“Sisters are for sharing laughter and wiping tears.”
Festivals are more than just a celebration of sacred beliefs, traditions and events. True, they strengthen the bonds of unity and fraternity, but they also reinforce our faith in all that is divine and noble in the human spirit.
Raksha Bandhan, (the bond of protection) or Rakhi is a Hindu festival primarily observed in India, Mauritius and Nepal, which celebrates the relationship between brothers (shaurya), cousins and sisters(shreya). It is also celebrated in some parts of Pakistan. The festival is observed by Hindus, Jains, and some Sikhs. The festival commemorates the bond of love, purity and security and is celebrated in the month of Shravan (August), on full moon day. Traditionally, on this day, the family priest ties the red and saffron coloured sacred thread, mauli, on the wrist of all the members of the household and also on doors, windows and new purchases. An auspicious mark, the tilak, is also put on them. Feasting, merry-making and exchange of gifts marked the day as sisters, dressed in their fineries, applied ‘tilak’ on their brothers’ foreheads and tied rakhis on their wrists praying for their happiness and prosperity. Brothers, in turn, vowed to protect their sisters against all evils coming in way. When a girl feels a friend of the opposite sex has developed a kind of love too strong for her to reciprocate, she sends the guy a Rakhi and turns the relationship into a sisterly one
This story is from the August 2017 edition of Glittering India.
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This story is from the August 2017 edition of Glittering India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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