Rath Yatra Festival
Rath Yatra is also known as Car Festival, this spectacular Chariot Festival is celebrated in the month of Asadha, on the second day of the lunar fortnight that falls during June-July. Popularly known as Rath Yatra, this festival is celebrated in the honor of Lord Jagannath who is believed to be an incarnation of Lord Vishnu.
The celebrated Ratha Yatra Festival is
said to have started in the time of Svarochisha Manu of the second
manvantara and is predicted to continue until the end of the second half
of Lord Brahma’s lifetime. Even in the Valmiki Ramayana, it is
mentioned that when Lord Rama was getting ready to leave this world, he
told Vibhishan, Ravana’s younger brother, to worship Lord Jagannatha,
the Lord of the Iksvaku dynasty in His absence.
The Skanda Purana also fixes the date of the Ratha Yatra as the
second day of the bright fortnight if the month of Ashadha, a day called
Pushyami Nakshatra by astrological calculations. The Padma Purana
describes that in Purushottama-Kshetra, or Jagannatha Puri, the
supremely blissful Personality of Godhead pretends to be made of wood.
In this way, although the Lord takes on what appears to be a material
form, it is completely spiritual by the causeless mercy of the Lord for
the conditioned souls who cannot perceive the transcendental domain of
His.On the day of the festival, the wooden idols of Krishna, Balrama and Subhadra are taken out in procession in three chariots to their summer temple for a week. The main chariot is 14 meters high and 10 meters square with 16 wheels. The actual construction of the carts begins two months before the festival day, on the third day of the bright fortnight of Vaisakha (April-May).
More than 600 trees, or 400 cubic meters of wood, are needed for the construction, taken from the local forests, along the banks of the Mahanadi River. Using the same simple tools and procedures as they have for the past hundreds of years, once the basic elements are made, such as the wheels, the actual construction begins only a few weeks before the festival.
The ropes of the huge chariots are pulled by millions of devotees. In the ancient times, devotees would occasionally throw themselves in front of the chariot of Sri Jagananath, for it was believed that to be crushed to death under its sixteen wheels was to go straight to heaven.
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