HAPPY DIWALI
Diwali, also spelled Divali , one of the
major religious festivals in Hinduism, lasting for five days from the 13th day
of the dark half of the lunar month Ashvina to the second day of the light half
of Karttika. (The corresponding dates in the Gregorian
calendar usually fall in late October and
November.) The name is derived from the Sanskrit term dipavali
meaning “row of lights,” which are lit on the new-moon night to bid the
presence of Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth. In Bengal, however, the goddess Kali is worshiped, and in north India the festival also
celebrates the return of Rama, Sita, Lakshmana, and Hanuman to the city of Ayodhya, where Rama’s rule of righteousness would commence.
During the festival, small earthenware lamps filled with oil are
lighted and placed in rows along the parapets of temples and houses and set
adrift on rivers and streams. The fourth day—the main Diwali festival day and
the beginning of the lunar month of Karttika—marks the beginning of the new
year according to the Vikrama calendar.
Merchants perform religious ceremonies and open new account books. It is
generally a time for visiting, exchanging gifts, cleaning and decorating
houses, feasting, setting off fireworks displays, and wearing new clothes.
Gambling is encouraged during this season as a way of ensuring good luck for
the coming year and in remembrance of the games of dice played by the Lord Shiva and Parvati on Mount Kailasa or similar contests between Radha and Krishna. Ritually, in honour of Lakshmi, the female player
always wins.
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