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Showing posts from 2025

Experience of Durga Puja Celebration in Margao, Goa

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Durga Puja, also known as Navratra, Vijayadashami, or Dasara, is one of India’s most celebrated religious festivals, symbolizing the victory of good over evil — Lord Rama’s triumph over Ravana and Goddess Durga’s victory over Mahishasura. This age-old festival has something for everyone — from children enjoying the vibrant melas, lights, and food, to spiritual seekers who observe deep penance, fasting, and introspection over the nine sacred days. Across India, the celebration takes many forms. In West Bengal, Durga Puja is the heart of cultural life — every lane and locality sets up beautifully themed pandals and idols of Goddess Durga. In Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and other northern states, too, the festival holds immense significance. In the south, Mysore Dasara and the Kullu Dasara of Himachal Pradesh are equally grand, drawing devotees and visitors from far and wide. This year, I had the opportunity to spend the first few days of Navratra in Goa, and it was a beautiful experience t...

Goa Beyond Beaches: The Hidden Spiritual Soul of India’s Western Coast

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Goa: Beyond the Beaches — A Continuing Spiritual Journey Goa — that small, sun-washed state on India’s western coast- is often imagined as a paradise of beaches, seafood, and fun living. Yet beneath that lies another Goa: serene, soulful, and steeped in centuries of devotion and tradition. Its history stretches far beyond the shimmering shoreline — from being part of the Mauryan Empire in the 3rd century BCE to flourishing under ancient Hindu dynasties between 1000 and 1200 AD, followed by the rule of the Adil Shahs, and then over four centuries of Portuguese influence. This long and layered past has given Goa a unique cultural rhythm — one where temple bells and church choirs seem to coexist in harmony after its liberation from Portuguese rule in 1961. When India became independent in 1947, Goa still remained under Portuguese control. It was only in 1961 that it found its own freedom — and since then, the transformation has been remarkable. Today, Goa offers world-class tourism infr...

The Inner Landscape: Solitude, Silence, and the Architecture of Happiness

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The power of silence and solitude is not easily felt. For roughly one decade, I have been trying to experience this elusive state. I explored several manners of techniques and tools, yet it continues to elude me. I spent considerable time in the Himalayas, embarked on several long solo journeys both within country and abroad, read countless books and articles, and practiced meditation and yoga. Throughout this journey, I try to develop a non-reactive mindset while continuing to work. What amazes me in this process is that the murmuring self never allows you to rest in silence, even in the deep mountains where you are completely alone. What I come to understand is that the inner self is the primary obstacle to meaningful silence and solitude. I try to work on this realization, observing all sorts of communication with my inner self while trying not to be reactive or repetitive. It remains a work in progress, but the initial results are bit positive. In this process, I learned to mai...

On Art, Courage, and Our Collective Responsibility in Dark Times

  As we witness the devastating conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, and witnessing the rising tide of authoritarianism worldwide, Doris Lessing's 1957 reflections on the artist's role become more relevant. Since the 1960s, the world has moved from testing nuclear weapons to stockpiling large arsenals, while simultaneously creating an ecological time bomb. Today’s conflicts starkly put nuclear power nations against aspiring ones, while environmental destruction threatens all nations regardless of their arsenals.  Writing in the shadow of nuclear testing and the cold war, she understood something profound about how we face civilizational threats—and how easily we retreat into either "the pleasurable luxury of despair" or hollow platitudes. Her words remind us that in times when madmen hold switches of destruction, artists, writers and individuals bear a special responsibility: not to turn away from the nightmare, but to help us imagine what living might look lik...