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Upcoming Hindu Festivals in August 2026 – Hindu Vrat – Fasting – Rituals

Dates of important upcoming festivals and fasting associated with Hinduism in August 2026 – based on major Hindu calendars and Panchang used in India. The festivals, Vrats and ritual days are based on Indian Standard Time (IST). Hindu Vrat – Fasting - Festivals August 2026 August 1 – Jaya Parvati Vrat Jagran August 2 – Ganesh – Sankashti Chaturthi Vrat – Chandrodaya or moonrise time is at 9:33 PM August 3 – Shravan Somvar Vrat in North India August 3 – Aadi Perukku August 4 – Bhaum Vrat, Mangala Gauri Puja, Durga Yatra, Hanuman Darshan in North India August 5 – Kalashtami August 6 – Aadi Krithigai August 9 – Kamada Ekadashi Vrat August 10 – Shravan Somvar Vrat in North India August 10 – Pradosh Vrat - Damodar Dwadashi Vrat – Pavitra Baras August 11 – Bhaum Vrat, Mangala Gauri Puja, Durga Yatra, Hanuman Darshan – Shravan Shivratri Vrat – Shiv Chaturdashi Vrat in North India August 12 – Amavasya Tithi - Divaso in Gujarat - Karkidaka Vavu Bali in Kerala - Har...

Patra Of Hindu Sculptures – Bundle of Leaves - Grass or Paddy

The Sacred Sheaf: Patra in Hindu Sculpture and Spiritual Symbolism - Bound in Abundance: The Patra Sheaf as Emblem of Sattvic Grace in Hindu Art What is Patra? In the vast iconographic vocabulary of Hindu sacred art, few emblems are as quietly powerful as the patra — a bound bundle of leaves, grass blades, or paddy stalks. Known variously as patra shepha or patra puta, this modest sheaf carries layers of spiritual meaning that connect the earth, the divine, and the human aspiration for prosperity and purity. Far from being a decorative afterthought, the patra is a recognized lakshana — a distinguishing mark or attribute — that conveys precise theological and cosmological significance to those trained in reading the visual language of Hindu sculpture. Form and Sculptural Rendering The patra is rendered with considerable discipline in stone carving and bronze casting alike. It appears as a tight, vertical bundle of long, narrow blades or leaves, bound firmly at the base or mid-sectio...

Mukti Or Salvation In Hinduism Goes Through Family Life And Responsibility

Mukti Through Family Life: Embracing Responsibility on the Spiritual Path In many circles the idea of spiritual life is equated with renunciation alone: abandoning family, social duties, and immersion in ascetic practice. Yet Hindu wisdom, as reflected in the Narada Parivrajaka Upanishad of the Atharva Veda, teaches a more balanced sequence. It asserts that before one attains the highest state of sannyasa, one must pass through the householder phase, fulfilling familial and social responsibilities. This teaching stands as a counterpoint to escapist tendencies, affirming that genuine self-realization often ripens in the crucible of everyday duty. The Ashrama Framework and Its Purpose Hindu teachings outline four stages (ashramas) of life: brahmacharya (student), grihastha (householder), vanaprastha (forest dweller), and sannyasa (renunciate). Far from mere social convention, these stages form a systematic progression helping aspirants gradually internalize detachment. The householder...

Path Of Aghora Is Not To Be Understood By Appearances

Beyond the Cremation Ground: The True Meaning of Aghora - The Hidden Path of Divine Non-Duality When most people hear the word Aghori, their minds immediately conjure dramatic images: ash-smeared bodies, skulls, cremation grounds, and rituals that seem to defy every social norm. These images, amplified endlessly by media and popular imagination, have created a distorted lens through which one of Hinduism's most profound spiritual paths is perceived. The world sees the outer terror and stops there. It rarely asks what lies beneath. But Aghora, in its truest sense, has almost nothing to do with shock or spectacle. Its name alone carries the answer. The Sanskrit word Aghora means that which is not ghora — not terrible, not fearful, not caught in duality. It is a path of liberation, not of horror. What the Scriptures Actually Teach About Aghora The philosophical foundation of Aghora rests on the bedrock of non-duality, or Advaita. The Tantric tradition, particularly the Kaula a...

Ekaveni Of Hindu Sculptures – Single-Braid Hairstyle

 Ekaveni: Symbol, Scripture, and Stone — The Single-Braid Tradition in Hindu Art What Is Ekaveni The ekaveni is one of the most recognizable and symbolically resonant hairstyles depicted across Hindu sculpture, bronze casting, and temple iconography. Derived from the Sanskrit roots eka meaning one and veni meaning braid or plait, the term refers to a single continuous strand of hair gathered from the crown or nape and woven into a clean, segmented plait that falls along the center of the back. Unlike the elaborately structured coiffures known as dhammilla, which involve coiling, pinning, and ornamentation in layered arrangements, or the deliberately loose and unbound hair called muktakesha, the ekaveni occupies a precise middle ground — it is neither untamed nor overly ornate. It speaks of a particular inner state: composed, youthful, and purposeful. Scriptural Recognition and Classification Hindu sculptural canons are not arbitrary in their prescriptions. The classical texts tha...

Why Science And Technology Can Never Displace The Wisdom Of Upanishads

The problems of human life and destiny have not been superseded by the striking achievements of science and technology. The solutions offered (in ancient classics like Upanishads), though conditioned in their modes of expression by their time and environment, have not been seriously affected by the march of scientific knowledge and criticism. (Dr S Radhakrishnan in his Preface to The Principal Upanishads). Beyond Data and Discovery: The Undying Light of the Upanishads In 1951, sitting in Moscow as India's ambassador to the Soviet Union, the philosopher and statesman Dr S Radhakrishnan wrote the preface to his celebrated work, The Principal Upanishads. He observed that the deep problems of human life and destiny had not been resolved by even the most striking advances of science, and that the answers offered in the Upanishads, though expressed in the language of their own age, had not been seriously shaken by the march of scientific knowledge. He wrote those words from inside one of...

June 25 2026 Tithi – Panchang – Hindu Calendar – Good Time – Nakshatra – Rashi

Tithi in Panchang – Hindu Calendar on Thursday, June 25 2026 – It is Shukla Paksha Ekadashi tithi or the eleventh day during the waxing phase of moon in Hindu calendar and Panchang in most regions. It is Shukla Paksha Ekadashi tithi or the eleventh day during the waxing phase of moon till 9 :14 PM on June 25. Then onward it is Shukla Paksha Dwadashi tithi or the twelfth day during the waxing phase of moon till 10 :45 PM on June 26. (Time applicable in all north, south and eastern parts of India. All time based on India Standard Time.)  Good – Auspicious time on June 25, 2026 as per Hindu Calendar – There is no good and auspicious time on the entire day.  Nakshatra  – Chothi or Swathi nakshatra till 6:21 PM on June 25. Then onward it is Vishakha or Vishakam nakshatra till 8:29 PM on June 26. (Time applicable in north, south and eastern parts of India).  In western parts of India (Maharashtra, Gujarat, Goa, north Karnataka and south Rajasthan), Chothi or Sw...

Story Of Kallurti Kalkuda Kola In Tulu Nadu

Kalkuda and Kallurti Story: The Divine Sculptors of Tulu Nadu and Their Eternal Justice The Family That Shaped Stone and Destiny In the coastal heartland of Tulu Nadu, where the Western Ghats meet the Arabian Sea and ancient traditions run as deep as the roots of the banyan tree, lives the sacred belief in Daivas, divine spirit beings who once walked among people as flesh and blood. Among the most revered of these Daivas are Kalkuda and Kallurti, worshipped across the Dakshina Kannada and Udupi districts of Karnataka, whose story is not merely a tale of skilled artisans but a profound testament to justice, sacrifice, sibling love, and the power of divine grace. The story begins with Shambu Kalkuda and his devoted wife Ervadi, a couple of humble origins belonging to the sculptor community. Despite their modest means, Shambu was a man of extraordinary vision. He and Ervadi were blessed with four sons, each of whom Shambu trained with dedicated discipline in a distinct craft. One becam...

The First Name of Devi in Lalita Sahasranama and the Secret of All Transformation

Chitagnikundasambhuta - First Name of Devi in Lalita Sahasranama - When the Divine Emerges from the Ashes of the Self  The Lalita Sahasranama, one of the most sacred texts in the Shakta tradition, does not begin with a description of beauty, power, or majesty. It begins with fire. The very first name of the Mother Goddess is Chit – Agni – Kunda – Sambhuta (Chitagnikundasambhuta) — She who arose from the Kunda, the sacred vessel, of Chit-Agni, the fire of pure Consciousness. This is no ordinary fire. No wood is consumed here. No physical altar holds this flame. The fire in question burns within the deepest chamber of awareness itself, and what it produces is not heat or light in the conventional sense, but the living presence of the Divine Feminine in all Her fullness. This deliberate choice of the first name is itself a teaching. The text is speaking not merely of a cosmic event that occurred once in some distant age. It is describing the inner mechanics of every genuine sp...

Vachaka Shakti – Related To Use Of A Particular Word

Vachaka Shakti is the inherent potency of a word to communicate a referent. The essential nature of an articulated word lies in its power to communicate a meaning. This power is referred to by the word shakti (potency). This communication is known as abhidhanam, according to early Mimamsakas. A relation between a word and its meaning may be either direct or indirect. The direct relationship is termed by Mammata (11th century CE) as sanketa. If the relationship is abiding and direct, it is called Vachaka Shakti. The Mimamsakas hold this power as a natural relationship with the object which the particular word signifies, and is eternal, since they accept the Vedic knowledge texts to be eternal and unchanging. They are called advocates of Nityasaktivada (doctrine of word power as unchanging. The logicians hold that the relation is conventional and is established by the will of Brahman. For them, will of Brahman is Shakti. What is conveyed through Shakti is Shakyarhta or abhidheya or m...

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