DOLA YATRA
This is Celebrated from the tenth day of the
bright fortnight of Falguna up to the full moon day. The representative deities
Dologobinda, Bhudevi and Sreedevi are taken in a procession to Dolabedi located
outside the outer compound wall of the main Temple and special rites are
performed.
CHANDAN YATRA
This Takes place in the month of Vaisaksha and
continues for long 42 days. But, generally speaking it is a Festival of first
21 days only. The first period of 21 days is known as "Bahar Chandan"or outer
Chandan. During this period, the representative images of Rama,Krushna,
Madanmohan,Sridevi and Bhudevi are taken in a procession to Narendra tank.The
images of Siva from 5 Siva Temples known as "Pancha Pandavas" also accompany
them to the Narendra tank, At Narendra tank the images play in well decorated
boats and are worshipped. The second period of 21 days known as "Bhitar
Chandana" is celebrated inside the Temple. The rites observed on this period
are not popularly enjoyed.
SNANA YATRA
This Festival takes places in the month of
Jestha. it is popularly known as the Deba Snana Purnima.This is the first
occasion in the course of a year when the deities Jagannath,
Balabhadra,Subhadra along with Sudarsan and Madanmohan are brought out from the
Temple and taken in procession to Snana Bedi located in the North East corner
of the outer compound.The deities are bathed there with 108 pitchers of water
drawn from a well near the Northern Gate. Here,Jagannath and Balabhadra are
dressed like Lord Ganesh of the Purans with the head of an elephant. Lord
Balabhadra, Devi Subhadra & Lord Jagannath in Snana Bedi Click to enlarge
Three Ratha(Chariot) The Chariots The three Chariots of Balabhadra,Subhadra and
Jagannath are constructed each year with Sal wood, customarily brought from the
exprincely State of Dasapalla,by a specialist team of carpenters who have
hereditary rights for this.Lorrd Jagannth's Chariot is called nandighosa. it is
forty-five feet square at the wheel level.It has sixteen wheels,each of seven
feet diameter, and is decked with rred and yellow coverings of cloth. The
Chariot of Lord Balabhadra,called the Taladhwaja,has fourteen wheels,each of
seven feet diameter, and is covered with red and blue cloth.Its height is
forty-four feet. The Chariot of Subhadra,known as darpadalan is forty-three
feet high with twelve wheels, each of seven feet diameter. This Chariot is
decked with the coverings of red and black cloth. Around each of the Chariots
are nine Parsvadevatas, the guardian deities,and four horses. Each chariot has
a Charioteer called Sarathi,Matali,Darruka and Arjuna are the three charioters
attached respectively to the three Chariots of Jagannath, Balabhadra and
Subhadra.
NAVAKALEVARA
As a man discarding worn out clothes takes other
new ones,so also the embodied soul, casting off worn out bodies enters into
others which are new.In the light of this truth of the Bhagavat Geeta,
Navakalevar can be interpreted as a ceremony for entering into new bodies, when
Lord Jagannath, Balabhadra, Subhadra and Sudarshan cast off their old bodies
and take new ones. It is called Navakalevar. The year which has two months of
Ashadha is regarded auspicious for Navakalevar ceremony.It usually occurs in
8,11 or 19 years. The new bodies of the deities are made out of the newly cut
Yeem trees. The previous navakalevars were held in 1733,1744, 1752, 1771, 1790,
1809, 1828, 1836, 1855, 1874, 1893, 1912, 1931, 1950, 1969, 1977 and 1996.
RATHA YATRA (Chariot Festival)
The most splendid of the innumerable festivals
celebrated round the year in the holy city of Puri, the Ratha Yatra is the
grand culmination of a series of celebrations spread over the summer and the
monsoon months.
Akshaya Trutiya tithi marks the beginning of the
construction of the Rathas (chariots) for the ceremonial journey and sojourn of
Lord Jagannath, Balabhadra and Subhadra at the Gundicha Temple for a week.
On the full-moon day of the month of Jyestha
(May-June) in the Snana Yatra, the Bathing Festival, when the three deities
move in colourful processions to a platform in the outer enclosure of the
temple, the Snana Vedi, the bathing platform, where they bath with one hundred
and eight pitchers of perfumed water drawn from a temple well once a year.
After the ritual bath, the deities assume the special elephant form, recalling
the legend of the Lord's affection for a devotee, whom He proved that he was in
fact another manifestation of Lord Ganesha.
At the end of the Snana Yatra day, the holy
triad,supposedly afflicted with fever, do not return to their pedestal in the
sanctum.they stay away from the public view for a period of fifteen days,
called Anasara, after which they appear in their Navayauvana Vesha, literally a
renewed youth, on the new moon day of the Month of Ashadha.During this
fortnight the icons get a fresh coat of painting which gets washed out on the
day of the Bathing Festival. During this period the deities eat only fruits
other restricted diet and soft drinks.Cloth paintings. representing the deities
called Anasara Pati, are displayed beyond the enclosures hiding the deities
from the devotees to see and worship.
Finally comes the Ratha Yatra on the
second day of the bright fortnight of the month of Ashadha, when the three
deities come out of the temple in a specacular procession called Pahandi. The
deities, which are colossal wooden statues, adorned with giant floral crowns,
called Tahias, are literally pulled, pushed and dragged in rhythmic movement to
the accompaniment of the beat of cymbals, drums and chanting of their names in
chorus by devotees in frenzied ecstasy. After all the deities are seated in
their respective chariots starts the Chhera Pamhara, the ritual of sweeping of
the chariots with a golden broom by the Gajapati King of Puri,the foremost
servant of God,the Adya sevaka of Lord Jagannath. The King comes from his
palace on a richly decorated palanquin. Chhera Pamhara is a symbolic rite which
proclaims that the King, like others, is but an humble servant of the real
sovereign, Lord Jagannath.
The most exciting part of the Rath yatra is the
pulling of chariots by thousands of people who lay their hands on the sturdy
ropes and drag the massive structures along the Bada-Danda,the grand road. The
chariot of Balabhadra moves first, followed by those of Subhadra and Jagannath.
The chariots grind forward slowly until they reach the Gundicha temple and the
three deities rest for a night at the entrance on their own chariots. They
enter the Gundicha temple on the next day in the usual Pahandi style and stay
there for seven days.
Godess Laxmi,who gets angry for being left out
at the temple, proceeds to the Gundicha temple to meet her Lord, Jagannath , on
the Hera Panchami day,the fifth day of the fortnight. After having a stealthy
look at her Lord, she returns to the temple, damaging a part of Jagannath's
chariot in anger and disgust.
The deities, after the seven-day stay at
Gundicha Temple, their garden house, commence their return journey. It is
called Bahuda Yatra held on the tenth day of bright fortnight of Ashadha. The
return of the chariots takes place in the same order as in the Rath Yatra.
Balabhadra’s chariot moves first,followed by those of Subhadra and Jagannath.
On his way back,Jagannath stops for a while at Ardhasani temple, popularly
called Mausi Ma temple or the temple of Aunt. He accepts from the aunt His
favourite rice cake,Poda Pitha. The three chariots pulled by thousands of
devotees, reach back the Simhadwara in the late afternoon of the Bahuda day and
the deities remain seated on their chariots. On the next day known as the Bada
Ekadasi,the three deities, are attired in costumes of glittering gold and are
worshipped by thousands of devotees. This form of the deities is known as the
famous Suna Vesa. On the Dwadasi day, the three deities go back to their
original place,the Ratna Simhasana, literally the jewelled platform, with the
usual fanfare and the Pahandi style.Their arrival into the Sanctum sanctorum
marks the end of the Ratha Yatra the grand festival of chariots.
The Chariots
The three Chariots of Balabhadra,Subhadra and
Jagannath are constructed each year with Sal wood, customarily brought from the
exprincely State of Dasapalla,by a specialist team of carpenters who
havehereditary rights for this.Lorrd Jagannth's Chariot is called nandighosa.
it is forty-five feet square at the wheel level.It has sixteen wheels,each of
seven feet diameter,and is decked with rred and yellow coverings of cloth.
The Chariot of Lord Balabhadra,called the Taladhwaja, has fourteen wheels, each
of seven feet diameter, and is covered with red and blue cloth. Its height is
forty-four feet.
The Chariot of Subhadra,known as darpadalan is forty-three feet high with
twelve wheels, each of seven feet diameter. This Chariot is decked with the
coverings of red and black cloth.
Around each of the Chariots are nine Parsvadevatas, the guardian deities, and
four horses. Each chariot has a Charioteer called Sarathi,Matali,Darruka and
Arjuna are the three charioters attached
respectively to the three Chariots of Jagannath, Balabhadra and Subhadra.
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