Janmashtami, the birth of lord Krishna
is celebrated with great devotion in the months of August
& September months, on the Ashtami of Krishna Paksh
or the 8th day of the dark fortnight in the month of
Bhadon, in the whole of north India.
Temples and homes are beautifully decorated and lit.
An attractive feature of the celebrations are cribs
& other decorations depicting stories of lord Krishna's
childhood. There are five main tableaux "jhankis",
the tableaux of Janmastami, which depict the entire
sequence of events from lord Krishna's birth to this
being discovered in Gokul.
Janmashtami is celebrated in various parts of India
to mark the birth of Lord Krishna. It is observed on
the Ashtami day of the Shravan (July/August) month according
to the Hindu calendar. The temples of Vrindavan witness
an extravagant and colourful celebration on this occasion.
Raslila is performed to recreate incidents from the
life of Krishna and to commemorate his love for Radha.
Lord Vishnu is invoked in his human incarnation as Krishna
on his birth anniversary in the festival of Janmashtami.
The idol of the infant Krishna is bathed at midnight
and is placed in a cradle. Devotional songs and dances
mark the celebration of this festive occasion all over
Northern India. On this day, in some parts of India,
especially Maharashtra, youths celebrate it by breaking
clay pots called 'Dahi-Handi', filled with curd and
butter suspended high above the ground, young men and
children form human pyramid to reach the pot and break
it. This custom follows the habit of Lord Krishna who
used to steal butter in this manner from villagers along
with his friends. The reason for this is that Gokul;
the place where lord Krishna spent his childhood used
to generate a lot of milk and the people used to sell
it in Mathura, thus depriving their children from milk
and butter which is very essential for young boys and
girls.
Legends
According to the legends, the birth of Lord Krishna
took place under extraordinary circumstances. Krishna
was an incarnation of Lord Vishnu who comes to the world
to get rid of all evil demons. He was born at midnight
stroke on a dark, rainy night to 'Devaki' and 'Vasudev'
who had been imprisoned by Devaki's brother Kansa.
It had been foretold that the eighth son of Devaki
would kill the evil king Kansa. Upon hearing this prophesy,
Kansa had his sister put into prison. He killed her
seven children one by one but when Krishna was born,
there was divine intervention to save the life of baby
Krishna. The guards had fallen into deep slumber and
were unable to inform their master about the newborn
child.
A voice commanded Vasudev to take the baby to Gokul
and exchange with the newborn baby Nanda and Yashoda.
The shackles and the prison gates opened miraculously
and Vasudev carried the child in a small basket, through
the waters of Yamuna. As it was a dark stormy night,
the waters of Yamuna were raging but parted to let the
carrier of the divine Krishna pass. A huge snake known
as Adisesha with 2000 hoods, glided behind them, its
hoods formed a protective canopy over the child.
When Vasudev returned back with Nanda's child the shackles
fastened and the doors closed and the guards awakened.
Kansa came and picked up the child to hurl it to the
wall and kill him but somehow the baby slipped from
his grasp and took the form of a Goddess laughing at
Kansa, she vanished after telling him that the one who
would kill him had already taken birth and was elsewhere.
As a little boy, Krishna was the heartbeat of Gokul,
a mischievous prankster who was favourite amongst the
gopikas. He used to steal curd and butter from the houses
of gopikas. Even though he was a child, he performed
several miracles. His exploits are now the immortal
legends of Braj. He killed a number of 'asuras'(devils),
vanquished the Kali Nag and later he killed Kansa as
it had been foretold.
Rituals
On Janamashtmi, devotees keep daylong fasts and keep
themselves awake while chanting 'bhajans', until midnight
follows. Midnight is the moment when Lord Krishna was
born. The prayer ceremony is a simple affair. The priests
chant holy mantras and bathe the idol of Lord Krishna
placed on a swing with charanamrit or ganga-jal (water
from the holy Ganges River), milk, ghee (clarified butter),
oil, and honey from a conch shell.
Midnight prayers amidst the sound of hymns and religious
songs extol the greatness of Lord Krishna. Devotees
break their day-long fast and chant - "Radhe Krishna,
Hare Krishna, Radhe Radhe."
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