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Nation
celebrates Dussehra, Durga Puja
New
Delhi/Kolkata: The festival of Dussehra was celebrated
with high enthusiasm throughout the country on Wednesday,
while the nine-day long 'Durga Puja' also came to
end with immersion (which symbolically ends the festivities)
of huge idols of Goddess Durga across the nation.
In New Delhi, Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh while
participating in the Dussehra celebrations at Subhash
Nagar ground said the nation was facing a grave situation
in Jammu and Kashmir due to the devastating October-8
earthquake and appealed to all citizens to contribute
with ''open hands'' for relief and rehabilitation
operations there. "We are with the people of the state
in this hour of grief. ''Several children have died
and many women have become widows because of the quake.
We all are with them in these trying times,'' Dr Singh
said.
Referring
to the basic reason for celebrating Dussehra, the
Prime Minister said: ''We must continue doing our
duty, come what may, as ultimately truth comes out
victorious. Dusshera is symbolic of the victory of
goodness over evil''. The PM, along with UPA chairperson
Sonia Gandhi, Lt Governor B L Joshi and Chief Minister
Sheila Dikshit, also released pigeons, which is considered
as "symbols of peace" and coloured baloons to mark
the occasion. In eastern India, it was the women's
day out at community Puja Pandals across as the time
for bidding farewell to Goddess Durga approached.
Married ladies, including mothers, wives and daughters
joined together to bid adieu to the Goddess, adorning
her with vermilion and feeding her sweets. They applied
vermilion on each other, praying for the well being
of their husbands, asking the Goddess for her blessings,
seeking prosperity, health and wealth for their better
halves. In Delhi, hundreds of devotees marched in
processions carrying idols of Goddess Durga to river
Yamuna. Celebrated as Durga Puja in the east and Navratra
in the north, the nine-day festival is amongst the
biggest in the country as cities, towns and villages
all come alive with celebrations during which thousands
of glittering tents are put up as makeshift temples
and dances and revelry are held every night. Goddess
Durga is worshipped during the nine-day "Navratri"
festival, but public display of idols in Pandals or
makeshift temples is held for four days and the idols
are immersed in the sea, rivers and lakes on the last
day. Durga is depicted as a powerful goddess, riding
a raging lion, holding aloft ten weapons of war in
her ten hands. Her trident is depicted plunging into
the side of a monstrous buffalo, out of whose body
emerges a demon symbolising evil. It is said that
the goddess makes her annual visit to the world and
the festivities are meant to welcome her.
-Oct 12,
2005
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