Pooja - Navarathri worship

avatar

The image shows a bomma golu(kolu) that has been done beautifully by the ladies of our village in the Ganapati temple. Various dolls have been arranged, and ladies and children are given a tamboolam that consists of betel leaves and kumkum. Prasad is given to all after the evening pooja to all devotees present in the temple premises. This goes for the period of Navarathri.

The dolls that are usually kept are the wedding set, the Dashavatar set, the musician set, and various forms of goddesses. Other dolls are also arranged beautifully, and people come to admire them. Sometimes, even replicas of fruits and vegetables are kept on the bottom row. People are not allowed to touch the dolls or play with them, as it is part of the worship process, and in my experience, when we practiced this tradition when young, naughty children from our neighborhood used to try and knock the dolls off. So, we used to distract them by giving them smaller versions and sweets too. Sigh, sometimes, even the elders were also very unruly.

Today evening, books and musical instruments will be placed before the gods for worship. The books will be placed on a mat or table, and then covered with a cloth, and flowers will be used to worship. Sweets must also be offered as Nivedya. Those who find it inconvenient to worship at home will take their books to the temple to be worshipped.

On the Vijayadashami day - Vidya Arambham day, toddlers will be initiated into the world of reading and writing by knowledgeable persons. People usually go to Ma Saraswati temple as she is the Goddess of knowledge.

Children also prostrate before Gurus on that day to start learning music, dance, and various musical instruments. It is a very delightful time to visit India during this festival, as the whole nation grandly celebrates Navaratri, and a tourist can experience different cultures in various states of the country. Needless to say, free food is given daily to all those who visit the temples.

Wishing you all a happy Pooja.

Jai Sai Ram

image - own



0
0
0.000
8 comments
avatar

This post has been manually curated by @bhattg from Indiaunited community. Join us on our Discord Server.

Do you know that you can earn a passive income by delegating to @indiaunited. We share more than 100 % of the curation rewards with the delegators in the form of IUC tokens. HP delegators and IUC token holders also get upto 20% additional vote weight.

Here are some handy links for delegations: 100HP, 250HP, 500HP, 1000HP.

image.png

100% of the rewards from this comment goes to the curator for their manual curation efforts. Please encourage the curator @bhattg by upvoting this comment and support the community by voting the posts made by @indiaunited..

This post received an extra 20.00% vote for delegating HP / holding IUC tokens.

0
0
0.000
avatar

It is very nostalgic to see the same set of traditions being followed in many places in India. We used to be very happy back then during the school days that we don't have to study during the Saraswati Pooja day. The next day we have to sit and read from each and all very book that we placed in front of the God. It is a great thing. 🙂

0
0
0.000
avatar

Yes, Bala. All the best to your family.

0
0
0.000
avatar

That bit about giving tiny toys and sweets to keep the naughty ones busy made me grin, and the elders being rowdy cracked me up too :)
The way you described placing books and instruments on a mat and covering them before offering sweets felt so gentle, a nice reminder that learning itself is sacred.
I love how tamboolam with betel leaf and kumkum ties everyone together, even the temple ADmin cant resist that warm vibe.
Thanks for sharing this season so vividly and and wishing your Vidyarambham goes smoothly.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thanks :)

0
0
0.000
avatar

Anytime! Your post bring back so many temple feels, esp the tamboolam and kids getting sweets :) If you did Vidya Arambham, hope it went well and the little ones had fun with golu, its' such a lovely tradition. Got any favorite prasad from the temple.

0
0
0.000