Vijaya-Dashami: Durga Pooja The Significance of Durga Pooja
Vijaya-Dashami: Durga Pooja The Significance of Durga Pooja
Vijaya-Dashami: Durga Pooja The Significance of Durga Pooja
While the ceremonies bring observance of fast and devotion for ten
days, the last four days of the festival namely Saptami, Ashtami,
Navami, and Vijaya-Dashami are celebrated with much sparkle and
magnificence in India, especially in Bengal and overseas.
The Durga Pooja celebrations differ based on the place, customs, and
beliefs. Things differ to the extent that somewhere the festival is on for
five days, somewhere it is for seven and somewhere it is for complete
ten days. Joviality begins with ‘Shashti’ – sixth day and ends on the
‘VijayaDashmi’ – the tenth day.
Goddess Durga was the daughter of Himalaya and Menka. She later
became Sati to get married to Lord Shiva. It is believed that the festival
of Durga pooja started since the time Lord Rama worshipped the
goddess to get a grant of powers from her to kill Ravana.
The festivities begin from the time of Mahalaya, where the devotees
request Goddess Durga to come to the earth. On this day, they make the
eyes on the statue of the Goddess during an auspicious ceremony named
Chokkhu Daan. After establishing the idol of Goddess Durga in place,
they perform rituals to raise her blessed presence into the idols on
Saptami.
During the festival, the devotees offer prayers to the Goddess and
worshiped her in several different forms. After the evening aarti ritual is
done on the eighth day it is a tradition for the religious folk dance which
is performed in front of the Goddess in order to gratify her. This dance
is performed on the musical beats of drums while holding a clay pot
filled with burning coconut covering and camphor.
Conclusion
All people celebrate and enjoy this festival irrespective of their castes
and financial status. Durga Pooja is an enormously communal and
theatrical celebration. Dance and cultural performances are an essential
part of it. Delicious traditional food is also an enormous part of the
festival. The street of Kolkata flourishes with food stalls and shops,
where several locals and foreigners enjoy mouth-watering foodstuff
including sweets. To celebrate Durga Pooja, all workplaces, educational
institutions, and business places remain closed in West Bengal. Besides
Kolkata, Durga Pooja is also celebrated in other places like Patna,
Guwahati, Mumbai, Jamshedpur, Bhubaneswar, and so on. Many non-
residential Bengali cultural establishments organize Durga Pooja in
several places in the UK, USA, Australia, France, and other countries.
Thus, the festival teaches us that good always wins over the evil and so
we should always follow the right path.