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#hindu #kovil #festival #colombo #srilanka Hindu devotional festivals are joyous religious celebrations that express love and reverence for different deities through worship, music, dance, fasting, and community gatherings. They follow the Hindu lunisolar calendar, so dates change each year, and many festivals last several days with elaborate rituals at temples and in homes. A central idea is bhakti—devotion to a personal God or Goddess such as Vishnu, Krishna, Shiva, Ganesha, or Durga. During festivals, devotees perform puja (ritual worship), offer flowers, incense, lamps, and food, sing devotional songs (bhajans and kirtans), and listen to stories from sacred texts like the Ramayana and Bhagavata Purana. Fasting and night‑long vigils are common, especially on days like Maha Shivaratri, when worshippers stay awake chanting Shiva’s names and meditating. Some devotional festivals honor specific incarnations of God. Krishna Janmashtami celebrates the birth of Krishna with midnight worship, cradle ceremonies, and reenactments of his childhood, while Rama Navami marks the birth of Lord Rama with readings from the Ramayana and processions of his images. Ganesha Chaturthi focuses on Lord Ganesha; families and communities install clay images of Ganesha, worship him for several days, then immerse the idols in water as a symbol of letting go and returning him to the divine. Other festivals combine devotion with seasonal change and community bonding. Navaratri and Durga Puja, held in autumn, celebrate the Goddess in her forms as Durga, Lakshmi, and Saraswati with nine or ten nights of dancing, music, and beautifully decorated altars. Diwali, the “festival of lights,” is one of the most widely celebrated; devotees light lamps for Lakshmi and sometimes Rama and Krishna, decorate their homes, perform Lakshmi Puja, and share sweets, symbolizing the victory of light over darkness and good over evil. Holi, the spring festival of colors, joyfully honors Krishna and the arrival of spring with colored powders, songs, and forgiveness of past grievances. Large pilgrimage festivals like Kumbh Mela are also deeply devotional. Millions of pilgrims travel to sacred river confluences to bathe, pray, and listen to spiritual discourses, believing the waters are especially purifying during these times. Across all these occasions, Hindu devotional festivals renew personal faith, strengthen family and community ties, and symbolically “recharge” the world by aligning human life with divine rhythms and the cycles of nature.