August 28, 2007

రాఖీ







R.A.K.H.I


R - Relationship


A - Affection


K - Knitting together


H - Him (Brother) & Her (Sister)


I - Interminably





Raksha Bandhan (the bond of protection in Hindi) or Rakhi (राखी ) is a Hindu and Sikh
festival, which celebrates the relationship between brothers and sisters. It is celebrated on the full moon of the month of Shraavana.

The festival is marked by the tying of a rakhi, or holy thread by the sister on the wrist of her brother. The brother in return offers a gift to his sister and vows to look after her. The brother and sister traditionally feed each other sweets. It is not necessary that the rakhi can be given only to a brother by birth; any male can be "adopted" as a brother by tying a rakhi on the person, that is "blood brothers n sisters", whether they are cousins or a good friend. Indian history is replete with women asking for protection, through rakhi, from men who were neither their brothers, nor Hindus themselves. Rani Karnavati of Chittor sent a rakhi to the Mughal Emperor Humayun when she was threatened by Bahadur Shah of Mewar. Humayun abandoned an ongoing military campaign to ride to her rescue.



The rakhi may also be tied on other special occasions to show solidarity and kinship (not necessarily only among brothers and sisters), as was done during the Indian Independence Movement.



Origins:

The origin of the festival is mostly attributed to one of following mythological incidents:
1. Indra's fight with Vritra - Indra, the king of devtas (gods), had lost his kingdom to the asura (demon) Vritra. At the behest of his Guru Brihaspati, Indra's wife Sachi[citation needed] tied a thread around her husband's wrist to ensure his victory in the upcoming duel.

2. Draupadi and Krishna during the Rajsuya yagya - After Shishupal's death, Krishna was left with a bleeding finger. Draupadi, the wife of the Pandavas, had torn a strip of silk off her sari and tied it around Krishna's wrist to stop the flow of blood. Touched by her concern, Krishna had declared himself bound to her by her love. He further promised to repay the debt many fold. Many years later when Draupudi was about to be shamed by being disrobed in front of the whole court by her evil brother-in-law Duryodhana, she called on Krishna to help her, and he did by divinely elongating her sari so it could not be removed.




Why Rakhi?

Rituals like Rakhi, there is no doubt, help ease out various societal strains, induce fellow-feeling, open up channels of expression, give us an opportunity to rework on our role as human beings and, most importantly, bring joy in our mundane lives.

7 comments:

bAnnEd OnE said...

దొస్త్ క్యేకో క్యేక ....ఎమన్న పెట్టినవ ...అదిరింధి దొస్త్..నీకు కూడా రాఖీ పండగ సుభాకంక్షలు

Mr.Cheetah said...

రాఖీ పండగ శుభాకాంక్షలు లాలీ పాప్

bAnnEd OnE said...

ఆ బొమ్మ లొ ఎవరు దొస్త్ నువ్వు నెనే నా??

Mr.Cheetah said...

నాకు అలా అనిపించటం లేదు రా.. ;)

sowmya said...

rakhi panduga subhakankshalu andariki...

sowmya said...

chla baaga post chesaav ra sowji...chala baavundi...

vamsi said...

goood wrk NKL .....:-)