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Holi is celebrated
on the day after the full moon in early March every year.It announces
the advent of the spring and the end of the simmering winters. Flowers
and fields are in bloom and the country goes wild with people running
on the streets and smearing each other with brightly hued powders
and coloured water.It is a festival to celebrate good harvests and
fertility of the land Holi is now a symbolic commemmoration of a
legend from Hindu Mythology.
The story centres
around an arrogant king who resents his son worshipping Lord Vishnu.
He attempts to kill his son but fails each time. Finally, the king's
sister Holika who is said to be immune to burning, sits with the
boy in a huge fire. However, the prince Prahlad emerges unscathed,
while his aunt burns to death. Holi commemorates this event from
mythology, and huge bonfires are burnt on the eve of Holi as its
symbolic representation.
This festival is
played in all parts of the country but it is famous in Mathura and
Vrindavan where Lord Krishna was born and spent his childhood. Holi
is spread over 16 days in Vrindavan as well as Mathura - the two
cities with which Lord Krishna shared a deep affiliation.This exuberant
festival is also associated with the immortal love of Krishna and
Radha, Apart from the usual fun with coloured powder and water,
Holi is marked by vibrant processions which are accompanied by folk
songs, dances and a general sense of abandoned vitality.
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