Wednesday, 11 September 2019

Onam Festival

                                     Pookkalam   (flower Rangoli)

                                              










Onam is an annual ancient Harvest Festival  in the state of Kerala  in India.   

It falls on the 22nd nakshatra Thiruvonam  in the Malayalam Calandar month of Chingam, which in Gregorian calendar overlaps with August–September. 

According to legends, the festival is celebrated to commemorate King of King Mahabali, whose spirit is said to visit Kerala at the time of Onam.


Onam is a major annual event for Malayali people in and outside Kerala. 

It is a harvest festival, one of three major annual Hindu celebrations along with Vishnu and Thiruvathira, and it is observed with numerous festivities.  

Onam celebrations include Vallam Kali  (boat races), Pulikali  (tiger dances), Pookkalam   (flower Rangoli  ), Onathappan (worship), Onam Kali, Tug of War, Thumbi Thullal (women's dance), Kummattikali   (mask dance), Onathallu (martial arts), Onavillu (music), Kazhchakkula (plantain offerings), Onapottan (costumes), Atthachamayam (folk songs and dance), and other celebrations.  


Onam is the official state festival of Kerala with public holidays that start four days from Uthradom (Onam eve).  


Major festivities take places across 30 venues in Thiruvananthapuram, capital of Kerala. 


It is also celebrated by Malayali diaspora around the world. 

Though a Hindu festival, non-Hindu communities of Kerala participate in Onam celebrations considering it as a cultural festival.
 

Onam is an ancient Hindu festival of Kerala that celebrates rice harvest. 

The significance of the festival is in Hindu legends, of which two are more common. 


 The story behind Onam -


According to the Hindu mythology, Mahabali  was the great- great-grandson of a Brahmin  sage named Kashyapa.

The great-grandson of demonic dictator, Hiranyakashipu, and the grandson of Vishnu  devotee Prahlada. 

This links the festival to the Puranic mythology of Prahlada in Hinduism, who was the son of Hiranyakashipu. 
  



Prahlada's grandson, Mahabali, came to power by defeating the gods (devas) and taking over the three worlds. 

According to Vaishnavism  mythology and story in Vishnu Purana, the defeated Devas approached Vishnu for help in their battle with Mahabali.  

Vishnu refused to join the gods in violence against Mahabali, because Mahabali was a good ruler and his own devotee. 

He, instead, decided to test Mahabali's devotion at an opportune moment. 

Mahabali, after his victory over the gods, declared that he would perform a Yajana  ( homa sacrififices/rituals)  and grant anyone any request during the Yajna

Vishnu took the Avatara (reincarnation) of a dwarf boy called Vamana and approached Mahabali. 

The king offered anything to the boy – gold, cows, elephants, villages, food, whatever he wished. 

The boy said that one must not seek more than one needs, and all he needed was "three paces of land." Mahabali agreed.
  

Vamana grew to an enormous size, and covered everything Mahabali ruled over in just two paces. 

For the third pace, Mahabali offered his head for Vishnu to step on, an act that Vishnu accepted as evidence of Mahabali's devotion.

Vishnu granted him a boon, by which Mahabali could visit again, once every year, the lands and people he previously ruled. 

This revisit marks the festival of Onam, as a reminder of the virtuous rule and his humility in keeping his promise before Vishnu. 

The last day of Mahabali's stay is remembered with a nine-course vegetarian Onasadya  feast.
 


Friends my book "ROOTS INDIA" is coming in this month.  In this book one will get an Ancient Indian Literature from Veda, its Peri...