
GANESH MEMANE -
on Aug. 26, 2024, 10:14 a.m. by ILCE-7SM3
What is the symbolic reason for throwing rice at weddings? Tossing rice at the end of the ceremony is meant to symbolize wishes of prosperity, fertility and good fortune to the married couple. It was one of many fertility rituals.
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GANESH MEMANE -
on Aug. 26, 2024, 10:14 a.m. by ILCE-7SM3
A shy boy, Mudit, manages to woo Sugandha and the two decide to get married. However, before the wedding, their relationship undergoes a setback as they discover his erectile dysfunction.
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GANESH MEMANE -
on Aug. 26, 2024, 9:30 a.m. by ILCE-7SM3
During the Peshwa era in Maharashtra, every village celebrated the arrival of Ganpati Bappa. But in 1892, revolutionaries like Shrimant Bhausaheb Rangari and Vishwa Bhasavdekar introduced the Sarvajanik Ganesh Utsav in Pune, during which Ganpati pandals were set up across the city for everyone to come and see, and to participate in its rituals. “The people celebrated the utsav through public contribution,” says Pune based historian Mandar Lawate. The festival was also used as a medium to spread the message of Indian independence and promote the Nationalist movement in India. Awareness about the festival was spread across the country from Karachi to the far east in Bangladesh through Bal Gangadhar Tilak’s newspaper, Kesari.
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GANESH MEMANE -
on Aug. 26, 2024, 9:26 a.m. by ILCE-7SM3
During the Peshwa era in Maharashtra, every village celebrated the arrival of Ganpati Bappa. But in 1892, revolutionaries like Shrimant Bhausaheb Rangari and Vishwa Bhasavdekar introduced the Sarvajanik Ganesh Utsav in Pune, during which Ganpati pandals were set up across the city for everyone to come and see, and to participate in its rituals. “The people celebrated the utsav through public contribution,” says Pune based historian Mandar Lawate. The festival was also used as a medium to spread the message of Indian independence and promote the Nationalist movement in India. Awareness about the festival was spread across the country from Karachi to the far east in Bangladesh through Bal Gangadhar Tilak’s newspaper, Kesari.
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