Autumn is a season of festivals in India. People across the country recently observed Navratri, also known as Dussehra or Durga Puja in different regions. The season will end with Diwali or the festival of lights in November.
Navratri lasts for nine days dedicated to shakti or the nine forms of Goddess Durga. Devotees from some regions celebrate only for three days while others observe the festival for five days.
[PHOTOS OF INDIAN FESTIVALS]
People celebrate festivals with much pomp and show but the manner of celebration differs from place to place. In the Iyer community of Tamil Nadu, women are invited home and gifted with accessories like bangles, earrings, etc. to wish her and her husband long and happy life together.
In Andhra Pradesh, Navratri is a celebration of universal motherhood. Women folks prepare a Batukamma, which is made up of flowers with seven layers, and dance around it while singing folk songs in praises of Goddess Shakti before sending it afloat across waters.
People from different states - Kerala, Karnataka, West Bengal, Maharashtra and others - celebrate in different ways but Goddess Durga is the centre of the festivities.
A few weeks after Navratri comes Diwali, which is celebrated between October and November based on the Hindu lunar calendar. It falls on Nov 13 this year.
Diwali is a five-day festival celebrating the victory of 'good over evil' and 'light over darkness'. It commemorates the return of Lord Rama to Ayodhya after a 14-year-long exile. Legend has it that he killed demon-king Ravana and returned to the capital with Sita and Lakshmana.
Hindus around the country and abroad celebrate Diwali with great pomp by bursting firecrackers and lighting up homes with oil lamps.
[PHOTOS OF INDIAN FESTIVALS]