write a diary entry on how you spend your puja vacation
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We are required to write a diary entry detailing our puja vacation. The following is how we'll spend our puja vacation:
Hi Diary, 25.10.22
Today was Durga Puja, and I'll describe how we celebrated it.
One of the most basic Hindu holidays is Durga Puja. Every year, a plethora of decorations are made to honor the goddess Durga. She is the descendant of Sati, who later wed Lord Shiva and the daughter of Himalaya and Menaka. It is believed that this puja was started the first time when Lord Rama worshipped the Goddess Durga in order to gain the authority to kill Ravana.
Durga Puja is a nine-day festival. Days of the Durga Puja celebration vary depending on the location, custom, aptitude, and conviction of the people. A select few people praise it for five, seven, or the full nine days. On Shashti, people start worshipping the Durga idol, and it ends on Dashami. By enhancing a "pandal" in the surrounding environs, a select few members of the organization or society applaud it. Nowadays, especially early in the morning, all the nearby temples fill to the full with worshippers. A small number of devotees do all forms of worship at home while following all the rules, and on the last day, they immerse a statue in the Ganges.
So I did all of these activities involved in the Durga Punja festivity, I and my family participated in all of these events and we all had a great time. Waiting to celebrate it the next year also.
#SPJ2
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In this question, we are required to write a diary entry on how you spend your puja vacation.
4th November 2022
Thursday
11: 30 PM.
Dear Diary,
I came to Kolkata to spend my Durga Puja holidays with my maternal uncle and aunt, who live there, as I've written in earlier notes this week. And I'm delighted that I chose to visit this place on vacation.
For me, it was a completely different experience because I often spend my puja vacations in Patna, where I was born and raised. We went to a puja pandal in Kolkata's Bara Bazaar neighborhood.
When they learned that I was visiting Kolkata for the first-time during Durga Puja, the majority of the visitors there—most of whom were Bengalis—became incredibly welcoming, making sure I could understand the rites being performed and even making an effort to explain everything in detail.
Due to the fact that this was the final day of the puja, married women as well as all other females were invited to a ceremony called Sindoor Khela, in which married women apply sindoor on one another as a way of symbolically bringing wealth into one another's lives.
Overall, it was such a special and great experience for me that I will treasure forever. I would want to go back to Kolkata.
#SPJ2