Nepal's
Religious Festivals |
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Nepal's
religious festivals |
Hindu
festivals: Saat Gaonley Jatra |
Hundreds
of villagers of Newar community living in seven villages of the Valley's
Southwest part celebrated the locally popular festival of Saat Gaonley
Jatra (festival of seven villages). The festival is celebrated at the premises
of Vishnu Devi temple, located in Tinthana village, on the way to Macchegaon.
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Newar
community in this part of the Valley celebrates this festival every year
according to the lunar calendar in the Dashami Tithi.
People
from seven villages - Satungul, Besigaon, Lahankot, Macchegaon, Taukhel,
Naikap and Teenthana converged at the Vishnu Devi temple to offers prayers. As
per the tradition, decorated chariots carrying the daughters of Goddess
Vishnu Devi were brought from Satungul, Macchegaon and Naikap villages
to the temple of Vishnu Devi on the midnight amid a chanting of drums and
other traditional instruments.
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And
the chariot of Lord Bhairab was brought from Besigaon and Lahankot villages
to the temple.A stone-script at the temple shows that the temple was built
in the 17th century. Beside these seven villages, people in Kirtipur and
Panga villages also celebrate this festival, but in their own way. After
the completion of the festival, the chariots are kept at the temple vicinity
and are taken back to their respective villages only after a year.People
celebrate the occasion in their respective villages in their own way, which
will continue for a week.
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Hindu
festivals: Thakalis celebrate Toran-la |
The
Thakalis, living in Kathmandu remembertheir forefathers, celebrating the
annual festival of Torna-la. "Toran-la" is the most important festival
of the Thakalis religiously as well as culturally. The people of the community
gathered in the capital, exchanged greeting and spent time with traditional
game of archery and other indoor games. The women clad in their traditional
long skirt while the men in daura-suruwal were busy in the sunny day at
Balaju, an outskirt of Kathmandu.
Worshipping
the dead souls is the major part of the festival whereas playing archery,
singing song and dancing are other adjoining games are its merry side.
The
Thakalis have four main clans and each of them worships its own clan god
or goddess. Their idols - Lha Langba Nhurbu, Lha Chhyurin Gyalmo, Lha Khangla
Sinkki Karpo and Lha Hyaba Hangjyung - are in animals guise.
Thakali
people, originally from the inner Himalayas of Thakkhola, are known for
their unrivalled hospitality. Most of them in the villages and highways
run restaurants where family atmosphere overpowers business. According
to the 1991 census, the Thakalis occupy 0.07 percent of the population
while 0.43 percent of them speak their mother language.
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