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Home ›   Photo Gallery ›   Astrology Blogs ›   Nag Panchami • The festival of snakes

Nag Panchami • The festival of snakes

Amisha Amisha Updated Mon, 09 Aug 2021 07:00 PM IST
Nag Panchami • The festival of snakes
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Nag Panchami 2021 is on August 13, Friday

When is Naga Panchami celebrated?
Nag Panchami is celebrated on the fifth day (Panchami) in Shukla paksha (bright half, after the new moon) in the month of Shravan. This falls in July or August.

https://en.myjyotish.com/en/astrology-blogs/something-special-will-happen-if-you-dream-of-bholenath-get-to-know-it-know-it

The legend about Naga Panchami
The roots of the festival of Nag Panchami can be found in Hindu scriptures. The Nagas were born of the third wife of Kashyap who is the son of Brahma – the creator. So, the Nagas were stepbrothers to the gods or the Devatas. They ruled the underworld or the Patal Loka. Eight major Nagas have been described in the scriptures. One of them was Kaliya who was evil. When Krishna – the incarnation of Lord Vishnu was only a boy, he defeated Kaliya and danced on his head, putting an end to his misdeeds. Nag Panchami marks the day on which Krishna defeated Kaliya.
Alternatively, it is thought that the Nagas were a tribe that lived during the Indus Valley civilization and worshipped snakes. When the Aryan
civilization became well established in India, the Nagas were absorbed in the Aryan population, and remnants of their rituals were adopted by the
Aryans as Nag Panchami. Nag Panchami is also celebrated by the Hindus of Nepal. Here, the legend says that Kathmandu valley used to be a lake occupied by snakes or the Nagas. When people tried to settle here, the Nagas became enraged. So, they were worshipped and given special
places of ritualistic significance to live in. The rituals of Nag Panchami

Though Nag Panchami is celebrated all over India, the festival has gained greater distinction in certain parts. The various rituals followed
are as follows:
In Nepal, Nag Panchami is a popular festival. Pictures of Nagas are placed on doors to ward off evil. Foods like milk and honey are placed
in fields infested with the Nagas. Some people roam the streets wearing demon masks. Nag Panchami is an important festival in South India. It is also used to celebrate the blessings of siblings. Married ladies generally visit their father's home for the ritual. They get up early in the morning, bathe and offer puja to ant hills which are the homes of the snakes. Live cobra or idols of the cobra are worshipped. Milk is the most common
offering and a part of the milk is brought back as Prasad. Flowers are immersed in this milk and ladies apply it to their brother's backs. In Shirale near Mumbai, snakes are dug out and fed milk and rats. They are carried to the temple in containers where puja is performed.
A common ritual is that swings are tied to trees for the ladies.

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