Sunday 28 October 2018

BE THE CHANGE BECAUSE YOU CAN CHANGE THE WORLD

   
Diwali festival is a time to have spread joy and cheer. let’s not restrict it just to our friends and family this time. Make your Diwali festival more joyous not by mere bodily but by heart. Spare just few moments to think for the poor children of your neighborhood.
A small effort from you can light up the life of a child in need and in that process you can also Educate, Entertain, bring Smile and make them feel that they are a Part of Us. Give them hope. Sell them dreams. Play with them and teach them some good habits. Do this Good Karma. It will be your best Diwali gift ever! Worth claps and admiration!!
Donate old clothes & other household items- You can also carry forward this initiative and can collect clothes and other old items from your neighbors, office, school, etc and can donate among poor children.

Donate Food- Once in a while, make food packets and give it to poor children. It is like a drop in the ocean but it will really feed those 15-20 kids at that time. So, it's worth the effort.
Get poor kids into Government school- Convince their parents to send their kids to schools. They are almost free but still many don't go to school. A small effort in this direction will be highly appreciated.


Encourage others- To help people who are earning less like Maids, Watchman, Washer-man, Driver, etc. May be a one time help of INR 5000-10000 Rupees on the treatment of a kid of an underprivileged person will go a long way.

Arrange a Buffet for poor kids- If there is a function at your home or neighborhood then you can volunteer to donate the left out food to a poor children so that rather that getting wasted that can feed some poor hungry people.
Please don't forget to watch these three videos. Just click on the below given titles:




I  have one great suggestion from the perspective of undergrad student- For all those who have just completed their graduation, the best way for an undergrad student to support poor children is by sharing knowledge he has gathered in so many years. As the education system in India for poor children is crippled, this way you are actually help them in building their future which is far much noble than giving them money. Do not feel shy in going alone to slums to teach children.

If you add to your teaching activity once in a year (or more as per your desire)- fund raising events, food donation, cloth donation, motivation sessions etc., there will be overall development of you and poor children, and that way of our entire society.

Let's first ask ourselves, What is Society? - the aggregate of people living together in a more or less ordered community.

By Betterment of Society What do we Wish to Do?:

Upliftment of Society?
Qualities to Improve Collective Action?
Friendship and Mutual Support?
Science and Education?
Spiritual and Moral Upliftment?
Individual and Social Transformation?
Global Solidarity?
Gender Equality?
Mutual Respect?

The Fact is, we already know what we need to do for the betterment of the society, What we need to figure out is "How"?


It is very well said by Mahatma Gandhi that 'Be the change that you wish to see in the world.’

Pick an area on which you wish to work on, and discuss with an open perspective and absorb what you feel about it and keep exploring by talking about what you feel with your circle, but don't form an opinion yet. Slowly, Start Expanding your Horizon of Knowledge. And soon what you will do will start affecting people around you.  

Society is held together by our need. We bind it together with legend, myth, coercion, fearing that without it we will be hurled into that void, within which, like the earth before the Word was spoken, the foundations of society are hidden.

The undermentioned is a list of just few things a person needs to do for the betterment of society:

1. Stop supporting useless and nonsense social costumes and rules. Even if leaders of the society give reasons like ‘this is our culture/morality/ethics’ or like ’our ancestors have been doing this for ages’, try hard to dissociate yourself from social evils.


2. Stop teaching your kids about social evils. Kids are going toconstitute the society in future. You are present, ensuring well being of future is your responsibility even at the cost of past. So don’t let your kids learn about bad things of the society. Teach them that they are free to change the rule as per requirement as rules are made to make life easy.


3. Find people like you and create a new society, slowly replacing the old one . A society is a group of people collaborating among each other for living. A group of good people will make good society.

Hope this Diwali festival will be proved the best ever of your life and you will soon be a part of a good as well as happy society…...


Mahesh Bhatt

Wednesday 24 October 2018

EVERYTHING ABOUT DIWALI OR DIPAVALI - THE FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS

One of the most popular festivals of Hinduism, Diwali or Dipavali is the festival of lights, which is celebrated every autumn in the northern hemisphere (spring in southern hemisphere). It symbolises the spiritual "victory of light over darkness, good over evil and knowledge over ignorance".
Some other faiths in India also celebrate their respective festivals alongside Diwali. The Jains observe their own Diwali, which marks the attainment of moksha or nirvana by Mahavira in 527 BC. The Sikha celebrate Bandi Chhor Divas to mark the release of Guru Hargobind from a Mughal Empire prison, while Newar Buddhists, unlike other Buddhists, celebrate Diwali by worshiping Lakshmi. Arya Samajists, celebrate this day as Death Anniversary of Swami Dayanand Saraswati. They also celebrate this day as Shardiya Nav-Shasyeshti. The festival of Diwali is an official holiday in Fiji, Guyana, India, Malaysia (except Sarawak), Mauritius, Myanmar, Nepal, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago.

Diwali is a five-day festival so the preparations and rituals for the festival typically last five days with the climax occurring on the third day coinciding with the darkest night of the Hindu Lunisolar month Kartika. In the Gregorian calendar, the festival generally falls between mid-October and mid-November.

For Hindus, it is the most important festivals of the year and is celebrated in families by performing traditional activities together in their homes. During the festival, Hindus, Jains and Sikhs illuminate their homes, temples and work spaces with diyas, candles and lanterns. Hindus, in particular, have a ritual oil bath at dawn on each day of the festival. Private shops, office buildings, factories, governmrntal offices and public places are brightly illuminated.

The five day festival originated in the Indian subcontinent and is mentioned in early Sanskrit texts. The names of the festive days of Diwali, as well as the rituals, vary by region. In the lead up to Diwali, celebrants will prepare by cleaning, renovating and decorating their homes and offices. During the climax, revelers adorn themselves in their finest clothes, illuminate the interior and exterior of their homes with lamps and candles (diyas) offer prayers (puja) to Lakshmi the goddess of prosperity light fireworks, partake in family feasts, where sweets (mithai) and gifts are shared. Diwali is also major cultural event for the Hindu and Jain diaspora from the Indian subcontinent.

Diwali is also marked with fireworks and the decoration of floors with rangoli designs. Food is a major focus with families partaking in feasts and sharing mithai. The festival is an annual homecoming and bonding period not only for families, but also for communities and associations, particularly those in urban areas, which will organise activities, events and gatherings. Many towns organise community parades and fairs with parades or music and dance performances in parks. Some Hindus, Jains and Sikhs will send Diwali greeting cards to family near and far during the festive season, occasionally with boxes of Indian confectionery.

Diwali is a post-harvest festival celebrating the bounty following the arrival of the monsoon in the subcontinent. Depending on the region, celebrations include prayers before one or more Hindu deities, the most common being Lakshmi. According to David Kinsley, an Indologist and scholar of Indian religious traditions particularly in relation to goddess worship, Lakshmi symbolizes three virtues: wealth and prosperity, fertility and abundant crops, as well as good fortune. Merchants seek Lakshmi's blessings in their ventures and will ritually close their accounting year during Diwali. Fertility motifs appear in agricultural offerings brought before Lakshmi by farming families, who give thanks for the recent harvests and seek her blessings for prosperous future crops. A symbolic piece of traditional fertilizer, a dried piece of cow dung, is included in the ensemble in Odisha and Deccan region villages, an agricultural motif according to Kinsley. Another aspect of the festival is remembering the ancestors.

Diwali is usually celebrated eighteen days after the Dussehra festival with Dhanteras, or the regional equivalent, marking the first day of the festival when celebrants prepare by cleaning their homes and laying floor decorations, such as rangoli. The second day is Choti Diwali, or equivalent in north India, while for Hindus in the south of India it is Diwali proper. Western, central, eastern and northern Indian communities observe Diwali on the third day and the darkest night of the traditional month. In some parts of India, the day after Diwali is marked with the Goverdhan Puja and Diwali Padva, which is dedicated to the relationship between wife and husband. Some Hindu communities mark the last day as Bhai Dooj, which is dedicated to the bond between sister and brother, while other Hindu and Sikh craftsmen communities mark this day as Vishvakarma Puja and observe it by performing maintenance in their work spaces and offering prayers.

During this most ospicious ocession of Hindu religion,i f you can't do anything in the name of prayer and worship I suggest you one extremely easy alternative. Just click on the below given title. Read and listen this 3 minnutes and 11 seconds vidio twice in a day in the early morning and in the evening from Dhanters to Labhpacham:


Rituals and preparations for Diwali begin days or weeks in advance, typically after the festival of Dusshera that precedes Diwali by about 20 days. The festival formally begins two days before the night of Diwali, and ends two days thereafter. Each day has the following rituals and significance:

Dhanteras (Day 1):   
Dhanteras, derived from Dhan meaning wealth and teras meaning thirteenth, marks the thirteenth day of the dark fortnight of Kartik and the beginning of Diwali. On this day, many Hindu's clean their homes and business premises. They install diyas, small earthen oil-filled lamps that they light up for the next five days, near Lakshmi and Ganesha iconography. Women and children decorate doorways within homes and offices with rangoli, colourful designs made from rice flour, flower petals and coloured sand, while the boys and men decorate the roofs and walls of family homes, markets and temples.
The day also marks a major shopping day to purchase new utensils, home equipment, jewelry, firecrackers and other items. On the evening of Dhanteras, families offer prayers (puja) to Lakshmi and Ganesha, and lay offerings of puffed rice, candy toys, rice cakes and batashas (hollow sugar cakes).
According to Tracy Pintchman, Dhanteras is a symbol of annual renewal, cleansing and an auspicious beginning for the next year. The term "Dhan" for this day also alludes to the Ayurvedic icon Dhanvantari, the god of health and healing, who is believed to have emerged from the "churning of cosmic ocean" on the same day as Lakshmi. Some communities, particularly those active in Ayurvedic and health-related professions, pray or perform havan rituals to Dhanvantari on Dhanteras.

Choti Deepawali, Naraka Chaturdasi (Day 2):
Choti Deepawali, also known as Naraka Chaturdasi, is the second day of festivities coinciding with the fourteenth day of the second fortnight of the lunar month. The term "choti" means little, while "Naraka" means hell and "Chaturdasi" means "fourteenth". The day and its rituals are interpreted as ways to liberate any souls from their suffering in "Naraka", or hell, as well as a reminder of spiritual auspiciousness. For some Hindus, it is a day to pray for the peace to the manes, or deified souls of one's ancestors and light their way for their journeys in the cyclic afterlife. A mythological interpretation of this festive day is the destruction of the asura (demon) Narakasura by Krishna, a victory that frees 16,000 imprisoned princesses kidnapped by Narakasura.
Naraka Chaturdasi is also a major day for purchasing festive foods, particularly sweets. A variety of sweets are prepared using flour, semolina, rice, chickpea flour, dry fruit pieces powders or paste, milk solids (mawa or khoya) and clarified butter (ghee). According to Goldstein, these are then shaped into various forms, such as laddus, barfis, halvah, kachoris, shrikhand and sandesh, rolled and stuffed delicacies, such as maladu, susiyam, pottukadalai. Sometimes these are wrapped with edible silver foil (vark). Confectioners and shops create Diwali-themed decorative displays, selling these in large quantities, which are stocked for home celebrations to welcome guests and as gifts. Families also prepare homemade delicacies for the main Diwali day. Choti Diwali is also a day for visiting friends, business associates and relatives, and exchanging gifts.
This day is commonly celebrated as Diwali in Tamilanadu, Goa and Karnataka. Some South Indian Hindus receive an oil massage and then take a ritual bath. Many visit their favorite Hindu temple.

Diwali or Deepawali, Lakshmi Pujan (Day 3):
The third day is the height of the festival, and coincides with the last day of the dark fortnight of the lunar month Kartik. This is the day when Hindu, Jain and Sikh temples and homes are aglow with lights, thereby making it the "festival of lights".
The youngest members in the family visit their elders, such as grandparents and other senior members of the community, on this day. Small business owners give gifts or special bonus payments to their employees between Dhanteras and Diwali. Shops either do not open or close early on this day allowing employees to enjoy family time. Shopkeepers and small operations perform puja rituals in their office premises. Unlike some other festivals, the Hindu typically do not fast on Diwali, rather they feast and share the bounties of the season at their workplaces, community centers, temples and homes.

As the evening approaches, celebrants will wear new clothes or their best outfits, teenage girls and women in particular wear saris and jewelry. At dusk, family members gather for the Lakshmi puja, although prayers will also be offered to other deities, such as Ganesha, Saraswati, Rama, Lakshmana, Sita, Hanuman, or Kubera. The lamps from the puja ceremony are then used to light more earthenware lamps, which are placed in rows along the parapets of temples and houses, while some diyas are set adrift on rivers and streams. After the puja, people go outside and celebrate by lighting up patakhe (fireworks) together, and then share a family feast and mithai (sweets, desserts).
The puja and rituals in the Bengali Hindu community focus on Kali, the goddess of war, instead of Lakshmi. According to Rachel Fell McDermott, a scholar of South Asian, particular Bengali, studies, in Bengal during Navaratri (Dussehra elsewhere in India) the Durga puja is the main focus, although in the eastern and north eastern states the two are synonymous, but on Diwali the focus is on the puja dedicated to Kali. These two festivals likely developed in tandem over their recent histories, states McDermott. Textual evidence suggests that Bengali Hindus worshipped Lakshmi before the colonial era, and that the Kali puja is a more recent phenomenon. Contemporary Bengali celebrations mirror those found elsewhere, with teenage boys playing with fireworks and the sharing of festive food with family, but with the Shakti goddess Kali as the focus.

On the night of Diwali, rituals across much of India are dedicated to Lakshmi to welcome her into their cleaned homes and bring prosperity and happiness for the coming year. While the cleaning, or painting, of the home is in part for goddess Lakshmi, it also signifies the ritual "reenactment of the cleansing, purifying action of the monsoon rains" that would have concluded in most of the Indian subcontinent. Vaishnava families recite Hindu legends of the victory of good over evil and the return of hope after despair on Diwali night, where the main characters may include Rama, Krishna, Vamana or one of the avatars of Vishnu, the divine husband of Lakshmi. At dusk, lamps placed earlier in the inside and outside of the home are lit up to welcome Lakshmi. Family members light up firecrackers, which some interpret as a way to ward off all evil spirits and the inauspicious, as well as add to the festive mood.
According to Pintchman, who quotes Raghavan, this ritual may also be linked to the tradition in some communities of paying respect to ancestors. Earlier in the season's fortnight, some welcome the souls of their to join the family for the festivities with the Mahalaya. The Diwali night's lights and firecrackers, in this interpretation, represent a celebratory and symbolic farewell to the departed ancestral souls.

The celebrations and rituals of the Jains and the Sikhs are similar to those of the Hindus where social and community bonds are renewed. Major temples and homes are decorated with lights, festive foods shared with all, friends and relatives remembered and visited with gifts.

Padwa (1st day of the New year), Annakut, Govardhan puja (Day 4):   
The day after Diwali is the first day of the bright fortnight of the luni-solar calendar and celebrated as the first day of the New year as per Hindu calendar. It regionally called as Annakut (heap of grain), Padwa, Goverdhan puja, Bali Pratipada, Bali Padyani, Kartik Shukla Pratipada and other names.
According to one tradition, the day is associated with the story of Bali's defeat at the hands of Vishnu. In another interpretation, it is thought to reference the legend of Parvati and her husband Shiva playing a game of dyuta (dice) on a board of twelve squares and thirty pieces, Parvati wins. Shiva surrenders his shirt and adornments to her, rendering him naked. According to Handelman and Shulman, as quoted by Pintchman, this legend is a Hindu metaphor for the cosmic process for creation and dissolution of the world through the masculine destructive power, as represented by Shiva, and the feminine procreative power, represented by Parvati, where twelve reflects the number of months in the cyclic year, while thirty are the number of days in its lunisolar month.

This day ritually celebrates the bond between the wife and husband, and in some Hindu communities, husbands will celebrate this with gifts to their wives. In other regions, parents invite a newly married daughter, or son, together with their spouses to a festive meal and give them gifts.

In some rural communities of the north, west and central regions, the fourth day is celebrated as Govardhan puja, honouring the legend of the Hindu god Krishna saving the cowherd and farming communities from incessant rains and floods triggered by Indra's anger, which he accomplished by lifting the Govardhan mountain. This legend is remembered through the ritual of building small mountain-like miniatures from cow dung. According to Kinsley, the ritual use of cow dung, a common fertilizer, is an agricultural motif and a celebration of its significance to annual crop cycles.

The agricultural symbolism is also observed on this day by many Hindus as Annakut, literally "mountain of food". Communities prepare over one hundred dishes from a variety of ingredients, which is then dedicated to Krishna before shared among the community.
Hindu temples on this day prepare and present "mountains of sweets" to the faithful who have gathered for darshan(visit). In Gujarat, Annakut is the first day of the new year and celebrated through the purchase of essentials, or sabras (literally, "good things in life"), such as salt, offering prayers to Krishna and visiting temples. On this day Hindu people wish Happy New Year (Nutan Varshabhinandan) to each other.

Bhai Duj, Bhaiya Dooj (Day 5):
The last day of the Diwali festival is called Bhai duj, literally "brother's day" or Bhai tilak. It celebrates the sister-brother bond, similar in spirit to Raksha Bandhan but it is the brother that travels to meet the sister and her family. This festive day is interpreted by some to symbolize Yama's sister Yamuna welcoming Yama with a tilaka, while others interpret it as the arrival of Krishna at his sister's, Subhadra, place after defeating Narakasura. Subhadra welcomes him with a tilaka on his forehead.
The day celebrates the sibling bond between brother and sister. On this day the womenfolk of the family gather, perform a puja with prayers for the well being of their brothers, then return to a ritual of feeding their brothers with their hands and receiving gifts. According to Pintchman, in some Hindu traditions the women recite tales where sisters protect their brothers from enemies that seek to cause him either bodily or spiritual harm. In historic times, this was a day in autumn when brothers would travel to meet their sisters, or invite their sister's family to their village to celebrate their sister-brother bond with the bounty of seasonal harvests.
The artisan Hindu and Sikh community celebrates this day as the Vishwakarma puja day. Lord Vishwakarma is the presiding Hindu deity for those in architecture, building, manufacturing, textile work and crafts trades. The looms, tools of trade, machines and workplaces are cleaned and prayers offered to these livelihood means.

Labh Pancham (Day 8):
So far the Hindu custom and culture are concerned, the final festival during the Diwali period is Labh Pancham on Kartik. It is also known as 'Laakheni Panchmi' and 'Saubhaagya Panchmi'. Pancham is an auspicious day to commence business. Jains celebrate Pancham or Panchami by worshiping their books and praying for more knowledge. Hindu business men worship Goddess Lakshmi and open their accounts.
Those who have not performed Sharda Pujan on Diwali, perform pujan of their new ledgers today and ritually open their shops and businesses. In the days following Diwali including today, people visit friends and relatives, to renew solidarity. Sweets and other items are offered to guests, symbolically 'sweetening' relations.

'Labh' means benefit. People today usually wish for material 'labh' such as: a good job, good in-laws, riches and so forth. Yet the scriptures and sadhus inform us that the greatest 'labh' is human birth itself. With this one should endeavor for realization of God.

The scriptures define 'labh' as:
Laabhasteshaam jayasteshaam kutasteshaam paraajayaha,
Yeshaam indeevarashyaam hrudayastho janaardanaha.

Means, He is the true beneficiary and the truly victorious, who has installed the consort of Lakshmi, God, in his heart. Diwali then, is a festival of inner enlightenment. It is an occasion to eradicate one's inner darkness, by renouncing any addictions, bad habits and 'doshas' - base instincts, by obeying the God.

Accross India in many different parts and especially in gujarat, the twenty days long “Dipavali parv” starts from Agiaras, the 11th day of the dark fortnight of the month Kartik (as per gujarati calendar it is a last “agiaras” of the year which  falls in the dark fortnight of Ashwin or Aaso) and last till Dev Diwali which inculeds two more auspicous festival days Prabodhini Ekadashi and Kartik Poornima, which day is celebrated as Dev Diwali or Diwali of gods.

Dev Oothi ekadashi (Day 14):
Prabodhini Ekadashi also known as Devotthan Ekadashi, is the 11th lunar day (ekadashi) in the bright fortnight (Shukla Paksha) of the Hindu month of Kartik. It marks the end of the four-month period of Chaturmas, when god Vishnu is believed to sleep. It is believed that Vishnu sleeps on Shayani Ekadashi and wakes on Prabodhini Ekadashi, thus giving this day the name "Prabodhini Ekadashi" ("awakening eleventh"), Vishnu-prabodhini ("awakening of Vishnu") and Dev-Prabodhini Ekadashi, Deothan, Dev uthav ekadashi or Dev Oothi ekadashi ("god's awakening"). The end of Chaturmas, when marriages are prohibited, signifies the beginning of the Hindu wedding season. It is also known as Kartiki Ekadashi, Kartik Shukla ekadashi and Kartiki.

Dev Deepavali (Day 18):
The Dev Deepavali ("the Diwali of the Gods" or "Festival of Lights of the Gods") is the festival of Kartik Poornima. It falls on the full moon of the Hindu month of Kartika (November - December).
It is celebrated in Varanasi of Uttar Pradesh state of India very differently as it takes place fifteen days before Diwali and the steps of all the ghats on the riverfront of the Ganges River, from Ravidas Ghat at the southern end to Rajghat, are lit with more than a million earthen lamps (diyas) in honour of Ganga, the Ganges, and its presiding goddess. The gods are believed to descend to Earth to bathe in the Ganges on this day. The tradition of lighting the lamps on the Dev Deepawali festival day was first started at the Panchganga Ghat in 1985. The festival is also observed as Tripura Purnima Snan.

Wishing you all Happy Deepavali and prosperous New Year,
Mahesh Bhatt

Sunday 14 October 2018

IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT THE DIVINE MOTHER GODDESS BOTH IN ENGLISH AND HINDI:

MAA LAKSHMI
MAA KALI
MAA SARASWATI
Devi is synonymous with Shakti or the Divine Power that manifests, sustains and transforms the universe as the one unifying Force of Existence. In fact, worship of Devi is not sectarian, it does not belong to any cult. By Drive or Shakti we mean the presupposition of all forms of existential power, the power of knowledge, of omniscience. These powers are the glorious attributes of God—you may call Him Vishnu or Siva or as you like. In other words, Shakti is the very possibility of the Absolute’s appearing as many, of God’s causing this universe. Shakti and Shakta are one; the power and the one who possesses the power cannot be separated; God and Shakti are like fire and heat of fire.

Devi-worship or Shakti-worship is therefore worship of God’s glory, of God’s greatness and supremacy. It is adoration of the Almighty. It is unfortunate that Devi is misunderstood as a bloodthirsty ‘Hindu Goddess.’ No. Devi is not the property of the Hindu alone. Devi does not belong to any religion. Devi is the conscious power of the Deva. Let this never be forgotten. The words Devi, Shakti, etc. and the ideas of the different forms connected with these names are concessions given to the limitations of human knowledge; human comprehension. Bhagavan Sri Krishna says in the Gita, “This is only my lower nature Shakti, beyond this is my higher nature, the Original Shakti, the life principle which sustains this entire universe.” The Upanishad says, “The Para Shakti, the Supreme Power of this God is heard of in various ways, this power is the nature of God manifesting as knowledge, strength and activity.” Truly speaking all beings of the universe are Shakti worshippers, for there is none who does not love and long for power in some form or other. Physicists and scientists have proved now that everything is pure imperishable energy. This energy is only a form of Divine Shakti which exists on every form of existence.

Since Shakti cannot be worshipped in its essential nature, it is worshipped as conceived of in its manifestations, viz., creation, preservation and destruction. Shakti in relation to these three functions is Sarasvati, Lakshmi and Kali. These, as is evident, are not three distinct Devis, but the one formless Devi worshipped in three different forms. Navaratri is the festive occasion of the ‘nine-day-worship of Maha-Kali, Maha-Lakshmi and Maha-Sarasvati’ the Divinity of the Universe adored in three ways.

Sarasvati is cosmic Intelligence, cosmic consciousness, cosmic knowledge. Worship of Sarasvati is necessary for Buddhi-Shuddi, Viveka-Udaya, Vichara-Shakti for Jnana for Self-illumination. Lakshmi does not mean mere material wealth like gold, cattle, etc. All kinds of prosperity, glory, magnificence, joy, exaltation or greatness come under the grace of Goddess Lakshmi. Sri Appayya Dikshitar calls even final Liberation as “Moksha Samrajya Lakshmi.” Hence worship of Lakshmi means the worship of Divinity, the power that dissolves multiplicity in unity. The worship of Devi is therefore the explanation of the entire process of spiritual Sadhana in all its aspect.

During Navaratri, observe strict anushthana, and purify your inner spiritual nature. This is the most auspicious time in the year for Mother-Worship. Read Sapthasathi, or Devi Mahatmya and Lalita Sahasranama. Do Japa of the Mantra of Devi. Perform formal worship with purity and sincerity and absolute devotion. Cry for the Darshan of Mother Devi.
The Divine Mother will bless you with the knowledge, the peace and the joy that know no end.
May the Divine Mother bless you all!
॥ ॐ दुं दर्गायॆ नम: ॥
॥ माँ जगदंबा भगवती के ५१ प्रमुख शक्तिपीठ 

यहां पर क्लिक करके सभी ५१ शक्तिपीठोके दर्शन करे:

1. किरीट कात्यायनी:-
पश्चिमी बंगाल में हुगली नदी के तट पर लालबाग कोट स्थित शक्तिपीठ, जहां सती का किरीट यानी "मुकुट" गिरा था।

2. कात्यायनी वृंदावन: -
मथुरा के भूतेश्वर में स्थित है कात्यायनी वृंदावन शक्तिपीठ, जहां सती के "केशपाश" गिरे थे।

3. नैनादेवी: -
पाकिस्तान के सक्खर स्टेशन के निकट शर्कररे और हिमाचल प्रदेश के बिलासपुर स्थित नैनादेवी मन्दिर स्थलों पर सती के "नेत्र" गिरे थे।

4. श्रीपर्वत शक्तिपीठ: -
इस शक्तिपीठ को लेकर लोगों में मतांतर है। कुछ लोग मानते हैं कि इस पीठ का मूल स्थल लद्दाख है, जबकि कुछ कहते हैं कि यह असम के सिलहट में है जहां माता सती की "कनपटी गिरी" थी।

5. विशालाक्षी शक्तिपीठ: -
वाराणसी के मणिकर्णिका घाट पर स्थित इस शक्तिपीठ पर माता सती के "दाहिने कान के मणि" गिरे थे।

6. गोदावरी तट शक्तिपीठ: -
आन्ध्र प्रदेश के कब्बूर में गोदावरी तट पर स्थित इस शक्तिपीठ में माता का " गाल" गिरा था।

7. शुचीन्द्रम शक्तिपीठ: -
कन्याकुमारी के त्रिसागर संगम स्थल पर है शुचि शक्तिपीठ, जहां सती के "दांत" गिरे थे।

8. पंच सागर शक्तिपीठ: -
इस शक्तिपीठ का कोई तय स्थान ज्ञात नहीं है। यहां माता के "नीचे के दांत गिरे" थे।

9. ज्वालादेवी शक्तिपीठ:-
हिमाचल प्रदेश के कांगडा स्थित शक्तिपीठ, "जिह्वा गिरी" थी।

10. भैरव पर्वत शक्तिपीठ: -
मध्य प्रदेश के उज्जैन के निकट क्षिप्रा नदी के तट पर स्थित इस शक्तिपीठ में माता का "ऊपर का होंठ गिरा" था।

11. अट्टहास शक्तिपीठ: -
यह शक्तिपीठ पश्चिम बंगाल के लाबपुर में स्थित है। यहां माता का "निचला होंठ" गिरा था।

12. जनस्थान शक्तिपीठ: -
महाराष्ट्र में नासिक स्थित पंचवटी के इस शक्तिपीठ में माता की "ठुड्डी" गिरी थी।

13. कश्मीर शक्तिपीठ:-
जम्मू कश्मीर के अमरनाथ स्थित इस शक्तिपीठ में माता का "कंठ" गिरा था।

14. नन्दीपुर शक्तिपीठ:-
पश्चिम बंगाल के सैन्थया स्थित इस पीठ में देवी की देह का "कंठहार गिरा" था।

15. श्रीशैल शक्तिपीठ: -
आन्ध्र प्रदेश के कुर्नूल के पास है श्रीशैल शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता का "गाल गिरा" था।

16. नलहरी शक्तिपीठ: -
पश्चिम बंगाल के बोलपुर में माता की "उदरनली गिरी" थी।

17. मिथिला शक्तिपीठ: -
भारत और नेपाल सीमा पर जनकपुर रेलवे स्टेशन के पास बने इस शक्तिपीठ में माता का "वाम स्कंध" गिरा था।

18. रावली शक्तिपीठ: -
चेन्नई में कहीं स्थित है रावली शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता का "दक्षिण स्कंध" गिरने का जिक्र आता है।

19. अम्बाजी शक्तिपीठ:-
गुजरात जूनागढ के गिरनार पर्वत के प्रथत शिखर पर देवी अम्बिका का विशाल मन्दिर है, जहां माता का "उदर" गिरा था।

20. जालंधर शक्तिपीठ: -
पंजाब के जालंधर में स्थित है माता का जालंधर शक्तिपीठ। यहां माता का "बायां स्तन" गिरा था।

21. रामागिरि शक्तिपीठ: -
कुछ लोग इसे चित्रकूट तो कुछ मध्य प्रदेश के मैहर में मानते हैं, जहां माता का "दाहिना स्तन गिरा" था।

22. बैद्यनाथ हार्द शक्तिपीठ: -
झारखण्ड के देवघर स्थित शक्तिपीठ में माता का "हृदय" गिरा था। मान्यता है कि यहीं पर सती का दाह-संस्कार भी हुआ था।

23. बक्रेश्वर: -
बीरभूम, पश्चिम बंगाल के पापहर नदी से सात किलोमीटर दूर स्थित इस शक्तिपीठ में सती का "भ्रूमध्य" गिरा था।

24. कण्यकाश्रम: -
तमिलनाडु के कन्याकुमारी के तीन सागरों- हिन्द महासागर, अरब सागर तथा बंगाल की खाडी के संगम पर स्थित है कण्यकाश्रम शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता की "पीठ गिरी" थी।

25. बहुला शक्तिपीठ:-
पश्चिम बंगाल के कटवा जंक्शन के निकट केतुग्राम में स्थित है बहुला शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता की "बायीं भुजा गिरी" थी।

26. उज्जयिनी शक्तिपीठ:-
उज्जैन की पावन क्षिप्रा के दोनों तटों पर स्थित है उज्जयिनी शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता की "कुहनी गिरी" थी।

27. मणिवेदिका शक्तिपीठ:-
राजस्थान के पुष्कर में स्थित है यह शक्तिपीठ, इसे गायत्री मन्दिर के नाम से जाना जाता है। यहां माता की "कलाईयां" गिरी थीं।

28. ललितादेवी शक्तिपीठ:-
प्रयाग (इलाहाबाद) स्थित ललितादेवी शक्तिपीठ में माता के "हाथ की अंगुलियां" गिरी थीं।

29. उत्कल पीठ:-
उडीसा के पुरी में है, जहां माता की "नाभि गिरी" थी।

30. कांची शक्तिपीठ:-
तमिलनाडु के कांचीवरम में माता का "कंकाल" गिरा था।

31. कमलाधव: -
अमरकंटक, मध्य प्रदेश के सोन तट पर "बायां नितम्ब गिरा" था।

32. शोण शक्तिपीठ: -
मध्य प्रदेश के अमरकंटक का नर्मदा मन्दिर ही शोण शक्तिपीठ है। यहां माता का "दायाँ नितम्ब" गिरा था।

33. कामरूप कामाख्या:-
असम, गुवाहाटी के कामगिरि पर "योनि गिरी" थी।

34. जयंती शक्तिपीठ: -
मेघालय के जयंतिया पर वाम "जंघा गिरी" थी।

35. मगध शक्तिपीठ: -
पटना में स्थित पटनेश्वरी देवी को ही शक्तिपीठ माना जाता है। यहां माता का "दाहिनी जंघा" गिरी थी।

36. त्रिस्तोता शक्तिपीठ:-
पश्चिम बंगाल के जलपाईगुडी के शालवाडी गांव में तीस्ता नदी पर माता का "वाम पाद" गिरा था।

37. त्रिपुरा सुन्दरी शक्तिपीठ:-
त्रिपुरा के राधकिशोर गांव में स्थित है त्रिपुरा सुन्दरी शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता का "दक्षिण पाद" गिरा था।

38. विभाष शक्तिपीठ: -
पश्चिम बंगाल के मिदनापुर के ताम्रलुक गांव में स्थित है विभाष शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता का "वाम टखना" गिरा था।

39. देवीकूप पीठ कुरुक्षेत्र: -
हरियाणा के कुरुक्षेत्र जंक्शन के निकट द्वैपायन सरोवर के पास स्थित है यह शक्तिपीठ। इसे श्रीदेवीकूप
(भद्रकाली पीठ) भी कहा जाता है। यहां माता का "दाहिना चरण" गिरा था।

40. युगाद्या शक्तिपीठ (क्षीरग्राम शक्तिपीठ): -
पश्चिम बंगाल के बर्दमान में क्षीरग्राम स्थित शक्तिपीठ, जहां सती के "दाहिने चरण का अंगूठा" गिरा था।

41. विराट का अम्बिका शक्तिपीठ: -
जयपुर के वैराट ग्राम में स्थित है विराट शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता की "बायें पैर की अंगुलियां" गिरी थीं।

42. काली शक्तिपीठ:-
कोलकाता के कालीघाट नाम से यह शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता के "दायें पांव का अंगूठा छोडकर चार अन्य अंगुलियां" गिरी थीं।

43. मानस शक्तिपीठ: -
तिब्बत के मानसरोवर तट पर स्थित है मानस शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता की "दाहिनी हथेली" गिरी थी।

44. लंका शक्तिपीठ:-
लंका शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता की "पायल" गिरी थी।

45. गंडकी शक्तिपीठ: -
नेपाल में गंडक नदी के किनारे "कपोल" गिरा था.

46. गुहेश्वरी शक्तिपीठ:-
नेपाल के काठमांडू में पशुपतिनाथ मन्दिर के पास ही स्थित है गुहेश्वरी शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता सती के "दोनों घुटने" गिरे थे।

47. हिंगलाज शक्तिपीठ: -
पाकिस्तान के बलूचिस्तान में माता का "सिर" गिरा था।

48. सुगंध शक्तिपीठ:-
बांग्लादेश के खुलना में "नासिका" गिरी थी।

49. करतोयतत शक्तिपीठ: -
बांग्लादेश भवानीपुर के बेगडा में करतोयतत के तट पर माता की "बायीं पायल" गिरी थी।

50. चट्टल शक्तिपीठ:-
बांग्लादेश के चटगांव में स्थित है चट्टल का भवानी शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता की "दाहिनी भुजा" गिरी थी।

51. यशोरेवरी शक्तिपीठ:-
बांग्लादेश के जैसोर खुलना में स्थित है माता का प्रसिद्ध यशोरेवरी शक्तिपीठ, जहां माता की "बायीं हथेली" गिरी थी।
जय माता दी।

एक खास प्रकार की शुभकामना आपको मेरी बनाई ABCD” से भेजता हूँ। ऐसी “एबीसीडी” आज तक आपको किसी ने नहीं सिखाई होगी:

A=अम्बे
B=भवानी
C=चामुंडा
D=दुर्गा
E=एकरूपी
F=फरसाधारणी
G=गायत्री
H=हिंगलाज
I=इंद्राणी
J=जगदंबा
K=काली
L=लक्ष्मी
M=महामाया
N=नारायणी
O=ॐकारणी
P=पद्मा
Q=कात्यायनी
R=रत्नप्रिया
S=शीतला
T=त्रिपुरासुंदरी
U=उमा
V=वैष्णवी
W=वराही
Y=यति
Z=ज़य्वाना
पढ़ते जाओ ..जय माता दी कहते जाओ ...!!!​
​जय माँ अम्बे​
सारे बोलो जय माता दी
मिलकर बोलो जय माता दी
जोर से बोलो जय माता दी
आप भी बोलो जय माता दी
हम भी बोलेजय माता दी
प्यार से बोलो जय माता दी
सबसे बुलवाओ जय माता दी
सुबह भी बोलो जय माता दी
शाम भी बोलो जय माता दी
दोपहर में बोलो जय माता दी
रात में बोलो जय माता दी
हर समय बोलो जय माता दी
अब तो बोलो जय माता दी
जयकारा शेरा वाली का जय माता दी
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