Krishna Janmashtami
Krishna
Janmashtami
Krishna Janmashtami, also known simply as Janmashtami or Gokulashtami,
is an annual Hindu festival that celebrates the birth of Krishna,
the eighth avatar of Vishnu. It is observed according to
the Hindu lunisolar calendar, on the eighth day (Ashtami) of the Krishna
Paksha (dark fortnight) in Shraavana or Bhadrapad (depending
on whether the calendar chooses the new moon or full moon day as the last day
of the month), which overlaps with August or September of the Gregorian
calendar.
It is an important festival, particularly in the Vaishnavism tradition
of Hinduism. Dance-drama enactments of the life of Krishna according to
the Bhagavata Purana (such as Rasa Lila or Krishna
Lila), devotional singing through the midnight when Krishna was born, fasting (upavasa),
a night vigil (Ratri Jagaran), and a festival (Mahotsav) on the
following day are a part of the Janmashtami celebrations. It is celebrated
particularly in Mathura and Vrindavan, along with major
Vaishnava and non-sectarian communities found in Manipur, Assam, Bihar, West
Bengal, Odisha, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka,
Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and all other states of India.
Krishna Janmashtami is followed by the festival Nandotsav,
which celebrates the occasion when Nanda Baba distributed gifts to
the community in honor of the birth.
Baby Krishna with mother Yashoda |
|
Also called |
Krishnashtami, SaatamAatham, Gokulashtami, Yadukulashtami, Srikrishna
Jayanti |
Observed by |
Hindus |
Type |
Religious (1–2 days), cultural |
Celebrations |
Dahi Handi (next day), kite-flying, fair, fasting, traditional
sweet dishes etc. |
Observances |
Dance-drama, puja, night vigil, fasting |
2020 date |
11, 12 August [1] |
2021 date |
Monday, 30 August |
Significance
Krishna is Devaki and Vasudeva Anakadundubhi's
son and his birthday is celebrated by Hindus as Janmashtami, particularly those
of the Gaudiya Vaishnavism tradition as he is considered the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. Janmashtami is celebrated when Krishna is believed to
have been born according to Hindu tradition, which is in Mathura, at
midnight on the eighth day of Bhadrapada month (overlaps with August
and 3 September in the Gregorian calendar).
Krishna is born in an area of chaos. It's a time when persecution
was rampant, freedoms were denied, evil was everywhere, and when there was a
threat to his life by his uncle King Kansa. Immediately following the
birth at Mathura, his father Vasudeva Anakadundubhi takes
Krishna across the Yamuna, to foster parents in Gokul, named Nanda and Yashoda.
This legend is celebrated on Janmashtami by people keeping fast, singing
devotional songs of love for Krishna, and keeping a vigil into the
night. After Krishna's midnight hour birth, statues of baby Krishna are
washed and clothed, then placed in a cradle. The devotees then break their
fast, by sharing food and sweets. Women draw tiny footprints outside their
house doors and kitchen, walking towards their house, a symbolism for Krishna's
journey into their homes.
Celebrations
Hindus celebrate
Janmashtami by fasting, singing, praying together, preparing and sharing
special food, night vigils, and visiting Krishna or Vishnu temples. Major
Krishna temples organize recitation of ‘'Bhagavata Purana and Bhagavad
Gita. Many communities organize dance-drama events called Rasa
Lila or Krishna Lila. The tradition of Rasa Lila is particularly
popular in the Mathura region, in northeastern states of India such as Manipur
and Assam, and in parts of Rajasthan and Gujarat. It is acted out by numerous
teams of amateur artists, cheered on by their local communities, and these
drama-dance plays begin a few days before each Janmashtami.
Maharashtra
Janmashtami (popularly known as "Gokulashtami" as in
Maharashtra) is celebrated in cities such as Mumbai, Latur, Nagpur and Pune. Dahi
Handi is celebrated every August/September, the day after Krishna
Janmashtami. Here, people break the Dahi Handi which is a part
of this festival. The term Dahi Handi literally means "earthen pot of
yogurt". The festival gets this popular regional name from the legend of
baby Krishna. According to it, he would seek and steal milk products such as
yogurt and butter and people would hide their supplies high up out of the
baby's reach. Krishna would try all sorts of creative ideas in his pursuit,
such as making human pyramids with his friends to break these high
hanging pots. This story is the theme of numerous reliefs on Hindu temples
across India, as well as literature and dance-drama repertoire, symbolizing the
joyful innocence of children, that love and life's play is the manifestation of
god.
In Maharashtra and other western states in India, this Krishna
legend is played out as a community tradition on Janmashtami, where pots of
yoghurt are hung high up, sometimes with tall poles or from ropes hanging from
the second or third level of a building. Per the annual tradition, teams
of youth and boys called the "Govindas" go around to these hanging
pots, climb one over another and form a human pyramid, then break the
pot. Girls surround these boys, cheer and tease them while dancing and
singing. The spilled contents are considered as Prasada (celebratory
offering). It is a public spectacle, cheered and welcomed as a community event.
In contemporary times, many Indian cities celebrate this annual
Hindu ritual. Youth groups form Govinda pathaks, which compete with
each other, especially for prize money on Janamashtami. These groups are
called mandals or handis and they go around
the local areas, attempting to break as many pots as possible every August.
Social celebrities and media attend the festivities, while corporations sponsor
parts of the event. Cash and gifts are offered for Govinda teams,
and according to The Times of India, in 2014 over 4,000 handis in
Mumbai alone were high hung with prizes, and numerous Govinda teams
participated.
Gujarat and Rajasthan
People in Dwarka in Gujarat – where Krishna is
believed to have established his kingdom – celebrate the festival with a
tradition similar to Dahi Handi, called Makhan Handi (pot
with freshly churned butter). Others perform folk dances at temples, sing
bhajans, visit the Krishna temples such as at the Dwarkadhish Temple or Nathdwara.
In the Kutch district region, farmers decorate their bullock carts
and take out Krishna processions, with group singing and dancing.
The carnival-style and playful poetry and works of Dayaram,
a scholar of the Pushtimarg of Vaishnavism, is particularly
popular during Janmashtami in Gujarat and Rajasthan.
Northern India
Janmashtami is the largest festival in the Braj region of north
India, in cities such as Mathura where Hindu tradition states Krishna
was born, and in Vrindavan where he grew up. Vaishnava
communities in these cities in Uttar Pradesh, as well as others in the
state, as well as locations in Rajasthan, Delhi, Haryana, Uttarakhand and
Himalayan north celebrate Janmashtami. Krishna temples are decorated and
lighted up, they attract numerous visitors on the day, while Krishna devotees
hold bhakti events and keep night vigil.
The festival typically falls as the monsoons in north India have
begun retreating, fields laden with crops and rural communities have time to
play. In the northern states, Janmashtami is celebrated with the Raslila tradition,
which literally means "play (Lila) of delight, essence (Rasa)". This
is expressed as solo or group dance and drama events at Janmashtami, wherein
Krishna related compositions are sung, music accompanies the performance, while
actors and audience share and celebrate the performance by clapping hands to
mark the beat. The childhood pranks of Krishna and the love affairs
of Radha-Krishna are particularly popular. According to Christian Roy
and other scholars, these Radha-Krishna love stories are Hindu symbolism for
the longing and love of the human soul for the divine principle and reality it
calls Brahman.
In Jammu, kite flying from rooftops is a part of
the celebration on Krishna Janmashtami.
Eastern and Northeastern India
Janmashtami is widely celebrated by Hindu Vaishnava communities
of eastern and northeastern India. The widespread tradition of celebrating
Krishna in these regions is credited to the efforts and teachings of 15th and
16th century Sankardeva and Chaitanya Mahaprabhu. They developed
philosophical ideas, as well as new forms of performance arts to celebrate the
Hindu god Krishna such as Borgeet, Ankia Naat, Sattriya and Bhakti
yoga now popular in West Bengal and Assam. Further east, Manipur people
developed Manipuri dance form, a classical dance form known for its
Hindu Vaishnavism themes, and which like Sattriya includes
love-inspired dance drama arts of Radha-Krishna called Raslila. These
dance drama arts are a part of Janmashtami tradition in these regions, and as
with all classical Indian dances, there contextual roots are in the ancient
Hindu Sanskrit text Natya Shastra, but with influences from the
culture fusion between India and southeast Asia. Krishna Janmashtami Puja
method
On Janmashtami, parents dress up their children as characters in
the legends of Krishna, such as gopis and as Krishna. Temples and
community centers are decorated with regional flowers and leaves, while groups
recite or listen to the tenth chapter of Bhagavata Purana, and
the Bhagavata Gita.
Janmashtami is a major festival celebrated with fasts, vigil,
recitation of scriptures and Krishna prayers in Manipur. Dancers
performing Raslila are a notable annual tradition during Janmashtami
in Mathura and Vrindavan. Children play the Likol Sannaba game
in the Meetei Vaishnava community.
The Shree Govindajee Temple and the ISKCON temples
particularly mark the Janmashtami festival. Janmashtami is celebrated in
Assam at homes, in community centers called Namghars (Assamese: নামঘৰ), and
the temples usually though Janmashtami. According to the tradition, the
devotees sing the Nam, perform pujas and sharing food and Prasada.
Odisha and West Bengal
In the eastern state of Odisha, specifically the region
around Puri and in Nabadwip, West Bengal, the festival is also
referred to as Sri Krishna Jayanti or simply Sri
Jayanti. People celebrate Janmashtami by fasting and worship until
midnight. The Bhagavata Purana is recited from the 10th
chapter, a section dedicated to the life of Krishna. The next day is
called "Nanda Utsav" or the joyous celebration of Krishna's foster
parents Nanda and Yashoda. Devotees keep fasting during
the entire day of Janmashtami. They bring water from Ganga to bathe
Radha Madhava during their abhisheka ceremony. A grand abhisheka is
performed at midnight for the small Radha Madhava Deities while food (bhoga)
offering of more than 400 items is offered to Their Lordships with devotion.
South India
Gokula Ashtami (Janmashtami or Sri Krishna Jayanti) celebrates
the birthday of Krishna. Gokulashtami is celebrated with great fervor in South India.
In Kerala, people celebrate on September according to the Malayalam calendar.
In Tamil Nadu, people decorate the floor with kolams (decorative pattern
drawn with rice batter). Geetha Govindam and other such devotional songs are
sung in praise of Krishna. Then they draw the footprints of Krishna from the
threshold of the house till the pooja room, which depicts the arrival of
Krishna into the house. A recitation of Bhagwadgita is also a popular
practice. The offerings made to Krishna include fruits, betel and butter.
Savories believed to be Krishna's favorites are prepared with great care. The
most important of them are Seedai, Sweet Seedai, Verkadalai Urundai. The
festival is celebrated in the evening as Krishna was born at midnight. Most
people observe a strict fast on this day and eat only after the midnight puja.
In Andhra Pradesh, recitation of shlokas and devotional
songs are the characteristics of this festival. Another unique feature of this
festival is that young boys are dress up as Krishna and they visit neighbours
and friends. Different varieties of fruits and sweets are first offered to
Krishna and after the puja, these sweets are distributed among the visitors.
The people of Andhra Pradesh observe a fast too. Various kinds of sweets are made
to offer Gokulnandan on this day. Eatables along with milk and curd are
prepared to make offerings to Krishna. Joyful chanting of krishna's name takes
place in quite a few temples of the state. The number of temples dedicated to
Krishna are few. The reason being that people have taken to worship him through
paintings and not idols.
Popular south Indian temples dedicated to Krishna are Rajagopalaswamy
Temple in Mannargudi in the Tiruvarur district, Pandavadhoothar
temple in Kanchipuram, Sri Krishna temple at Udupi, and the Krishna
temple at Guruvayur are dedicated to the memory of Vishnu's
incarnation as Krishna. Legend says that the Sree Krishna Idol installed in
Guruvayur is from Dwarka which is believed to be submerged in the sea.
Outside
India
Nepal
About eighty percent of the population of Nepal identify
themselves as Hindus and celebrate Krishna Janmashtami. They observe
Janmashtami by fasting until midnight. The devotees recite the Bhagavad
Gita and sing religious songs called bhajans and kirtans. The temples of
Krishna are decorated. Shops, posters and houses carry Krishna motifs.
Bangladesh
Janmashtami is a national holiday in Bangladesh. On
Janmashtami, a procession starts from Dhakeshwari Temple in Dhaka,
the National Temple of Bangladesh, and then proceeds through the streets
of Old Dhaka. The procession dates back to 1902, but was stopped in 1948.
The procession was resumed in 1989.
Fiji
At least a quarter of the population in Fiji practices
Hinduism, and this holiday has been celebrated in Fiji since the first Indian
indentured laborers landed there. Janmashtami in Fiji is known as "Krishna
Ashtami". Most Hindus in Fiji have ancestors that originated from Uttar
Pradesh, Bihar, and Tamil Nadu, making this an especially important
festival for them. Fiji's Janmashtami celebrations are unique in that they last
for eight days, leading up to the eighth day, the day Krishna was born. During
these eight days, Hindus gather at homes and at temples with their 'mandalis,'
or devotional groups at evenings and night, and recite the Bhagavat Purana,
sing devotional songs for Krishna, and distribute Prasadam.
Pakistan
Janmashtami is celebrated by Pakistani Hindus in
the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir in Karachi with the singing
of bhajans and delivering of sermons on Krishna.
Réunion
Among the Malbars of the French island Réunion, a
syncretism of Catholicism and Hinduism can develop. Janmashtami is
considered to be the date of birth of Jesus Christ.
Others
In Arizona, United States, Governor Janet Napolitano was
the first American leader to greet a message on Janmashtami, while
acknowledging ISKCON. The festival is also celebrated widely by Hindus in
Caribbean in the countries of Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica and the
former British colony Fiji as well as the former Dutch colony of Suriname. Many
Hindus in these countries originate from Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar;
descendants of indentured immigrants from Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar,
Bengal, and Orissa.
ISKCON temples worldwide celebrate Krishna Janmashtami, as
well the birthday of ISKCON founder Swami Prabhupada (1 September
1896).
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