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    Harela

    • July 17, 2022
    • Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
    • Category: DPN Topics
    No Comments

     

     

    Harela

    Subject : History

    Section: Art and Culture

    • Villagers across Uttarakhand celebrated Harela, a festival of greenery, peace, prosperity and environmental conservation
    • Harela means ‘day of green’ and is celebrated in the month of Shravan (the fifth month of the Hindu lunar calendar) to worship Lord Shiva and Goddess Parvati.
    • People across Uttarakhand, especially the Kumaun region, associate greenery with prosperity.
    • The seeds of five to seven types of crops —  maize, til (sesame), urad(black gram), mustard, oats —  are sown in donas (bowl made of leaves) or ringalare (hill bamboo baskets) nine days before the festival.
    • They are harvested on the ninth day and distributed to neighbours, friends and relatives.
    • The flourish of the crops symbolises prosperity in the year ahead.
    • People make clay statues of Lord Shiva and Goddess Parvati, known as Dikare, and worship them a day before the festival.
    • Locals of Garhwal said Harela is also linked to the Barahnaza system (12 types of crops), a crop diversification technique followed in the region.
    • On the day of the festival the locals sing the in kumaoni language.
    Harela History
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