About Ganesh Chaturthi
Ganesh Chaturthi
is celebrated on the birthday of Lord Ganesh (Ganesha), the god of
wisdom and prosperity on the fourth day of the moons bright fortnight,
or period from new moon in the lunar month of Bhadrapada. The
celebration of Ganesh Chaturthi continue for five, seven, or ten days.
Some even stretch it to twenty one days, but ten the most popularly
celebrated. In the tradition of the right hand path the first day is the
most important. In the left hand path tradition the final day is most
important.
Ganesha is
the god of wisdom and prosperity and is invoked before the beginning of
any auspicious work by the Hindus. It is believed that for the
fulfillment of one's desires, his blessing is absolutely necessary.
According to the mythology, he is the son of Shiva and Parvati, brother
of Kartikeya - the general of the gods, Lakshmi - the goddess of wealth
and Saraswati-the goddess of learning. There are numerous stories in
Hindu mythology, associated with the birth of this elephant-headed god,
whose vehicle is the Mooshak or rat and who loves Modaks (droplet shaped
Indian sweet).
Legend has
it that Parvati created Ganesha out of the sandalwood dough that she
used for her bath and breathed life into him. Letting him stand guard at
the door she went to have her bath. When her husband, Shiva returned,
the child who had never seen him stopped him. Shiva severed the head of
the child and entered his house. Parvati, learning that her son was
dead, was distraught and asked Shiva to revive him. Shiva cut off the
head of an elephant and fixed it on the body of Ganesha.
Another
tale tells of how one day the Gods decided to choose their leader and a
race was to be held between the brothers- Kartikeya and Ganesh. Whoever
took three rounds of the earth first would be made the Ganaadhipati or
the leader. Kartikeya seated on a peacock as his vehicle, started off
for the test. Ganesh was given a rat, which moved swiftly. Ganesh
realised that the test was not easy, but he would not disobey his
father. He reverently paid obeisance to his parents and went around them
three times and thus completed the test before Kartikeya. He said, " my
parents pervade the whole universe and going around them, is more than
going round the earth." Everybody was pleasantly surprised to hear
Ganesha's logic and intelligence and hence he came to be known as the
Ganaadhipati or leader, now referred to as Ganpati.
There is
also a story behind the symbolic snake, rat and the singular tusk.
During one of his birthdays, His mother, Parvati, cooked for him
twenty-one types of delicious food and a lot of sweet porridge. Ganesha
ate so much that even his big belly could not contain it. Mounting his
little mouse, he embarked on his nightly rounds. His mouse suddenly
stumbled upon seeing a huge snake. To adjust His belly, Ganesha put the
snake on as a belt around his stomach. All of a sudden, he heard
laughter emanating form the sky.
He looked
up and saw the moon mocking him. Ganesha infuriated, broke off one of
his tusks and hurled it at the moon. Parvati, seeing this, immediately
cursed the moon that whoever looks at it on Ganesh Chaturthi will be
accused of a wrong doing. The symbology behind the mouse and snake and
Ganesha's big belly and its relationship to the moon on his birthday is
highly philosophic. The whole cosmos is known to be the belly of
Ganesha. Parvati is the primordial energy. The seven realms above, seven
realms below and seven oceans, are inside the cosmic belly of Ganesha,
held together by the cosmic energy (kundalini ) symbolized as a huge
snake which Ganesha ties around Him. The mouse is nothing but our ego.
Ganesha, using the mouse as a vehicle, exemplifies the need to control
our ego. One who has controlled the ego has Ganesha consciousness or
God-consciousness.
Ganesh Chaturthi Celebrations
The
festival of Ganesh Chaturthi is celebrated the states of Maharashtra,
Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh and many other parts of India.
Started by Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaja, the great Maratha ruler, to
promote culture and nationalism, the festival was revived by Lokmanya
Tilak (a freedom fighter) to spread the message of freedom struggle and
to defy the British who had banned public assemblies. The festival gave
the Indians a feeling of unity and revived their patriotic spirit and
faith. This public festival formed the background for political leaders
who delivered speeches to inspire people against the Western rule. The
festival is so popular that the preparations begin months in advance.
Ganesha
statues installed in street corners and in homes, and elaborate
arrangements are made for lighting, decoration, mirrors and the most
common of flowers. Poojas (prayer services) are performed daily. The
artists who make the idols of Ganesh compete with each other to make
bigger and more magnificent and elegant idols. The relevantly larger
ones are anything from 10 meters to 30 meters in height. These statues
are then carried on decorated floats to be immersed in the sea after
one, three, five, seven and ten days. Thousands of processions converge
on the beaches to immerse the holy idols in the sea. This procession and
immersion is accompanied by drum- beats, devotional songs and dancing.
It is still forbidden to look at the moon on that day as the moon had laughed at Ganesha when he fell from his vehicle, the rat. With the immersion of the idol amidst the chanting of "Ganesh Maharaj Ki Jai!" (Hail Lord Ganesh). The festival ends with pleas to Ganesha to return the next year with chants of "Ganpati bappa morya, pudcha varshi laukar ya" (Hail Lord Ganesh, return again soon next year.
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