8lj3uMTE9fdaxgxQmQyGf2nnPqs Bal Bharati Public School Library: INDIAN FESTIVAL

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Showing posts with label INDIAN FESTIVAL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label INDIAN FESTIVAL. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

होली की बोली..........

मैं हूँ होली,
कहिये मेरे संग रंगों की बोली.
प्राकृतिक रंग करो इस्तमाल,
वर्ना हो जाएगा बुरा हाल.
पानी का करो कम यूज़,
हालत हो जाएगी वर्ना लूज़.
 खुशियों का त्योहार हूँ मैं,
इसमें ग्रीज़ और पक्के रंगों का काम क्या हैं??


                                अन्विता भटिआ
                                           छठी-अ 
  बाल भारती  पब्लिक स्कूल, ग़ाज़ियाबाद


Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Indian Festivals, Holi

Holi
Holi is the festival of colors. It marks the coming of spring. It is celebrated in the month of phalgun. it occurs on the day of full moon.
  This festival is of 2 days. The importance of the 1 day is-long time ago there was one cruel king Hiranyakashypu, he wanted everybody to worship him instead of god.  But Prahlad followed Vishnu. He planned to kill prahlad.  He thought that Holika would sit with him in the bonfire because Holika could not be harmed by fire by virtue of a boon from GOD.But the opposite happened-Holika died and prahlad came out without getting burnt. The triumph of prahlad represents victory of good over evil.  
     In North India on the eve of holy bonfire are lit. They enjoy by singing and dancing. The next day they enjoy with gulal. Some people enjoy this with gulal ,water, water balloons, bucket of water, water guns and harmful colors.
it is a very joyful festival.

 ISHITA RASTOGI
 VI-E

BAL BAHARATI PUBLIC SCHOOL
Brij Vihar, Ghaziabad

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Indian Festival, Raksha Bandhan

RAKSHA BANDHAN

Raksha Bandhan is a unspoken pledge exchange between a brother and a sister cementing their relationships. It is celebrated on the day of Shravan Purnima (full moon) that falls in the month of August every year. On this day, sister ties a delicate, sometimes decorative, thread on the wrist of their brothers and apply tilak on the forehead as a symbol of love and affection. The brother responds by giving a gift, implicitly pledging to protect his sister from danger. In some places in medieval India where women felt unsafe, they tied Rakhi around the wrists of men they could count upon. Later this practice changed and sister started typing Rakhi only on their brother's wrists. There are many legends that signify the importance of Rakhi in India.

 Ishita Rastogi
 VI E
 BAL BHARATI PUBLIC SCHOOL, Brij Vihar, Ghaziabad