sisters. The festival is observed by Hindus and Sikhs. The central ceremony involves the tying of a rakhi (sacred thread) by a sister on her brother's wrist. This symbolizes the sister's love and prayers for her brother's well-being, and the brother's lifelong vow to protect her. The festival falls on the full moon day (Shravan Poornima) of the Shravan month of the Hindu lunisolar calendar.


2mx0o5z.jpg


2rhycjm.jpg


2rmv3gm.jpg


ibl8hj.jpg


ny7c7d.jpg


10nt46w.jpg
 
Durga Pooja in Calcutta! Thank Later! :lol:

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Janmashtami

Krishna Janmashtami (Devanagari कृष्ण जन्माष्टमी kṛṣṇa janmāṣṭami), also known as Krishnashtami, Saatam Aatham, Gokulashtami, Ashtami Rohini, Srikrishna Jayanti, Sree Jayanthi or sometimes merely as Janmashtami, is a Hindu festival celebrating the birth of Krishna, an Avatar of the Hindu deity Vishnu.

Krishna Janmashtami is observed on the Ashtami tithi, the eighth day of the dark half or Krishna Paksha of the month of Bhadrapada in the Hindu calendar, when the Rohini Nakshatra is ascendant. The festival always falls within mid-August to mid-September in the Gregorian calendar. In 2009, for example, the festival was celebrated on 14 August, while in 2010, the festival will be celebrated on 2 September.

Rasa lila, dramatic enactments of the life of Krishna, are a special feature in regions of Mathura and Vrindavan, and regions following Vaishnavism in Manipur. While the Rasa lila re-creates the flirtatious aspects of Krishna's youthful days, the Dahi Handi celebrate God's playful and mischievous side, where teams of young men form human pyramids to reach a high-hanging pot of butter and break it. This tradition, also known as uriadi, is a major event in Tamil Nadu on Gokulashtami.


2n683h4.jpg


2lbcevm.jpg


9j3no9.jpg


14vu49h.jpg


2w7l8o0.jpg


2ykmi3a.jpg


6hjkt1.jpg
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom