Post Info TOPIC: Pongal
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Pongal
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Namasthe,
This message has been posted with a good intention of Learn and Teach Indian Heritage values, thoughts and views. If you are convinced and understood the value and the importance of our mother land and her rich heritage, please forward it to all your Internet friends. 
Today we are sending to you - "PONGAL ".

PONGAL FOR PEACE AND PROSPERITY
    Pongal, the mother of all festivals for Tamils, heralds the hope of a new era of prosperity. It signifies the end of the harvest season with plenty of hopes pinned on the entire Tamil month of ‘THAI’ beginning with the Pongal Day. According to an old Tamil saying, the ushering in of Thai brings prosperity and solves problems. The month of Thai (starting on January 14 or 15) is considered very auspicious. Young people eagerly await Thai, for it promises wedlock for them. Others too, expectantly wait for the arrival of this month for celebrating some other happy occasions.
    Pongal is the embodiment of Tamil culture. It is during Pongal that the best in the Nature and the skills of the people are brought out. Therefore, it is no wonder that people celebrate Pongal to show their gratitude to Mother Nature for blessing them with normal rainfall. And Mattu Pongal feasts are a testimony to the Tamil hospitality. On the festival day, not only the kith and kin but also the needy and downtrodden are invited to feasts. The valour of the Tamils is best illustrated in events like ‘Jallikattu’ or ‘Manjuvirattu’ in which the youth who control the fearsome bulls are honoured and given prizes. Their nature of respecting the elderly and the near and dear ones is revealed on the day of Kaanum Pongal when people visit their elders to pay their obeisance. Skills of womenfolk are clearly manifest during the festival when they decorate the courtyard of their houses with Rangoli and prepare delicacies like ‘Sarkarai Pongal’ for the Pongal feast.
Pongal also known as Makar Sankranti in the middle of January, which marks the beginning of the northerly journey of the sun, is an occasion for universal rejoicing in India
Significance
    Pongal is to Tamils what Durga Puja is to Bengal, Baisakhi to Punjab, Bihu to Assam, Ugadi to Andhra, Makar Sankranti to Karnataka and other States and Onam to Kerala. It is celebrated when the sun begins its return journey towards the north called Uttarayanam. In other words, it marks the day when the Sun enters the Zodiac sign of Makara (Capricorn).
The Pongal celebrations are spread over four days. The day before Pongal is called Bhogi. It is celebrated as a family festival. On the day of ‘Bhogi, people discard their old things by making a bonfire in front of their houses early in the morning amidst the beating of drums. During the day, they strain every nerve to keep their houses spick and span so as to get them ready for the next day’s event.
Festivities
    On the Pongal day, the womenfolk draw Rangoli in front of their homes with the caption ‘Pongalo Pongal" (Hail Pongal). The right fervour of the celebrations can be seen only in the villages. Newly harvested rice, added with a little milk, is boiled in new mud pots during an auspicious time. Sugarcane is kept by the side of the pots. As soon as the boiling is over, the cooked rice, i.e. Pongal, is offered to the Sun God. Camphor is lighted, coconut is broken and God is invoked to bless the family for a run of good luck. And the cycle continues every year hoping for prosperity. Everyone wears new clothes on that day and exchanges greetings with friends and relatives. The joy knows no bounds and every landlord is liberal in giving away a substantial amount of the produce to the labourers who work for him.
    On the third day during ‘Maatu Pongal’, the cattle are colourfully decorated with flowers and saffron adorning their foreheads. Their horns painted and they are fed sumptuously. Farmers pray for the good health of the cattle so that the animals can multiply and bring prosperity.On the fourth day, sisters visit their brothers and enquire about their welfare. In one way, it resembles the Raksha Bandhan festival and this day is called as ‘Kaanum Pongal’. People also visit their friends on this day.
    Pongal fosters friendship and brotherhood. It is an occasion when greetings and invitations for feasts are extended to friends belonging to other communities. Hundreds of temples all over Tamil Nadu arrange for ‘Sama Bandhi Virundu’ (community feasts) in which people from all castes and religions participate. Pongal is not only a harbinger of prosperity but also a promoter of peace.
Jai Bharath
Remember, it is your, mine and our duty, privilege and responsibility to learn, teach and spread our Heritage.
We have published books, brought out cassettes and CDs for learning and teaching the heritage of our motherland.  You can get the details from the Institute in the following address.
Indian Institute of Scientific Heritage,  Ushus,  Estate Road, Pappanamcode, Trivandrum-695 018, Kerala, India.




 
 
From, Friends of
INDIAN INSTITUTE OF SCIENTIFIC HERITAGE, MCT

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