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The festival Introduction
India’s rich and
glorious civilization is mirrored in its innumerable festivals. These festivals
mark the seasons which signal to man the time for work and the time for
relaxation, the commencement of the agricultural cycle with sowing in spring,
and its culmination with the harvesting of the golden grain. And then, of
course, we have, in endless variations of legend and myth, the hallowed
perceptions that there is an ever-renewed war of light and darkness, of the
divine and the demoniac in the unceasing evolution of the world.
Baisakhi (also called Vaisakhi) is a harvest festival which is celebrated on the
thirteenth day of April according to the solar calendar. It is celebrated in
North India, particularly in Punjab and Haryana, when the rabi crop is ready for
harvesting. This tough agricultural operation is rendered into a lighter
occupation by merry community festivities such as the Bhangra dance by men, who
pound the ground with vigorous steps accompanied by singing. Women, too, break
into a revelry of dances, principally the Gidda dance, executed with fervour and
rhythmic exactitude. On these occasions, men and women adorn themselves with
gay-coloured clothes and traditional jewellery. Generally, the sites of these
festivities are on the banks of the rivers which have their sacred import with
myths and legends woven around their origin and names.
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