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Thursday, October 12, 2017

Baikunth Chaturdashi (Kartick Puja15)

Baikunth Chaturdashi (Kartick Puja15) 

 https://youtu.be/WxJvNzgWHVg

  VAIKUNTHA CHATURDASI

Kartik Shukla Paksha Chaturdashi Tithi. Vaikuntha Chaturdashi muhurat. Vaikunth Chaturdashi, celebrated on is an important day in Hindu religion.

Vaikuntha Chaturdashi

Vaikuntha Chaturdashi
Vaikuntha Chaturdashi on Sunday, November 6, 2022
Vaikuntha Chaturdashi Nishitakal - 11:39 PM to 12:31 AMNov 07
Duration - 00 Hours 52 Mins
Dev Deepavali on Monday, November 7, 2022
Chaturdashi Tithi Begins - 04:28 PM on Nov 06, 2022
Chaturdashi Tithi Ends - 04:15 PM on Nov 07, 2022
28th

WSनिवार
Lord Vishnu offering 1000 lotuses to Lord Shiva






Devotees perform puja and keep full day fast on Chaturdashi Tithi day. Vaikuntha Chaturdashi is observed one day before Kartik Purnima. According to Hindu belief, Lord Vishnu worshipped Lord Shiva on the day of Kartik Chaturdashi during Shukla Paksha. Lord Vishnu offered Lord Shiva one thousand lotus flowers.
On Vaikuntha Chaturdashi day, a holy dip in Ganges during bramha muhurat (before Sunrise) at Manikarnika Ghat (Varanasi) is considered highly auspicious.
 On the Kartik Shukla Paksha Chaturdashi Tithi, Lord Vishnu as well as Lord Shiva are worshipped together and that too on the same day. It is very rare that Lord Shiva and Lord Vishnu are worshipped together on the same day.




This folklore in Maharashtra state in India is a practice that was set by Shivaji, the founder of the Maratha Empire and his mother Jijabai. After Shivaji was crowned, the capital was built at Raigarh, which also had a large lotus tank called Kushavarta. The lotus flowers in the tank bloomed during the month of Kartik in a splendour of white, blue and red colours. When Jijabai and Shivaji saw the blooms, and Jijabai commented to Shivaji that Vaikuntha Chaturdashi was in the offing. Shivaji recalled the Vishnu and Shiva legend. Like Vishnu, Jijabai also wished to offer a thousand white lotus flowers to Shiva at his Jagadeeshwara temple. She was very particular that the flowers should be unblemished white lotus flowers, fresh and unplucked by any other person (as by such an act its divine quality would be lost). As the aged Jijabai would be able to pick the flowers by herself, Shivaji was unable to find a way to fulfil her wish and convened his court to discuss the problem. In the court, Vikram Dalvi - the young a personal body guard of Shivaji had a solution. Then Dalvi offered to undertake this task and assured Jijabhai and Shivaji that he would pick the lotuses without touching them. Shivaji told him that if he failed he would be subject to severe punishment. On Vaikuntha Chaturdashi, Dalvi went to the tank, early in the morning, offered his obeisance to Shivaji and Jijabai, when other courtiers and citizens had gathered to watch the event. Then he lay down flat on the ground in front of the tank and shot arrows one after the other in quick succession to cut the lotus stems. Then he got into the tank in a boat and used a pair of tongs to pick the flowers without touching them, as promised. Shivaji and Jijabai were pleased with the ingenious and incomparable performance of the archery skill of Dalvi, and as a gesture of appreciation presented him with a gold and emerald necklace, in the presence of the assembled crowd

Devotees of Vishnu offer the god a thousand lotuses while reciting the Vishnu sahasranama, the thousand names of Vishnu. The Vishnupada Temple, which is believed to have footprints of Vishnu, celebrates its main temple festival in this period. The festival is also celebrated as kartik snan (bathing in a river or stream during the kaartik maas) by Vishnu devotees.In Rishikesh, this day is observed as Deep Daan Mahotsav to mark the occasion of Vishnu waking up, out of his deep sleep. As a mark of environmental awareness, the deeps or lamps are made of flour (which would disintegrate in water) instead of burnt earthen lamps. The lighted lamps are floated in the holy Ganges River in the evening. This is accompanied by several cultural festivities.
On this occasion, Vishnu is given a special place of honour in the sanctum of Kashi Vishwanath temple, a prominent Shiva temple in Varanasi. The temple is described as Vaikuntha on this day. Both the deities are ritually worshipped as though they are worshipping each other. Vishnu offers tulsi (holy basil) leaves (traditionally used in Vishnu worship) to Shiva, and Shiva in turn offers Bael leaves (traditionally offered to Shiva) to Vishnu, which is taboo otherwise, to each other. Devotees start the pujas after taking baths, fasting for the whole day, and offering akshat ( turmeric mixed rice), sandalwood (Chandan) paste, sacred water of the Ganges, flowers, incense and camphor to both the deities. Then they offer lighted deeps (earthen lamps) and batti (cotton wick) as a special offering for the day. In Varanasi, women, particularly old women, outnumber others in offering prayers on this occasion. Over the years, the number of devotees participating in this festival has increased. It is also said that old Brahmin ladies who are specialized in making cotton wicks offer 125,000 battis to the two gods on this occasion.
At the Grishneshwar temple of Shiva, Vishnu is offered Bael leaves and Shiva is offered Tulsi leaves. It is considered to portray the union of Vishnu and Shiva. In the Tilbhandeshvar temple in Nashik, the 2 feet (0.61 m) linga - aniconic form of Shiva - is dressed up in finery and a silver mask, as Ardhanarishvara, the half-male, half-female form of Shiva. Thousands of people worship the Tilbhandeshvar and Shiva Kampaleshvar temples in Nashik. The festival is one of the three important festivals of these temples.
Another observance is by celebrating avail bhojan (means a dinner) taken under the Phyllanthus emblica tree (Indian gooseberry).
 It is also prominently celebrated in Vishnu temples like SriRanga (Tamil Nadu), Tirupati Srinivasa temple (Andra Pradesh), Udupi Sri Krishna Mutt (Karnataka) and many more. It is a custom to light lamps in a cut summer squash, after removing its core, thus fashioning a lamp (others use earthen lamps) and using 360 wicks, that some make by themselves specially for this occasion. These wicks are customarily as long as the pod of a cereal (moong dal)


 https://youtu.be/eYReHDVDFdc

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