Vaikuntha Chaturdashi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ObservedbyHindus
TypeHindu
ObservancesPrayers and religious rituals, including puja with lotus flowers, lighting dipas and battis (cotton wick) for Vishnu and Shiva
DateDecided by the lunar calendar
Vaikuntha Chaturdashi
Painting of Shiva presenting the Sudarshana Chakra to Vishnu
Observed byHindus
TypeHindu
ObservancesPrayers and religious rituals, including puja with lotus flowers, lighting dipas and battis (cotton wick) for Vishnu and Shiva
DateDecided by the lunar calendar
Related toKartika Purnima

Vaikuntha Chaturdashi (Sanskrit: वैकुंठचतुर्दशी, romanized: Vaikuṇṭhachaturdaśī, lit.'The fourteenth day of Vaikuntha')[1] is a Hindu holy day, which is observed on chaturdashi, the 14th lunar day of the waxing moon fortnight (shukla paksha) of the Hindu month of Kartika (November–December). The day is sacred to the deities Vishnu and Shiva. They are worshipped individually or together in different temples in Varanasi, Rishikesh, Gaya, and Maharashtra.

The holy day of Vaikuntha Chaturdashi is also observed in Maharashtra by the Marathas as per the custom set by Shivaji and his mother Jijabai for this occasion and by the Gaud Saraswat Brahmins, though in a slightly different format.[2]

According to Shiva Purana, once, the preserver deity, Vishnu left his abode Vaikuntha and went to Varanasi to worship Shiva on this day. He pledged to worship Shiva with a thousand lotuses. While singing hymns in glorification of Shiva, Vishnu found thousandth lotus missing. Vishnu, whose eyes are often compared to lotuses, plucked one of them and offered it to Shiva. A pleased Shiva, restored Vishnu's eye and rewarded him the Sudarshana Chakra, Vishnu's discus and sacred weapon.[3][4]

According to regional folklore related to the Varanasi festivities, a Brahmin named Dhaneshwar who had spent his lifetime committing several sins, visited the bank of the Godavari River to take a bath and wash off his sins, when Vaikuntha Chaturdashi was being observed by a large number of devotees by offering earthen lighted lamps and batti (wick) to the sacred river. Dhaneshwar mingled with the crowd. When he died, his soul was taken by Yama, the god of death, to hell for punishment. However, Shiva intervened and told Yama that Dhaneshwar's sins were cleansed due to the touch of the devotees on Vaikuntha Chaturdashi. Then Dhaneshwar was released from hell and got a place in the Vaikuntha.[5]

Folklore in Maharashtra

Worship rituals

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI