Pooranmashi ( full moon) after Diwali
( festival of lights), is that magical time of the year, that has always been
special for me.
The moon always has a special aura around it, after all it is the
Gurpurab - day when Guru Nanak was born in Talwandi - Punjab, India,
(now in Pakistan) 500+ years ago. It
is that day, when I did not go to school in Bangalore, but went to the Gurudwara (place of worship) instead.
There would be many guest Ragi -jathas ( Singing groups of three
members – one main singer with the harmonium, one less proficient and the other a percussionist), and a
lot of beautiful shabads ( hymns) would be sung in the
praise of Guru Nanak and langar(food
prepared in the community kitchen). Throngs of people were bound to jostle
against each other and the Gurudwara would be bursting at its seams. Atleast
4000+ people show up, while the hall can accommodate only about 500+ people.
The organizers always tried to make extra
room, by setting up tents but no amount of space was and has ever been enough
for the growing number of people, that always show up. People from all walks, backgrounds and
religions throng the Gurudwara especially on this day, Truly personifying Guru
Nanak’s message of Ek onkar – “One
universal creator of all”. The message of equality and love for all still
resonates today as we all sit and pray and eat langar together. The rich, poor and the needy all of them sitting together
and eating langar. I have always enjoyed washing the dishes or chopping up
veggies, but on this day there are so many sevadars
- volunteers doing seva –
service, seva is such an
opportunity, such a privilege that it is not bestowed on everybody.
In the evening, I would wait for it to get
dark, so I could light candles and place them on the window- sills and the
railings of our balcony. Then my brother and me would burst the remaining firecrackers,
the first batch had been burst on Diwali, two weeks ago. In a way it felt
special that we were the only ones in the neighborhood lighting up candles and doing
firework, sometimes friends from the neighborhood joined us, the grandmother,
next door always lit diyas – earthern lamps, she always celebrated
the first pooranmashi (full moon)
after Diwali .
I enjoyed distributing prashad and besan burfee
(wheat flour pudding & buttered gram flour square) prepared by mother, in
the neighborhood. Although she felt that going to the Gurudwara and partaking
in langar was an apt celebration and
that I didn’t exactly need a new outfit, as I could wear any of the ones that
she had recently stitched for me. …Then, again in our diverse neighborhood
there was hardly a week that went by without a religious celebration of some
sort, and it was always fun to participate in that celebration in some minor or
major way depending on whether you were invited for a traditional pooja - prayer or given a plate full of
home made goodies, laddoos and Murukus
- sweets and savories, specially prepared at home for that particular occasion.
At times it felt lonesome being the only
Sikh girl in my school. In 4th grade I had a classmate, Neeta who
wanted me to draw a portrait of Guru Nanak for her older sister, who was a big
fan of Guru Nanak. I would attempt to copy the portrait from a picture that
hung on a wall in our prayer room. It was a bad imitation but she appreciated it and always
wanted more copies. One day, I met
her sister who was really happy to meet me and she told me that she had saved all my drawings of Guru Nanak and that she lit candles
on Guru Nanak’s birthday as well. My favorite shabad – hymn in praise of Guru
Nanak is Mitte dhund Jag Channan hoya – “ The mist cleared out and the world
shone in brilliant light” and it still does to this day even after 5 centuries.
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2 comments:
I was in Madras many years ago during Diwali. I remember it being a very special time. Thanks for sharing these memories of yours in this post. It is a good reminder that we all share the same moon. . . no matter where in the world, or what century.
Diwali has always been "The festival" of India. The fireworks would start a week in advance and it would become a competition of sorts between neighbors....as to who got the last and the loudest hurrah :)
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