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Posted in category: Diwali


  • Diwali Photo: Happy Diwali

    Photographer Satyajit Grover from Portland, Oregon sent us this photo:

    Happy Diwali

    He says: “Diwali is all about celebration. And lights. We would celebrate with fireworks, delicious sweets, exchanging gifts and smiles all around. We would celebrate to health, relationships, wealth and ambitions. My favorite memory of Diwali is from my childhood. Our street would be lit up with candle light. We decorated our own house and balcony with hundreds of candles. It was a serene and beautiful scene followed by the music of the evening puja and the cacophony of fireworks.”

    Check out other posts on Diwali.

  • Interview with Anju Bhargava: Diwali in America

    anjuonline-large

    On the occasion of Diwali, one of the most popular festival in India celebrated by Hindus, Jains, Sikhs, and Buddhists, Talking Faith interviewed Anju Bhargava, senior vice president at Bank of America. She is currently a member on President Obama’s Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships and is a convener of Hindu American Seva Charities. Bhargava is a graduate of Stella Maris College, the University of Madras in India and holds a master’s degree in business administration from Rutgers University, with training at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, American University, the Kellogg Graduate School of Management and Dale Carnegie Institute. Read more on her Web site.

    Question: How do you celebrate Diwali?

    Bhargava: Diwali or Deepavali means spending time with family and friends, praying for prosperity for all, sharing mithais (sweets), lighting the house with diyas/deepams candles and lights. It is bringing light into our lives symbolizing victory of good over evil. Diwali celebrations in the U.S. start five days earlier. This year, I started our observations at the White House. We had a council meeting and then I met the president and attended the Diwali celebration at the White House. It was an exhilarating event where I felt totally accepted in my country, America.

    Diwali is celebrated by all of Dharmic traditions (Hindus, Jains, Sikhs, Buddhists) and is the most popular festival of the people of and in India. Homes are decorated with diyas and lights. A variety of food is cooked. Prayers are offered. For businesses and many communities it is marked as a New Year on the Hindu calendars. The spiritual significance is that outwardly the light symbolizes the search for knowledge and goodness while the inner Divine removes the darkness of ignorance and erroneous values. And the president aptly said in his address, one should not forget the joyous Diwali celebrations — the fireworks lighting up the dark skies of a new moon night, the exchange of gifts and the savored sweets.

    For me, the next few days will be spent preparing (cooking, cleaning) for the Diwali and then celebrating with friends and family. We will put lights around the house to observe the victory of good over evil; symbolically it is also the illumination within that removes darkness of ignorance. On Friday evening, I will celebrate with the children who attend Livingston’s Indian School to learn language and culture. The children will share their learning of Diwali and we will distribute ladoos (sweets) to them. On Saturday morning, my daughter and I will cook the traditional sweets and we will visit our friends to share the mithais. In the evening, we will light lamps around the house, do our puja invoking prosperity for all, and have dinner with our friends. A time for prayers and a time for merriment!

    Read the entire interview here.

  • Diwali Photo: Gods - Enlightened!

    Check out this photo sent to us by Flikr user and photographer Canon Balaji in Hyderabad, India.

    Gods - Enlightened!

    Balaji says: “I am a working professional with pretty much a hectic work routine. Diwali as an occasion gives me the opportunity to take some time off to be with my family and friends. To me It is a day of brightness and cheerfulness, that keeps me kicking for the rest of the year.

    The photograph is a collection of pictures of Hindu Gods usually found in any Hindu home. The entire image is lit only by a single diya, whose lights spread across the pictures lighting them, signifying the importance of Diwali - spreading the light of the Good over the darkness of the Evil.

    Happy Diwali to everyone. Let there be light!”

  • Obama on Diwali

    Steve over at the Obama Today blog writes that President Obama is the first president to light a ceremonial Diya at the White House to mark the observance of Diwali.

    You can check out the video of Obama’s Diwali wishes.

    Join us later today when Anju Bhargava, senior vice president at Bank of America and a member on President Obama’s Council on Faith Based and Neighborhood Partnerships answers questions about celbrating Diwali in the United States.

About the Author  

  • Alexandra AbboudAlexandra Abboud has five years experience reporting on the legal and cultural dynamics that shape American society. At America.gov, she manages coverage of cultural diversity, the arts, education and sports. Abboud has also served as a managing editor of the State Department's eJournal USA series, producing internationally circulated publications on innovation and fighting corruption. Full Biography

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