St. Pete Beach, Tampa Bay, Florida
Every festival has its own special food and sweets to
celebrate with. As this festival is celebrated in mid-winter, the food,
prepared for this festival, is such that it warms the body and gives a boost in
energy. In Jaipur, Rajasthan we have Til Laddu (made with Jaggery and sesames
seeds) which is a specialty of the festival. Many more varieties of sesames
seeds and Jaggary sweets like Gajak(world famous Jaipur's Sesame Brittle),
Rewadi and Til papdi. Feeni is another sweet vermicelli delicacy mainly served
on this day. Pakoras, deep fried hot dumplings made of vegetables and lentil
paste area also a crowd favorite.
Everyone in my family is very passionate about kites. My
grandfather has taught us to fly kites and shares stories of how his father had
inspired him. His father used to organize events at his terrace on kite flying
day. He invited all his friends, relatives and their children to enjoy. They were
having competition among children to see who could cut the most number of kites,
and to see who wins. My grandfather explained how this became passion for him
and he started participating in kite completions in Jaipur, Luckhnow and Kanpur
and won lots of trophies. He now has a large joint family, where four
generations live together in one house. He tries to give same opportunities to
his grand and great-grandchildren to preserve our traditions, heritage and
culture.
I am now married into an American family, and was astounded to
know that my father-in-law also loved kite flying. My father-in-law is from an Indian
Parsi family. He lived in Mumbai and used to enjoy kite flying from his balcony
as a teenager. He also shared something
very special in that he made his own special string (Manjha) to cut opponent’s
kite, because when he was young, everything was self-made. Two years ago, he
was in Jaipur during the kite flying festival with his friends and family from
America. Even after 60 years, he was still thrilled to fly kites and especially
to cut other’s kites down. Enthusiasm for Kite flying is a passion for life.
India is the second biggest nation in population with
diversity of geography, faith, culture, climate, and where they celebrate lots
of festivals and fairs. Makar Sankranti is one of them. It is also known as
Kite Flying Festival. India’s multiplicity gives reason to celebrate Makar
Sankranti in different ways in different regions. Traditionally, this has been
one of many harvest days in India as well as regarded as the beginning of an
auspicious annual phase in Indian culture.
Makar Sankranti : Makar stands for Capricorn in Zodiac. Sankranti
describes the transition of the Sun. Therefore Makar Sankranti means the
transition of Sun into Makar rashi through its celestial path. It is the only
festival celebrated on a fixed date, January 14th.The traditional Indian Calendar
is based on lunar positions. This is the reason why the dates of all Hindu
festivals keep changing in the Gregorian calendar. Makar Sankranti is a solar
event, and therefore remains constant. It is the festival of the Sun God who is
regarded as a symbol divinity and wisdom. Millions of people take a dip in holy
rivers such as; Ganges, Yamuna, etc., to bathe and pray to the Sun God for
enlightenment, peace, prosperity and happiness.
On this day, every year, the sky above India resembles a
kaleidoscope all day long. As customary with many days of festivities, the day
ends with fireworks into the late night.



i find this blog colorful sparkling and lively.
ReplyDeletedid you know that today on treasure island beach,
just 6 miles north of st.pete beach shown on top photo they celebrated by flying big kites
as part of the 15th annual kite flying day
send us more kleidoscope of life episodes, swati
aspee
What a wonderfully written story about kites, festivals, & holidays in India...very insightful and informative for someone like me to learn of such an interesting culture and it's traditions. I know India has much to offer & see. How nice there is kite flying & wind surfing on the beaches for you to see in Florida. I loved all the photos, as well, especially the roof top kite flying. :) Kathy Jones
ReplyDeleteIt's a nice, fantastick blog and very good content. You write a beautiful language and have great knowledge.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes to you both.
Love
Inge and Bent
In Denmark we have a tradition for flying kites too.
ReplyDeleteOur kites are traditionally made out of paper and wood with tails of wrapped up newspaper. We call the “Dragons” probably from a Chinese tradition.
The Danish kite is big and heavy compared to the Indian kite. But because it’s almost always windy in Denmark we can make them fly – if you run fast ;-).
The Danish kite is not associated with any special occasion but the kites are traditionally built and flown in the month of October and November.
Best wishes
Jorgen Thy
It is great to know that Denmark also has tradition of kite flying. Looking forward to have kite flying experience in Denmark.
DeleteEnjoyed "re-visiting" the kite festival in Jaipur reading
ReplyDeletethis blog story. Keep it coming. Love Birgitte
Excellent, it brought back some great memories and we even recognised some of the people in the photos!!
ReplyDeleteKeep it up.
Our very best regards to you both.
Elsa & Chris
Love the Kite flying photo's bring back
ReplyDeletegreat memories. Keep it up Swati, Love
Birgitte