Navreh
{{Short description|Kashmiri New Year}}
{{see also|Indian New Year's days}}
{{Infobox holiday
| holiday_name = Navreh
| image = File:Navreh Thaal.jpg
| caption = A Navreh Thaal marks the beginning of the new year
| observedby = Kashmiri Hindus
| celebrations = Rituals
| longtype = Social, Cultural, Religious
| type = Hindu
| nickname = Kashmiri New Year
| frequency = Annual
| date = Chaitra Shukla Pratipada
| date2022 = 2 April (Saturday)
| date2023 = 22 March (Wednesday)
| date2024 = 9 April (Tuesday)
| relatedto = Chaitra Navaratri, Ugadi, Gudi Padwa
}}
{{Hindu festival date info}}
{{Hinduism}}
Navreh ({{IPA|ks|naʋ rʲah}}) or Kashmiri New Year is the celebration of the first day of the Kashmiri new year by Kashmiri Hindus, with the largest Kashmiri Hindu community being the Kashmiri Pandits. Kashmiri Pandits dedicate Navreh festival to their Goddess Sharika, a form of Goddess Durga or Shakti,{{cite news |last= |first= |date=30 October 2011|title=Fire in Shakira Temple,kitchen damaged|url=https://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/fire-in-shakira-temple-kitchen-damaged/|newspaper=Indian Express|access-date= 1 May 2024}} and pay homage to her during the festival. It takes place on the first day of the bright half (Shukla Paksha) on the month of Chaitra (March–April) of the Kashmiri Hindu calendar.
History
According to the legend, Mother Goddess Sharika's dwelling was on Sharika Parvata (Hari Parbat) where the celebrated Sapta Rishis gathered. On an auspicious day of 1st Chaitra, as the first ray of sun fell on Chakreshwari and paid honor to her. This moment is considered the beginning of New Year and the Saptarishi era for astrologers. Kashmiri Hindu Tradition and astronomical calculations date the beginning of this era to 3076 BC. {{cn|date=April 2022}}
Rituals
On the eve of the new year, the priest (kulguru) of the family provides a religious almanac (nachipatra) for the next year and a scroll (kreel pach) of the local goddess. Then a customary large plate (thali) is filled with rice and offerings like almanac, scroll, dried and fresh flowers, wye herb, new grass, curd, walnuts, pen, ink container, gold and silver coins, salt, cooked rice, wheat cakes and bread and covered on the eve of Navreh. On the day of the new year, the family members gather together, uncover the thali and view it on the holy day.
The rice and coins represent our daily bread and wealth, the pen and paper a reminder of the quest for learning, the mirror represents retrospection.
The calendar signals the changing time and the Deity the Universal Constant, and they together are a reminder of the constancy of changing time. The bitter herb is reminiscent of life's bitter aspects, to be taken in stride alongside the good. The bitter herb ‘wye’ is usually eaten with walnuts to bring wholeness of life's experiences in the admixture.
Symbolism aside, the consumption of this bitter herb has also been practiced by Native American cultures as well as by some of the American transcendentalist philosophers for various reasons.
After seeing (darshan) the thali, each person takes a walnut to be thrown into a river The walnuts from the thali are dropped in the river as a sign of thanksgiving. Then the family members offer turmeric rice in ghee (tahar) to the goddess at the temple and seek blessings.Crump, William D. (2014), [https://books.google.com/books?id=cDTfCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA114 Encyclopedia of New Year's Holidays Worldwide], MacFarland, page 114-115
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- Toshkhani, S.S. (2009). Cultural Heritage of Kashmiri Pandits. Pentagon Press.
- {{cite book|author=Robert Sewell|title=The Indian Calendar – With Tables for the Conversion of Hindu and Muhammadan Into A. D. Dates, and Vice Versa|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T9z33n6Q1nwC&pg=PA149|date=15 March 2010|publisher=Read Books Design|isbn=978-1-4455-3119-9}}
{{Hindu festivals}}
{{New Year by Calendar}}
Category:New Year celebrations
Category:Festivals in Jammu and Kashmir
Category:Culture of Jammu and Kashmir
Category:Hinduism in Jammu and Kashmir
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