Diya's
We say that, what remains in the end of a life is the
contribution you have given in the history of this world. In the same way, what
remains after a celebration blast of Diwali is the contribution you give to
world in understanding the meaning of this festival and life as a whole.
Diwali, as we know it, is a festival of ‘Diya’s. One will
be amazed to see how much brightness in one’s mind, a little lamp can bring,
for a day or two may be. Yes, it has the power to enlighten one’s mind. The small
diya fills every corner of our mind with rays of hope, love and happiness. This
kind of mechanism we have till now seen only in Diwali messages. But hardly
anyone bothers to imagine it in front of their eyes. With an ancient tradition
of over two thousand years, Diwali is the most enthusiastically celebrated
festival of India, among all generations. But, in total contradiction with
this, it is indeed one of the least understood festivals too. This may be said
in context of understanding the purpose , or wisdom in better words of
celebrating it!
Diwali arrives in the middle of a financial year, when everyone is
totally engrossed in her work. The life gives you a path to walk on and you hardly
get any time to look around. It is the time when we miss a small hang out with
friends, a little time with family, a brief introspection in your mind the
most. A month or so before Diwali, everyone becomes alert about the
arrival of this great festival of joy. Though it comes every year, we feel
fresh enough to welcome it with a totally fresh mind. The planning for the
celebration of this festival starts, with a great zeal. Thanks to the
opportunist media and their role in keeping us alert, we seriously start thinking
about planning well ahead of time for Diwali, so that nothing is left
out in our celebrations. Be it in shopping or in travel, decorations or
cleaning, gifting or sharing!
We all carry with us, many memories of childhood. For many
of us, most of it comes from the five days of Diwali and the long
vacation that used to come with it as a lovely gift. The tiny forts made
outside home or somewhere out in the mud, which is an old tradition in Maharashtra
used to give us a chance to revive the legacy of the great Maratha king ‘Chhatrapati
Shivaji Maharaj’. The small forts made by group of kids give a sense of
satisfaction and achievement. The joy of working with peers and the thrill of
competing with other groups in making your fort more beautiful & stronger than
the other is energizing. Plus, when it is done for a local competition,
sometimes it brings with it many prizes too, which used to give us as much
happiness as king Shivaji would have felt with his first victory at ‘Torna’(a
fort in Maharashtra).
The efforts we put at making the rangoli in front of
the door more attractive than that made by others are worth appreciating. It is
a way of bettering our skills. Because, there are very few occasions in the 365
days of a calendar year, when we get to look at the hidden artist inside us. This
artist, which was thrown into a corner of the dark room in our mind, gets a
chance to come out and revive a small piece of life. We hardly get time in rest
of the year to remember this prisoner, let alone meeting her. The one thing
that this small act of making rangoli, or decorating window of your
house with colored light bulbs or choosing among many designer lanterns is, it
keeps this artist in our mind happy. That’s why she never goes away and rests
peacefully in the dark corner of mind for a whole year waiting for the next Diwali
to come, where she will be shown light of the day. Definitely, over these years
of adulthood, this prisoner has seen only lights of Diwali.
She must have been impressed by the beauty of it.
Whether it is making a ‘lantern’ which is popularly known as
‘kandil’ in Maharashtra with our own hand or making rangoli with
no use of stencils, it decorates your mind as much as it decorates your house. Because,
with every strip of paper that gets attached to the wooden rim of the lantern
or every curved shape within periphery of white rangoli that gets filled
with vibrant colors, we paint our mind with the memories of events attached
with those colors. The colorful good memories definitely get bulky and hide the
bad memories behind them, which I suppose are nothing more than shades of grey.
By the laws of nature, it is very easy to find colorful pebbles in the sea of
stones. The memories that we build up with our own creation of art, play the
role of these pebbles. These wonderful stones then definitely make the surface
of our thoughts smoother and shiny, so that we can feel them in a better way.
My friend Deepak says-
“Festivals are a means, not an end in themselves. They are
like social glue, binding people from time to time. Because, otherwise in our
busy pursuits, we would just drift away….”
I would say, appreciation of what we have got in life is in
human nature. Festivals are the small opportunities when we can convey or
regards to nature for giving us what we have. It is the time we admire the
beauty of every natural thing that is present around us all the time.
The five elements of life or the five senses with the help
of which we give shape to our feelings are worth giving a better look at. These
senses have more potential than what they are generally used for. Mere protection
of human body from external aggressions is surely not the purpose of making the
senses being capable of doing so many extraordinary things. Hence, it becomes
necessary to give them a chance, once in a while, to realize their ability to
create human moods and shape our emotions. These senses touch our thinking in
many ways, even without our knowledge.
We say that, ‘let the beautiful and bright diya’s enlighten
our life…’
But hardly we think about what exactly is the enlightening
in life that is carried out in Diwali all about.
I think it is about enlightening our senses.
These five days help us make our grip over these senses more
firm and confident! Also, to make us reach in memories. Hence, the next time we
say this we mean it-
‘Happy Diwali!'
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