Durga Puja Significance and Spiritual Importance of Navratri – Shri Devi Pooja Mahatmyam

Durga Navratri or Durga Puja is the most auspicious time to worship the Mother Goddess. During these days, Durga will be in full swing and her powers are very active to bless her devotees and to destroy the evil forces. Devi Mahatmyam or the Chandi Path, also known as Durga Saptashati, gives full details about her power, knowledge and merits of Durga Puja.   

M N Chatterjee for Times of India writes:

  • Subrahmania Bharati invokes Mahashakti: “Mind and words are powerless/ to encompass your glory/ whose extent is as immeasurable/ as that of cosmic Cosmic energy in full play during navratri.”
  • Devi is beautiful and bountiful, beneficent and terrifying, compassionate and ruthlessly righteous. She is Durga and Kali in Bengal, Ambika and Bhadrakali in Gujarat, Vaishnodevi in Jammu and Kashmir, Chamunda in Karnataka, Santoshi Ma and Bhavani in Maharashtra and Kamakhya in Assam. She is invoked in many more forms that symbolize the Devi’s characteristic attributes. To most of us she is just Ma, the universal mother, who is conceived as protector of those who need her protection.
  • The 700 verses of the Devi Mahatmyam, also called Durga Saptasati of the Markandeya Purana , is recited during Durga Puja. She is hailed as the origin of all the worlds, and is said to have all the three gunas of sattva , rajas and tamas , that is, purity, passion and inertia. Yet she is without defects as the primordial matter, Prakriti , the ultimate resort of all and incomprehensible even to the trinity of Brahma, Vishnu and Maheshwara .
  • The Devi Mahatmyam projects a three-fold vision of the goddess in three main episodes. First, Vishnu kills the two demons deluded by Mahamaya, Madhu and Kaitabha. In the second story, Mahishasura, the buffalo-demon with his gang of desperadoes creates havoc in heaven and drives out the gods from their abode. The Devi Chandi, created by the combined effulgence of the gods, mounted on a lion and equipped with their diverse weapons, kills the buffalo demon and his aides after a protracted and gruesome battle.
  • In the third and final episode, the longest one, she overcomes the ferocious Shumbha and Nishumbha along with their aides Chanda and Munda. She is therefore called Chamunda. Central to her identity is her victory over the buffalo-demon, his annihilation and subsequent restoration of cosmic balance. It is her emergence as Mahishasuramardini which is etched in the popular imagination and this is what is mainly celebrated during the Navratri festival.
  • The composite imagery of the supreme Shakti with the powers of all the gods concentrated in her, marking a shift of the power paradigm from the all-male preserve to the feminine dimension of divinity, is a unique aspect of the Hindu polytheistic pantheon. Devi Durga flanked by Saraswati, the goddess of learning, Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth, Ganesha, the remover of obstacles and Kartikeya, the god of prowess, and her vaahan or vehicle, the lion, take on the buffalo demon to overpower him. This is a part of the iconographic representation of the cosmic struggle enacted every autumn during the Durga Puja. It is of great symbolic significance. The desire for wealth and power has to be regulated and integrated with the need for self-restraint through education and true learning to ensure the individual’s balanced growth. The lion overpowering the buffalo demon conveys the strength and determination with which the irrepressible ego and unbridled lust have to be curbed for good.
  • Mahashakti could have reduced the demons to ashes by merely looking at them. But she chooses to engage them in mortal combat and directs her weapons at them thus purifying them in the process with her divine touch to absolve them of their sins. There is no vendetta, only compassion. Eradicate the sin, not the sinner, seems to be the message. Shakti is also closely associated with vegetation and nourishment, so important for energy; hence her appearance around the harvest season.

Significance of Navaratri – Importance of Durga Navratri Puja

Significance or importance of Durga Navratri Puja is mentioned in several Puranas and other scriptures. As every other Hindu festival, Navratri also has some particular reason or factors to celebrate or observe. Hindu culture and way of living was started with Shakti worship. In other sense, every Hindu religious legend is associated with Shakti pooja. Puranas urge that Shakti Puja is the base for Hindu culture and Hinduism.

During the time of Navratri, in some places farmers get their yield from farmyards. In those places, Durga Navaratri is celebrated jubilantly. This is the main reason behind grand celebrations of Navaratri in Karnataka and Bengal.

Sharad Navratri – Tridevi Vrata:

During Navratri, Goddess Durga is worshipped in nine different forms. During Navratri pooja, first three days are dedicated to Goddess Durga, the Goddess of courage, next three days to Lakshmi, the Goddess of wealth, and the final three days are dedicated to Goddess Saraswati, the Goddess of wisdom and knowledge. Durga Navratri ends with Vijaya Dashami on the tenth day. Navratri festival signifies power, wealth, prosperity and knowledge.

Lakshmi Pooja Significance in Durga Navaratri:

As per Hinduism, Goddess Lakshmi is the source of all types of wealth. Lakshmi puja in Navratri days, frees devotes from poverty and all other sorrows and keeps him prosper. Lakshmi is worshipped as Kamala and Maha Laxmi during Navaratri.

Durga Pooja Significance in Sharad Navaratri:

The triumph of good over evil is Mahishasura mardhini. Navratri represents the demolition of Mahishasura and Shumbha Nishumbha. Mahishasura is the hidden evilness and Shumbha Nishumbha is the bad behavior of a person. Mother Goddess demolishes the both which means Durga Pooja makes one free from evil thoughts and routes him to the spiritual world.

In Eastern states of India particularly Bengal, the last four days of Navratri are observed as Durga Pooja. Durga Pooja is the most celebrated festival in Bengal.

Saraswati Pooja Significance in Sharad Navratri:

Saraswati Pooja is observed from seventh day to ninth day during Durga Navaratri. On Saraswati puja day, studies are initiated for children (Vidyaarambh or Vidyabhyasa arambh or Aksharabhyasa). Saraswati Pooja is also observed on Shri Panchami.

Other than these three Mother Goddesses, devotees also worship Gayatri, Lalitha, Amba, Jagaddatri, Ashtamatrikas (Eight divine Mothers) and Dasa mahavidya (10 Maha Vidya Goddesses) during Durga Navarartri.

Navratri festival begins on the first day of the bright phase during Ashwin month and ends with Vijaya Dashami. Durga idols are worshipped for nine nights and immersed in water on Dasara.

Three important aspects of life – the power of courage, the power of wealth and the power of knowledge – are provided during Durga Navratri to all the devotees who worship Goddess Shakti. Hence, Durga Navaratri holds the credit of most celebrated festive season.

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