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To: Mohan Marette who wrote (9421)11/6/1999 6:28:00 PM
From: JPR  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
 
HAPPY DEEPAVALI TO ONE AND ALL

AASHWAYUJA KRISHNA CHATURDASHI TO KAARTIKA SHUKLA DWITEEYAA

The 14th Day of the dark half of Aashwayuja to the 2nd day of bright half of Kaartik

If there is one occasion which is all joy and all jubilation for one and all - the young and the old, men
and women - for the entire Hindu world, it is Deepaavali - the Festival of Lights. Even the humblest of huts will be lighted by a row of earthern lamps. Crackers resound and light up the earth and the sky. The
faces of boys and girls flow with a rare charm in their dazzling hues and colors. Illumination - Deepotsavas - in temples and all sacred places of worship and one the banks of rivers symbolize the scattering of spiritual radiance all round from these holy centres. The radiant sight of everybody adorned with new and bright clothes, especially ladies decorated with the best of ornaments, captures the social mood at its happiest.
And all this illumination and fireworks, joy and festivity, is to signify the victory of
divine forces over those of wickedness.


Narakaasura was a demon king ruling over Praagjyotishapura (the present-day Assam). By virtue of his powers and boons secured from God, he became all-conquering. Power made him swollen-headed and he became a menace to the good and the holy men and even the Gods. The Gods headed by Devendra implored Sri Krishna who was at Dwaaraka (in the present-day Gujarat) to come to their rescue. Sri Krishn responded. He marched from the western end of the country to its eastern end, Praagjyotishapura, destroyed the huge army which opposed him finally beheaded Narakaasura himself. The populace was freed from the oppressive tyranny and all heaved a sigh of relief. The 16,000 women kept in captivity by the demon king were freed. With a view to removing any stigma on them and according social dignity, Sri Krishna gave all of them the status of his wives. After the slaying of Narakaasura Sri Krishna bathed himself smearing his body with oil in the early morning of Chaturdashi. Hence the invigorating vogue of taking an early morning `oil-bath' on that day.

Mother Earth, whose son Narakaasura was, requested Sri Krishna that the day be celebrated as one of jubilation. Sri Krishna granted the request and since then the tradition has continued. Mother Earth reconciled herself to the loss of her son and knowing as she did that the Lord had punished her son for the sake of the welfare of the world, she set a glowing example of how one has to brush aside one's
personal joys and sorrows in the interest of society. It is this deliverance of the people from the clutches of the asuras that fill the people with joy.

Then follows Amaavaasya, the new moon day, auspicious for offering prayers and gratitude to the bygone ancestors of the family and invoking their memories and blessings for treading the path of right conduct. This is also the sacred occasion for the worship of Mahaa Lakshmi, the goddess of Wealth and Prosperity. The business community open their New Year's account with Her worship. This reminds us of the famous saying of the sage Vyaasa, 'dharmaadarthashcha kaamashcha...' - it is through right conduct that wealth and fulfilment of desires also accrue.

In northern parts of Bharat, Deepaavali is associated with the return of Sri Rama to Ayodhya after vanquishing Raavana. The people of Ayodhya, overwhelmed with joy, welcomed Rama through jubilation and illumination of the entire capital. Well has it been said that while Sri Rama unified the north and south of our country, Sri Krishna unified the west and the east. Sri Rama and Sri Krishna together therefore symbolize the grand unity of our motherland.

The third day, i.e., the first day of Kaartik, is named Balipratipada, after the demon king Bali, the ruler of Paataala (the netherworld), who had extended his kingdom over the earth also. ,b>On the day, Sri Vishnnu, taking the form of a dwarfish Brahmin by name Vaamana, approached Bali, for a boon of space equal to his
three steps. Bali, known for his charity, gladly granted the boon. Vaamana now grew into a gigantic form; with one step he covered the entire earth, with the second he covered the outer sky, and asked Bali where he should keep his third step. Bali, left with no other choice, showed his own head. Sri Vishnu placed his foot on Bali's head and pushed him down to the netherworld, the rightful territory of Bali's reign.
However, Bali prayed to the Lord that he might be permitted to visit the earth once a year. Now it was the turn of Vishnu to grant the boon. And the people too offer their and respect to him on this day.


The annual visit of Bali is celebrated in Kerala as Onam. It is the most popular festival for Kerala where every Hindu home receives him with floral decorations and lights and festoons adorn all public places. Onam, however, falls on the 16th day of Aavani (Sowramaana) in september.

The pratipada is also the day for Govardhana Pooja and Anna Koota (heap of grains), the former signifying the Govardhana episode in Sri Krishna's life and the latter conveying affluence and prosperity.

The fourth and final day is Yama Dwiteeya, also called Bahu beej. It is a most touching moment for the family members when even distant brothers reach their sisters to strengthen that holy tie. The sister applies tilak and waves aarati to her brother, and the brother offers loving presents to the sister.
To the Jains, Deepaavali has an added significance to the great event of Mahaaveera attaining the Eternal Bliss of Nirvaana. The passing into Eternity on the same Amaavaasya of Swami Dayananda Saraswati, that leonine sanyasin who was one of the first to light the torch of Hindu Renaissance during the last century, and of Swami Ramatirtha who carried the fragrance of the spiritual message of Hindu Dharma to the western world, have brought the national-cum-spiritual tradition of Deepaavali right u to modern times.



To: Mohan Marette who wrote (9421)11/6/1999 11:14:00 PM
From: Mohan Marette  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
 
Singapore economy makes a killing in Diwali

Soumya Sarkar

Singapore, Nov 6: The Indian economy is looking up. In fact, it must be doing really well if you go by the hordes of Indians who descended upon Singapore in the Diwali week this year. Flights were booked to bursting weeks in advance. Some actually went west to Mumbai before striking it east.

It was what you call a 'win-win' situation. The Indian economy starts doing well and some Indians start to splurge. Result: The Singaporean economy makes a killing. Talk about global integration and free flow of funds.They tell you Singapore is an island city. Make a small correction there: Singapore is an island mall. Take a wrong turn and you are in a mall. Take a right one, you're in a mall again. And before you know it, you have gone and bought something altogether different from what you had intended to in the first place.

Not that the Indians who were in Singapore this week were complaining (except some toiling scribes like self, slogging it out at a conference). Shopping with a vengeance, they stormed intoevery shop, leaving dazed but very happy shopkeepers in their wake. You could spot the Indians right away among the hordes thronging the stores from the fixed gleams in their eyes as they walked past arrays of shelves as if dream-walking, stopping ever so often to pick up things that caught their eye.

From the storm that hit the Singapore malls last week, you would think that some Singaporeans await Diwali more eagerly than many Indians. But to its credit, the city does get decked up for Diwali on its own as well. With a large number of ethnic Indians on the island, every Diwali lights the city up in thousands of lights. The Singaporeans also let loose their inhibitions once a year and start on their own shopping binges. The streets of Little India, a locality with lots of ethnic Indians, look startlingly like an Indian city during Diwali, with the same bustle and lights, the same dirt and noise.

The real action, of course, is a little further ahead, at Mustafa, synonymous with paradise to Indians withmoney burning holes in their pockets. Not that they were in any smaller numbers on Orchard Street or the Sun Tec City Mall. All over the city you could find fellow countrymen, and women, representing all corners of the good old country, all with a single mind and a single purpose: SHOP. If we could achieve but half such unity of mind and purpose in making things as we do in spending on them, an economic miracle could be just around the corner.

financialexpress.com