English, asked by subrinadhanraj, 1 year ago

HAPPY DIWALI BRAINLY FRIENDS

My question to you today is :

What are the two stories for Diwali ?


Answers

Answered by Anonymous
4
Deepavali is a seasonal festival. It marks the start of winter in South Asia. Holi marks the end of Winter. Makar Sankranti, May 1 and Christmas on 25th December are all seasonal festivals. It is much older than, Rama, Krishna or Parshurama.
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Rama reached Ayodhya on Deepavali. Now we celebrate deepavali to mark Rama's return. Similarly other religious groups, such as Sikhs and Buddhist also have some significance attached to Deepavali.
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The reason could be personal, social or religious.

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Answered by GraceS
0

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HERE IS UR ANSWER

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In one of the main stories in Hindu mythology, Diwali is the day Lord Rama, his wife Sita Devi and brother Lakshmana return to their homeland after 14 years in exile. The villagers lit a path for Rama, who had defeated the demon king Ravana. ... In other cultures, Diwali coincides with harvest and new year celebrations

Once upon a time there was a great warrior, Prince Rama, who had a beautiful wife named Sita.

There was also a terrible demon king, Ravana. He had twenty arms and ten heads, and was feared throughout the land. He wanted to make Sita his wife, and one day he kidnapped her and took her away in his chariot. Clever Sita left a trail of her jewellery for Rama to follow.

Rama followed the trail of glittering jewellery until he met the monkey king, Hanuman, who became his friend and agreed to help find Sita. Messages were sent to all the monkeys in the world, and through them to all the bears, who set out to find Sita.

After a very long search, Hanuman found Sita imprisoned on an island. Rama's army of monkeys and bears couldn't reach the island, so they began to build a bridge. Soon all the animals of the world, large and small, came to help. When the bridge was built, they rushed across it and fought a mighty battle.

When Rama killed the evil Ravana with a magic arrow, the whole world rejoiced. Rama and Sita began their long journey back to their land, and everybody lit oil lamps to guide them on their way and welcome them back.

Ever since, people light lamps at Diwali to remember that light triumphs over dark and good triumphs over evil.

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