One of the major festivals of India, Holi is celebrated with enthusiasm and gaiety on the full moon day in the month of Phalgun which is the month of March as per the Gregorian calendar.
Holi festival may be celebrated with various names and
people of different states might be following different traditions. But, what
makes Holi so unique and special is the spirit of it which remains the same
throughout the country and even across the globe, wherever it is celebrated.
Preparations
Entire country wears a festive look when it is time for Holi
celebration. Market places get abuzz with activity as frenzied shoppers start
making preparations for the festival. Heaps of various hues of gulal and abeer
can be seen on the roadside days before the festival. Pichkaris in innovative
and modern design too come up every year to lure the children who wish to
collect them as Holi memorabilia and of course, to drench everybody in the
town.
Womenfolk too start making early preparations for the holi
festival as they cook loads of gujiya, mathri and papri for the family and also
for the relatives. At some places specially in the north women also make papads
and potato chips at this time.
Season of Bloom
Everybody gets delighted at the arrival of Holi as the
season itself is so gay. Holi is also called the Spring Festival - as it marks
the arrival of spring the season of hope and joy. The gloom of the winter goes
as Holi promises of bright summer days. Nature too, it seems rejoices at the
arrival of Holi and wears its best clothes. Fields get filled with crops
promising a good harvest to the farmers and flowers bloom colouring the
surroundings and filling fragrance in the air.
Legends
A Hindu festival, Holi has various legends associated with
it. The foremost is the legend of demon King Hiranyakashyap who demanded
everybody in his kingdom to worship him but his pious son, Prahlad became a
devotee of Lord Vishnu. Hiranyakashyap wanted his son to be killed. He asked
his sister Holika to enter a blazing fire with Prahlad in her lap as Holika had
a boon which made he immune to fire. Story goes that Prahlad was saved by lord
himself for his extreme devotion and evil minded Holika was burnt to ashes, for
her boon worked only when she entered the fire alone.
Since that time, people light a bonfire, called Holika on
the eve of Holi festival and celebrate the victory of good over evil and also
the triumph of devotion to god. Children take special delight in the tradition
and this has another legend attached to it. It says that there was once an
ogress Dhundhi who used to trouble children in the kingdom of Prithu. She was
chased away by children on the day of Holi. Therefore, children are allowed to
play pranks at the time of 'Holika Dahan'.
Some also celebrate the death of evil minded Pootana. The
ogress tried to Lord Krishna as an infant by feeding it poisonous milk while
executing the plan of Kansa, Krishna's devil uncle. However, Krishna sucked her
blood and brought her end. Some who view the origin of festivals from seasonal
cycles believe that Pootana represents winter and her death the cessation and
end of winter.

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