Chhath Puja was celebrated in the state as devotees thronged many river banks today to offer prayers. The festival will end in the morning tomorrow with devotees worshiping the rising sun.
Hundreds of devotees of ‘Chatti Maiya’ today lined the various places that were designated Chatth ghats to say their prayers and take dips in the water.
The festival is held each year six days after Diwali between the months of October and November to honour the Sun God (Surya).
The ancient Hindu Vedic festival is dedicated to the sun for bestowing the bounties of life on earth and to seek the granting of certain wishes. The festival sees rigorous fasting undertaken by both men and women over a period of four days before fast is broken after prayers on completion of prayers to the rising sun.
The rituals include bathing, fasting and abstaining from drinking water (Vratta), standing in water for long periods of time, and offering prasad (prayer offerings) and ‘arghya’ to the setting and rising sun. Some devotees also perform a prostration march as they head for the river banks.
The puja in Tura took place in the dedicated Chatth Ghat at Babupara stream while in Phulbari, devotees thronged the Jinjiram River to offer their prayers.
The event in Tura is organized by the Tura Chatth Puja Committee. Gatherings were restricted in the places of worship owing to COVID and the administration asking people to be cautious, asking them to maintain protocols.
“Our festival ends on the morning of the fourth day with prayers by devotees to the rising sun (Usha). We pray to the Sun God (Surya) and to Chathhi Mai (who is the embodiment of 5 other Gods including Durga, Saraswati, among others) for their blessings in our lives,” said Rahul Gupta, a resident of Tura and one of devotees during the festivities today.