Celebration:
Festival Of Colours
Religion: Hindu
Fall On: March-April
About Holi
Holi is all about
having fun, playing with colours and getting doped, all with the
permission of the Gods. Holi heralds the end of winter and the beginning
of the spring. It is a joyous celebration of the rejuvenation of
nature, and renewed hope of happiness and peaceful coexistence.
People throw coloured water and powders (gulal and kumkum) at each
other and make merry. Singing and dancing add to the gaiety of the
occasion.
Holis Or Bonfires
The night before the full moon, crowds of people gather together
and light huge bonfires to burn the residual dried leaves and twigs
of the winter. Metaphorically though, the fire is meant to signify
the destruction of evil - the burning of the 'Holika' - a mythological
character. The heat from the fire is also a reminder that winter
is behind and that the hot summer days are ahead. On the next day,
people of all ages come outside and playfully drench each other
with coloured water. Brightly coloured powders are applied on faces,
and there is plenty of music, dance and sweets to fill the rest
of the day. The exuberant display of colours symbolises the advent
of a colourful and prosperous spring season.
It's Association With Lord Krishna
Holi is also associated with the immortal love of Krishna and Radha,
the day begins with worshipping Krishna by lovingly smearing his
idol with 'gulal' - the colours used to play Holi. This is a festival
that is as much a gateway to celebrate the arrival of spring as
much as it is a way to celebrate the season of love.
Krishna
is the ultimate lover with his 'gopikas', who are a bunch of beautiful
women that Krishna forever seems to be chasing. And yet this icon
of love spends most of his time seeking out his only lover Radha.
So Krishna's love is the epitome of the freshness of youth amidst
all its playfulness. Without Krishna and his lover Radha there can
be no Holi
Legends
Krishna's mythological presence in Holi is undisputed. It is said
that the festival is also a celebration of the death of Pootna -
the demon who nearly killed Lord Krishna. The effigy of Pootna burnt
the night before, therefore, ends up signifying death itself just
as Pootna typifies winter and darkness.
Legends also associate this festival
with the later years of Krishna's amorous life. Depicted in miniature
paintings as a festival popular amongst Krishna and his Gopis (milkmaids),
Holi has been instrumental in providing colour in many lives.
There are more stories. This is the
one about Holika who believed herself to be immuned to death by
fire. And yet when she questions her nephew Prahlad's devotion to
the ultimate of Gods, Vishnu and threatens to walk through fire
with the intention to destroy the prince, she is herself consumed
by the fire whereas the prince comes out unscathed. This is the
Holika that is burnt the night before Holi as the triumph of the
good over evil.
Holi is also an occasion for the
celebration of the burning of Kama, the Hindu cupid, with the fire
that emanated from Lord Shiva's third eye. But he was brought to
life again when his wife, Goddess Parvati, implored Shiva for mercy.
On The Day Of Holi
Smearing colours on friends and dear ones is the basic idea of Holi,
no one is spared. Both the young and the old enjoy throwing water
balloons, dry colours, and washable dyes on anyone in sight on the
day of the Holi. People go around in streets, with tin drums, armed
with tonnes of colours and big syringes filled with coloured water
and at the end of the day no one will even remotely resemble themselves.
Holi is also synonymous with bhang,
which is consumed by many in the form of ladoos and ghols. One could
get away with almost anything on this day; squirting coloured water
on passers-by and dunking friends in the mud pool saying "bura
na mano, Holi hai" (don't feel offended, it's Holi). Holi is
the time when people from all castes and social strata come together
forgetting all past differences and grievances.
The festival is a favourite with
most Indians for being the most colourful and joyous of all. Every
year it succeeds in bridging the social gap, between employers and
employees, men and women. People visit homes, distribute sweets
and apply gulal (colour) on each other, signifying the colourful
and happy spring times ahead. They greet each other, embracing three
times.
Apart from this usual fun with coloured
powder and water, Holi is marked by vibrant processions, which are
accompanied by folk songs, dances and a general sense of abandoned
gaiety.
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