


People from all walks of life and age groups thronged colourful pandals
(marquees) to soak in the festivities and celebrate Durga Puja in Delhi,
Kolkata and other parts of India .
Celebrities from varied
fields, including actors, politicians and sportspersons, joined the
festivities with commoners in Kolkata.
Former
India cricket captain Sourav Ganguly offered prayers at a pandal in
Kolkata's Behala neighbourhood. President Pranab Mukherjee conducted all
the rituals at his ancestral home in Birbhum district.
According
to Hindu mythology, the festivities and prayers begin with the symbolic
arrival of the goddess on earth on the sixth day of the first quarter
of the moon and ends on Dashami or the 10th day, which is celebrated
across the country as Dussehra.
Traditionally, every pandal has
an idol of Goddess Durga depicting her as slaying the demon Mahishasur.
She is shown astride a lion and wielding weapons.
There was an
added sense of festivity in the air in West Bengal with Chief Minister
Mamata Banerjee offering a 10-day holiday to state government officials
for the festival, till the Laxmi Puja on October 29.
With
over 2,000 puja pandals spread across Delhi, revelers had fun hopping
from one marquee to another and appreciating the efforts put in by the
organisers to showcase innovative and imaginative themes.
Pandals
have nostalgia, an air of reminiscence and an aura around them. The
huge gathering of people of all age groups, the chatting, the
discussion, the gossips that go on among friends while sitting on the
puja ground has a special feel.
This year, pandals across Delhi
have adopted innovative and, of course, colourful themes to mark the
âannual visit of Goddess Durga to her maternal homeâ.
Puja
committees across the city have chosen themes like London Olympics,
Swami Vivekanandaâs birth anniversary and save the girl child. A
pandal in Mayur Vihar area of East Delhi even has a Bengali Film
Festival organised to keep the devotees entertained.
Long queues
of devotes could be seen at almost all the pandals as cameras and mobile
phones incessantly clicked to capture the moments. Pandals also have
stalls of various joints doing brisk business.
Gorge yourself on sinful delights this Durga PujaFrom
the multifarious Bengali cuisine to the Oriental to the Continental,
the world is your oyster when it comes to food this Durga puja - an
opportunity for people here to gorge on spicy, sinful delights.
Durga
Puja, one of the biggest annual festivals in eastern India, marks the
victory of good over evil, with the slaying of demon Mahishasura by
Goddess Durga. The five-day festival starts Oct 20 and the subsequent
four days - Saptami, Ashtami, Navami and Dashami - translate into
frenzied pandal-hopping in new clothes, meeting friends and family and
stuffing oneself to the brim.
Time to turn Navratri fasting into feastingCookies,
vegetarian 'mock duck', Parsi 'malai kulfi' and much more- chefs have
put together interesting recipes for those observing the nine-day
Navratri fast.
They have also brought "mouth-watering twists" to
the traditional menu promising to turn the fast into a feast. Navratri
starts Oct 16 and ends Oct 24.
Fancy journeying to exotic locales? Go pandal hopping in Kolkata this Puja!Sojourn
to an exotic Goan beach, participate in a Chinese Dragon Festival, blow
vuvuzelas at Johannesburg's Soccer City Stadium - the community Durga
Puja organisers in Kolkata are pulling out all stops to take revellers
on a magical tour during the Oct. 20-24 festival.
From the
abstract to the exotic, innovative marquees have been lined up to usher
in the socio-religious carnival and dazzle pandal hoppers with their
creativity and imagination during the five-day puja.
Durga Puja rituals, revelry continue in KolkataThe
second day of Durga Puja, known as Mahasaptami, saw a huge rush of
people to 'pandals' (marquees) in West Bengal to offer morning prayers
and join in the revelry on Sunday.
Mahasaptami is marked by the
'pran pratistha" ritual, where the deity is symbolically endowed with
life. The 'Kola Bou', a tender banana plant symbolising a bride, is
given a river bath amidst drum beats, wrapped in a sari and placed next
to the idol of Ganesha.
Durga Puja celebrated in IndonesiaBengalis
in Indonesia, which has the world's largest Muslim population, are
celebrating Durga Puja with great fervour and enthusiasm this
year.People from all walks of life have joined in the celebrations.
Inaugurating
the celebrations, Indian Ambassador Gurjit Singh appreciated the
Jakarta Bengali Association for keeping their traditions and cultural
heritage alive in Indonesia.
Durga Puja: Belurmath's unique puja now live on InternetDevotees
all over the world will now be able to watch the unique Durga Puja of
Belurmath, where a young girl is worshipped along with the Goddess, as
the Ramakrishna Mission has decided to stream it live on Internet.
With
eight hi-tech cameras covering diverse angles and a running English and
Bengali commentary, all ceremonies, rituals and celebrations will be
streamed live on the website www.belurmath.tv from Saturday, a
monk-in-charge of the website department said.