Balmikism | |
Ramayana | |
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Yoga Vasistha | |
Bhagwan Valmiki | |
Ashram | |
Pargat Diwas | |
Lav | |
Kush | |
Ardaas | |
Arthi | |
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Pargat Diwas or (Panjabi: ਪਰਗਤ ਿਦਵਸ ) Valmiki Jayanti is an annual Indian festival celebrated in particular by the Valmiki religious group, to commemorate the birth of the ancient Indian poet and philosopher Valmiki, who is thought to have lived around 500 BC. The festival date is determined by the Indian lunar calendar, and falls on the full moon (Purnima) of the month of Ashwin, typically in late September or early October. Valmiki is revered in India as the author of the Indian epic poem Ramayana, and is also worshipped as the Avatar of God in the Valmiki faith. Valmiki himself appears as a major character in the Ramayana, as a monk who receives the banished queen Sita into his hermitage and acts as teacher to her twin sons, Luv and Kush. The "epic meter" in traditional Indian poetry is attributed to Valmiki, with verses consisting of memorable rhyming couplets, suggesting that the poem was intended for public recitation, a common Indian oral tradition.
On Pargat Diwas portraits of Valmiki, typically depicted as a monk wearing saffron-coloured robes and holding a quill and paper, are paraded in processions called Shobha Yatra through the main streets of the Valmiki locality, accompanied by street devotional singing.