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Holi is a celebration of love, color and spring


That celebration is Holi, the Hindu festival of love, color and spring. It’s a time when Indians don simple, inexpensive clothes and take to the streets to drench each other in clouds of colored powder and buckets of water. There’s singing, dancing, and of course, food.

Holi this year falls on Friday.

But in some parts of India, communities begin the festivities by lighting bonfires the night before in a celebration known as Holika Dahan, or Choti Holi.

The bonfires are a nod to one of the most well-known legends associated with the festival.

The story goes something like this: The demon king Hiranyakashayap, who wanted to be worshipped as a god, became angry that his son Prahlad was instead a devotee of the deity Vishnu, the preserver and protector of the universe. In turn, Hiranyakashayap conspired with his sister Holika to kill his son.

As part of the plan, Holika would to lure Prahlad onto her lap and into a bonfire, while her enchanted shawl protected her from the wrath of the flames. But Vishnu thwarted the duo’s plan and rescued Prahlad. In the end, Holika died in the fire and Hiranyakashayap died at the hands of Vishnu. Prahlad eventually replaced his father as king.

The story is about the triumph of good over evil. The morning after, when the bonfires have gone out, some Hindus gather the ashes and smear them on their bodies as a purifying act, CNN reported in 2018.
Students smeared with colored powder on each other at Guru Nanak Dev University in Amritsar on March 17.
Holi’s signature tradition, however, is the throwing of colored powders — a tradition with roots in the love story of Radha and Krishna.
In Hindu mythology, the deity Krishna was left with blue skin after drinking milk poisoned by a demon. Worried that Radha would be turned off by his unnatural appearance, Krishna vented to his mother, who playfully suggested that he smear colored powder on Radha’s face, according to British Museum curator Sushma Jansari. Upon doing so, Radha fell in love with Krishna.
Marketgoers shop for Holi at a bazaar in New Delhi.

Today, street market vendors sell richly hued heaps of powder so that people can follow in the footsteps of Radha and Krishna.

A crowd in Hyderabad, India, throws colored powders into the air during a Holi celebration.

Despite being a Hindu festival, Holi now transcends the boundaries of religion and is celebrated by people across the Indian subcontinent. People young and old come together to douse loved ones and strangers alike in hues of red, yellow, pink, purple and more for a day of laughter and fun.

People apply colored powder on each other during Holi celebrations in Bhaktapur, Nepal on March 17.



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