Katra traders earn profits during ”Navratra” festival

Katra (Jammu and Kashmir), Mar 23 (ANI): Katra traders and businessmen do brisk business on the occasion of the ongoing ”Navratra” festival.

Thousands of pilgrims throng here on their way to the Hindu shrine of Vaishno Devi.

Katra, which lies in the foothills of Trikuta is visited by devotees all around the year with about 4000-5000 pilgrims visiting the shrine daily.

This in turn boosts the local economy.

“I have always seen that devotees throng this place during Navratras. The devotees believe that visiting this shrine during this time is very auspicious for them,” said Amarjeet Singh, a restaurant owner.

“So, when the tourist inflow increases each and every community, whether he is a businessman, a shopkeeper or a hotelier, earns profit. The people come here and buy things for their family,” Singh added.

On this occasion around 70-75 lakh devotees visit the Shrine each year.

“There is something very special about this festival, as there is normally not much work to do during the rest of the year; but during Navratras the business is good. We do seventy to hundred percent more business during this time than the whole year,” said Anu Dubey, a shopkeeper.

“People come here to buy things and the whole market place is also cleaned up during this festival,” she added.
A pilgrimage to Mata Vaishno Devi shrine during the Navratras is considered most auspicious.

Navratra is celebrated with religious fervour twice in a year, during the spring and the autumn season.

The nine-day festival signifies nine manifestations of Goddess Durga, who stands for power. She is depicted as riding a raging lion, holding weapons in her ten hands.

The shrine of Vaishno Devi is one of the oldest shrines of the country, located at a height of 5,300 feet. (ANI)

Nine-day ‘Navratri’ festival begins all over India

New Delhi/ Faizabad/Allahabad, Sept 19 (ANI): The nine-day ‘Navratri’ festival began across India with religious fervour on Saturday.

Thousands of devotees queued up at various temples dedicated to Goddess Durga.

In New Delhi, devotees converged at Jhandewalan to offer prayers prior to dawn and observed fast throughout the day.

“We observe fast on the first day of Navratri. On the first day, we pray for the whole day and meditate on Goddess Durga,” said Madan Gehlot, a devotee.

Meanwhile, at Faizabad in Uttar Pradesh, people made a beeline to the temple of Goddess Badi Devkali.

The devotees believe their wishes are fulfilled if they pray to Goddess Badi Devkali during the festival.

“People believe that coming here redeems them from their sins. Since the Goddess Devkali is the deity of Lord Rama’s dynasty, her significance is all the more. That’s why people come here to offer prayers to the Goddess,” said Poonam, a devotee.

Earlier on Friday, a day prior to the commencement of Dusshera, a unique annual horse procession was taken out through the streets of Allahabad.

The belief is that the horse representing sage Vyasa would relate the Ramayana.

Musical bands led the attractively decorated white horse procession organised by a leading Ram Lila committee of the city.

“Legend says that when Maharishi Valmiki narrated the story of Lord Rama to Luv and Kush then this horse standing next to them also listened to the story. The horse in the form of sage Vyasa tells the story of Rama to people during the Navratri celebrations,” said Ajay Kumar Shukla, secretary, Ramlila Committee.

“Naaratri”, which literally means nine nights, is observed twice a year.

The festival lasts for nine days in honour of nine manifestations of Durga, goddess of power, and fall in the months of April-May and September-October.

It is believed that during the Navratri, Goddess Durga descends on earth to rid it of the demons and blesses her devotees with happiness and prosperity. (ANI)

Muslims in Lucknow offer ‘Alvida Namaz’ before Eid

Lucknow, Sep 18(ANI): Muslims gathered in huge numbers at several mosques of Lucknow on Friday to offer the ‘Alvida Namaz’ marking the last Friday prayers of the holy month of Ramadan.

“We prayed to the Lord to raise the financial status of Muslims and also eradicate all their problems. In India, Hindu and Muslims have been living together for several centuries and we want them to be like this in future,” said Moulvi Faizul Rehman, an Islamic cleric at a mosque in Lucknow.

Highlighting the significance of the ‘Alvida Namaz’, Mohammad Sayeed, a Namazi said that it is the reason why thousands of Muslim from across the city gather to offer prayers.

“During Ramadan if we participate in the ‘Alvida Namaz’ and offer our prayers, then we get a reward for it and it will usher prosperity to us,” Sayeed said.

Ramadan, the ninth month of the Hijri lunar calendar, commemorates the revelation of Quran, Islam’s holy book, and has traditionally been a time of religious fervour, settling old disputes and behaving charitably towards neighbours.

Fasting during Ramadan is one of the five pillars of Islam. Considered auspicious for prayers, Muslims observe the month-long fasting named ‘Roza’.

They believe this secures them a place in heaven and also brings them face to face with Allah, the Almighty, on the day of ‘Kayamat’.

The end of Ramadan heralds the festival of Eid-ul-fitr. (ANI)

Himesh Reshammiya seeks divine blessings for his forthcoming film

Mumbai, Aug 30 (ANI): Deviating from the usual glitz and glamour associated with any Bollywood event, the movie unit of the forthcoming film ‘Radio’ led by singer-composer-actor Himesh Reshammiya, released the music album of their production amid religious fervour in Mumbai.

The music album was released during the ongoing festival at the ‘Lalbaug Ka Raja’, as the film crew sought divine blessings of Lord Ganesha, for the success of their film.

‘Radio’ is a modern day love story that deals with the issue of incompatibility between couples today.

The film revolves around the life of a radio jockey Vivan Shah, played by Himesh.

Vivan is undergoing a bitter divorce when he meets Shanaya, who hosts a show with him. The show becomes popular and sends across wrong signal that they are married.

Later the saga relates how Vivan’s estranged wife realises her mistake and wants to reconcile with him.

Himesh admitted that he had to prepare a lot to get into the role of a radio jockey.

“I’m playing the role of a radio jockey working at Radio Mirchi. I had to train with the radio jockeys. I used to observe these radio jockeys and how a radio jockey keeps his reflexes. I want all of you to pray for the success of my film,” he said.

‘Radio’ is slated to hit the screen worldwide on December 11. (ANI)

Cash offerings reach 10 million rupees on fifth day of Ganesha festival

Mumbai, Aug 28 (ANI): On the fifth day of the ten-day Ganesha Chaturthi festival, the organisers of a community Puja pandal in Mumbai confirmed that they have already received donations over 10 million rupees.

Members of the organising committee of the famed ‘Lalbaug Ka Raja’ who have erected 23-feet Lord Ganpati idol in Mumbai said that this year the devotees have been more generous to their beloved lord.

“We have just done a rough counting of the donations, it is not yet finalised. Till now we have received donations over one million rupees and the counting is still on,” said Dilip Joshi, a member of Lalbaug Ka Raja community Puja Pandal Committee.

The members said they usually begin counting after the end of the festival, but this time they have taken the decision to begin the process early to save the currency notes from getting spoiled.

“To save the currency notes from getting damaged when it gets mingled with flowers and sweet donations, we began the counting on second day itself,” Joshi added.

At the end of the 10-day long festival, the idol of Lord Ganesha would be taken in grand processions and immersed in water bodies.

Ganesha Chaturthi, the most important festival in Maharashtra, is also celebrated with religious fervour in other states like Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. (ANI)

531st birth anniversary of Guru Amar Das celebrated in Amritsar

Amritsar May 23, 2009 (ANI) Thousands of devotees on Saturday took part in a religious procession in the holy city to mark the 531st birth anniversary of Guru Amar Das, the third master of the Sikhs.

The Nagar Kirtan (religious procession) was led by “Punj Pyaras” (the five Sikh beloved) commenced from Gurdwara Lohgarh Sahib and is to conclude at Village Basarke.

“Whosoever comes with deep devotion, Guru Amar Das fulfils his or her wishes. I invite all the devotees to come and participate with religious fervour,” said Surjit Singh, President Sukhmani Sahib Society.

Angrez Singh, another devotee, said that Nagar Kirtan which started from Gurudwara Lohgarh will halt on many gurudwaras before it reaches the gurudwara at Basarke, the birthplace of Guru Amar Das.

The occasion is marked as ‘Parkash Purav” of Guru Amar Das Sahib.

Born in circa 1479, at village Basarke about 13 kilometres from Amritsar, Guru Amardas’s birthday is celebrated on 9 Jeth as per Nanakshai calendar and May 23 as per Gregorian calendar.

Guru Amar Das was declared “Guru” in 1552 when he was in his seventies.

A heavily decorated bus with flowers, carried Guru Granth Sahib, the holy scripture of the Sikhs, which was preceded by the Punj Piyaras (the five beloved).

Ahead of the bus, devotees chanted hymns and also kept on cleaning the path in respect of the Punj Pyaras.

Students of various schools also took part in the procession, and displayed Gatka or, the Sikh martial art.

Guru Amar Das established new centres for propagating the message of Guru Nanak among people. Guru Amar Das, is said to have been against Sati (widow burning in pyre). Besides, he favoured widow remarriage and was against thec caste system. Guru Amar Das also started the tradition of Guru Ka Langar (community kitchen for religious purposes). By Ravinder Singh Robin(ANI)

Buddha Jayanti celebrated in Leh

Leh, May 9 (ANI): Thousands of enthusiastic Buddhism devotees converged at Leh in Ladakh region of Kashmir to celebrate Buddha Jayanti or, the birth anniversary of Lord Buddha on Saturday.

The festival was celebrated with great religious fervour and gaiety at several monasteries located in Ladakh and also in Kargil.

A huge congregation was witnessed at the famed Polo Grounds in Leh.

Senior Lamas (Buddhist monks) of Ladakh and heads of different organisations, prominent citizens addressed the huge gathering which alsoncluded hundreds of schoolchildren.

“Buddha Poornima is celebrated to remember the teachings of Lord Buddha. Buddha Jayanti which is the birthday of Lord Buddha is not onlyelebrated in India but all over the world in places like Thailand, Sri Lanka and Burma. It is celebrated with great pomp and show,” said Dr. Tsewang Yangjor, a Buddhist scholar in Leh.

Highlighting the teachings and life of Lord Buddha, Lobzang Rinchen who is the President of Buddhist Association, Leh, stressed upon the people to follow the path shown by Lord Buddha.

Besides, a colourful procession was taken out from Chokhang Vihara in which the monks participated holding religious books and reciting prayers.

Another notable attraction happened to be several tableaux depicting various facets and teaching of Lord Buddha and his life.

Passing through the main market and other neighbourhood streets of Leh, the procession terminated at the Polo Grounds. (ANI)

‘Teenage suicide bombers don’t act out of religious fervour’

Islamabad, April 7 (IANS) The teenage suicide bomber of the kind who struck at a Shia mosque in Pakistan’s Punjab killing at least 24 people, including four children, did not act out of religious fervour ‘but under coercion or brainwashing’, an editorial in a leading English daily said Tuesday.

Another editorial welcomed the ‘change’ in that the interior minister had refrained from finger wagging at neighbouring countries and had admitted that a Pakistani was involved in Sunday’s attack in which 35 people were injured.

‘The suicide-bomber was just 17 years old and certainly did not know what he was doing. Now we know enough about this kind of terrorism to know that children who do the dirty work don’t do it out of religious fervour but under coercion or brainwashing,’ Daily Times said in an editorial.

Noting that ‘these children are business for some renegade madrassas and their clergy’, it added: ‘The going rate for a suicide-bomber is from Rs.600,000 to Rs.800,000.

The editorial also pointed out that Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud ‘has announced that he will strike Pakistan twice a week. And he is said to have 300 children suicide-bombers in reserve’.

Daily Times also saw the Sunday attack as part of the efforts of the Taliban and Al Qaeda to drive a wedge between Shias and Sunnis.

‘Baitullah Mehsud has the Shias of Orakzai and Kurram Agencies under his heel; he has wrested control of such Shia community towns in the NWFP as Hangu and Kohat, the last one Pakistan’s major air force centre, to force the Shias to live under fear,’ the editorial noted.

As for Al Qaeda, it ‘let’ slain commander Abu Musab Al Zarqawi ‘start killing’ Shias in Iraq and, in the 1990s, had ‘tolerated sectarian violence’ by Pakistani terror group Lashkar-e Jhangvi ‘whose boys were trained in its camps in Afghanistan’, the editorial contended.

Then, Taliban chief Mullah Umar ‘always declined to hand over the killers to Pakistan as they fled into his territory.

‘Now, sectarianism also makes strategic sense for terrorist groups because its fallout plugs into the larger mayhem they have planned to unleash on Pakistan to bring the state down to its knees,’ Daily Times added.

On its part, The News termed as ‘a positive development’ the ‘admission’ by Interior Minister Rehman Malik that the Sunday bombing and other recent terrorist attacks, including that on a police check post in Islamabad that killed eight Frontier Corps personnel, ‘are the work of Pakistanis’.

‘It is not clear how, why or when this light has suddenly dawned on the man responsible for safeguarding our security, but certainly it makes a change from the past tendency to immediately point fingers in the direction of neighbouring countries,’ The News maintained.

‘This is the doing of our own people. Cover-ups and a refusal to face what is happening to our country will take us nowhere. We must hope the interior advisor’s admission can lead to action to deal with the elements who have set up base everywhere in the country and today threaten its very survival,’ the editorial contended.

Navratra at Vaishno Devi shrine in Kashmir

Katra (J-K), Mar 28 (ANI): Devotees offered evening prayers at the famous shrine of Shri Mata Vaishno Devi as the nine-day Hindu festival of “Navratri” beganith religious fervour on Friday.

Nestling amidst Trikuta hills in the Himalayas, the Mata Vaishno Devi shrine and the base camp, the temple town of Katra in the foothills, present a festive look these days.

Thousands of devotees are pouring in from across the country to undertake a pilgrimage to the shrine during the Navratra festival.

Continuing for over a century, the festival was declared official by the Jammu and Kashmir Government 12 years ago, with an objective of projecting the rich culture and heritage of the region.

To seek the blessings of the Divine Mother in her three manifestations of Maha Saraswati, Maha Kali and Maha Lakshmi, over 6.5 million pilgrims visit the shrine of Mata Vaishno Devi every year.

Chaitra Navratri is most famous in Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and in other parts of North India.

Temporary stalls are set up by the road side or near the temples selling traditional goods for the festival such as diyas of all sizes, coconuts, clay pottery (matkas), dupattas for women, wrist-bands, special garlands made of marigold and other flowers, beads, and agarbatti sticks.

Chaitra Navratra is known by different names like Ram Navratri, Vasant Navratri, Basant Navrathri and some people also refer it as Spring Navaratras. By Tahir Nadeem Khan (ANI)

Nine-day ‘Navratri’ festival begins

New Delhi/Mumbai, Mar 27 (ANI): The nine-day ‘Navratri’ festival began across India with religious fervour on Friday.

In New Delhi, devotees queued up outside the temples early in the morning to pay their obeisance to Goddess Durga.

“Today is the first Navratri so we have come here to pay obeisance. We have firm faith in goddess. She has always listened to our prayers and fulfilled them,” said Vijay Singh, Bhandari, a devotee.

“Navratri”, dedicated to Goddess Durga is celebrated twice in a year, during the spring and the autumn season.

In Maharashtra, people celebrated the festival of ‘Gudi Padwa’, the Hindu New Year, with traditional fervour.

An essential part of ‘Gudi Padwa’ is the specially decorated sticks, called “gudis”, which symbolise the nature’s bounty.

A huge procession was taken out in Mumbai men, women and children wearing traditional dresses and participating in tableaus. It was organised in a bid to revive the festival, which has been losing some of its charm, owing to the increasing popularity of the Western New Year.

“We are welcoming the Hindu New Year on Gudi Parva with much fanfare and gaiety,” said Ajith Bedekar, a resident.

‘Gudi Padwa’ is celebrated on the first day of the Chaitra month, and is celebrated as New Year’s Day by Maharashtrians.

It is the same day on which great king Shalivahana defeated Sakas in battle.

This is also first day of Marathi Calendar. This festival is supposed to mark the beginning of spring.

According to the Gregorian calendar this would fall sometime at the end of March and the beginning of April. (ANI)

Kashmir prays for peace on Eid-e-Milad-un-Nabi

Srinagar/New Delhi/MP/UP, Mar 10 (ANI): Muslims in Kashmir valley on Tuesday celebrated Eid-e-Milad-un-Nabi, the birthday of Prophet Mohammad.

A large number of Muslims participated in special prayers at Mosques, and prayed for restoration of peace in Kashmir.

“We prayed for restoration of peace in Kashmir. Everyday, there is some incident of violence. So, we prayed to the Allah that we all live together in peace and harmony,” said Gul Mohammed, a resident.

Bashir Ahmed, another resident added, “Most of the people pray for the peace and harmony, development and safety in the region.”

In New Delhi, a procession is in progress in which large number of Muslims are participating. It will conclude at Turkman Gate in the evening.

In Madhya Pradesh, State Governor Dr. Balram Jakhar and Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, have greeted the people on the occasion.

The birth anniversary of Prophet Mohammad is being celebrated with religious fervour in Uttar Pradesh. The mosques and other religious places have been colourfully decorated and people are taking part in special religious sermon.

Born in 570 A.D., Mohammad is believed to be the last Prophet of Islam.

He described himself as the messenger of God and is said to have received “Koran” from the Almighty at the age of 40.

Years later, he returned to Mecca, where the “Kaaba” was established as the goal of pilgrimage for Islamic devotees.

The Prophet is believed to have died in 632 A.D. (ANI)