Hindu women across the country observed the Rhishipanchami festival today as per the established rituals. The festival, the concluding day of the Teej, falls on the fifth day of bright half moon of the month of Bhadra (August-September).
Hindu women reaching their menstruation period observe this festival with due respect and importance by fasting and paying homage to the Saptarishis (seven powerful saints as per the Hindu mythology) with a belief that they will be blessed and forgiven for all sins they believed to have committed during the menstrual cycle, said Chairman of the Nepal Panchanga Nirnayak Samiti, Prof Dr Tam Chandra Gautam.
On this day, the devotees woke up early in the morning, visited the nearby river, stream, pond and lake and took an early bath with established rituals. They clean their body with 365 stems of Apamarga, herbal plants, take bath with cow dung and soil collected from sacred places and ash.
The fasting ritual requires the devotee to take bath in the morning and carryout prayers after which the person is required to eat grains, vegetables, wild fruits, Kandamul, guava for a single meal and fast again.
Today, woman devotees thronged the Rhrisheshwor Temple in Teku of the capital city and other Rishi Temples across the nation for homage and worship. RSS