Holi festivities kick off in India

Holi festivities kick off in India

LUCKNOW

While people from all walks of life around India, Nepal, other South Asian countries, and their diasporas will officially celebrate the Hindu festival of colors, widely known as Holi, on March 25, festivities have already begun in advance across India.

The festival is a vibrant and joyful annual celebration at the advent of spring with cultural and religious significance. Typically observed in March, it celebrates love and signifies a time of rebirth and rejuvenation, a time to embrace the positive and let go of negative energy.

For one of Holi's most well-known traditions, celebrants clad in all white, come out to the street and throw colored powders at each other, leaving behind a kaleidoscope of pigments and joy. Festivities with music, dancing and food ensue.

Holi is celebrated at the end of winter and the beginning of spring, on the last full moon day of the Hindu luni-solar calendar month of Falgun. The date of the festival varies depending on the lunar cycle. Typically, it falls in March, and will be celebrated this year on March 25. However, the festivities can start almost a week in advance.

In Lucknow, India, bank and government employees kick-started the festivities by dousing eachother in colors before bidding farewell to their workplaces on March 23, marking the beginning of their holiday break.

Meanwhile, in Vrindavan, devotees and revelers thronged the Bankey Bihari temple, engulfing themselves in clouds of color, while the streets reverberated with chants.

The spirit of Holi also permeated the air in Hyderabad, where the streets pulsated with energy as residents took to the thoroughfares against a backdrop of streets illuminated by floodlights.

The spirit of Holi also found expression on university campuses. In Amritsar, students adorned in color reveled in festivities on March 22.

The holiday has its origins in Hindu mythology and lore.

In one origin story, the king, Hiranyakashipu, ordered everyone in his kingdom to worship him and was irked when his own son Prahlad, a devotee of Vishnu, the god of preservation, disobeyed his command. So, he ordered his sister Holika who was immune from fire to take the child, Prahlad, into a bonfire while holding him in her lap. However, when the pyre was lit, the boy’s devotion to Vishnu protected him and left him unscathed while Holika, despite her immunity, burned to death.

Some also consider Holi a reference to Krishna, the god of love, compassion and protection, and his love for his beloved, Radha, and his cosmic play with his consorts and devotees called “gopikas," who are also revered for their unconditional love and devotion to Krishna.

In many parts of India, people light large bonfires the night before the festival to signify the destruction of evil and victory of good.

On the day of Holi, entire streets and towns are filled with people who throw colored powder in the air. Some fling balloons filled with colored water from rooftops and others use squirt guns. For one day, it’s all fair game. Cries of “Holi hai!” which means “It’s Holi!” can be heard on the streets. Holi has also been romanticized and popularized over the decades in Bollywood films.

The colors seen during Holi symbolize different things. Blue represents the color of Krishna’s skin while green symbolizes spring and rebirth. Red symbolizes marriage or fertility while both red and yellow, commonly used in ritual and ceremony, symbolize auspiciousness.

An array of special foods are part of the celebration, with the most popular food during Holi being “gujia,” a flaky, deep-fried sweet pastry stuffed with milk curd, nuts and dried fruits. Holi parties also feature "thandai," a cold drink prepared with a mix of almonds, fennel seeds, rose petals, poppy seeds, saffron, milk and sugar.

Holi is celebrated around the world, wherever the Indian diaspora has gone. More than 32 million Indians and people of Indian origin are overseas, most in the U.S., where 4.4 million reside, according to the Indian government.

In North America and in any country with a Hindu population, people of Indian descent celebrate Holi with Bollywood parties and parades, as well as a host of public and private gatherings. It is also common for Hindu temples and community centers to organize cultural programs, friendly cricket matches and other festivities around the holiday.

The holiday is also widely enjoyed in Fiji, Mauritius, South Africa, Britain and other parts of Europe.