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Thaipusam Laksharchana 2026 at Skandagiri, Hyderabad: Essential Dates, Sacred Rituals, and Visitor Guide

Thaipusam Laksharchana at Skandagiri Subramanya Temple, Hyderabad, will be observed from 30 January to 1 February 2026, featuring Sri Ganapathi Homam, Sri Subrahmanyaswamy Mahanyasa Poorvaka Ekadasa Rudrabhishekam, and the commencement of the Laksharchana. The event highlights meticulous Vedic practice and structured collective chanting for spiritual focus. Visitors can expect well-organized sessions of archana, alankaram, and…
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Thaipoosam 2026 at Skandagiri Temple, Hyderabad: Powerful Murugan Bhakti and Community Light

Thaipoosam (Thaipusam) 2026 falls on February 1 and will be observed at Skandagiri Subramanyaswamy Temple in Padmarao Nagar, Secunderabad, Hyderabad. The festival aligns with Thai Pournami and honors Lord Murugan through vrata, milk-pot offerings, Kavadi, abhishekam, and alankaram. Skandagiri typically hosts special rituals, chanting rooted in the Skanda Purana, and community annadanam. Practical guidance includes…
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Skandagiri Temple Pujas in January 2026: Unmissable Festive Highlights and Sacred Rituals

Skandagiri Subramanya Swamy Temple in Hyderabad presents a spiritually rich calendar in January 2026 featuring Dhanurmasa Pujas, Bhogi, Makara Sankranti, and Thai Poosam. The month emphasizes disciplined predawn worship, gratitude, renewal, and courage through devotion to Lord Subrahmanya. Rituals and celebrations draw on Telugu and Tamil calendar traditions while nurturing shared dharmic values across Hinduism,…
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Thai Masam 2026: Auspicious Tamil Month, Pongal Celebrations, and Shared Dharmic Harmony

Thai masam 2026 spans January 15 to February 12 in the traditional Tamil calendar, beginning with Thai Pongal on January 15. The month is considered highly auspicious for weddings, housewarmings, and new ventures, encapsulated in the saying “Thai pirandhaal vazhi pirakkum.” Its start aligns with Makara Sankranti, a pan-Indic solar transition honored across dharmic traditions.…
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Uttarayan (Uttarayanam) 2026: Sacred Northward Sun, Auspicious Dates, Rituals, and Unity

Uttarayan (Uttarayanam, Uttarayana Punyakalam) marks the Sun’s northward journey from Makara Sankranti to Karka Sankranti and begins on January 14, 2026. Rooted in Vedic astronomy and Hindu calendar practice, it aligns seasonal change with ritual life while explaining why dates may vary by regional Panchang. Communities across India celebrate this transition through Makara Sankranti, Pongal,…
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Shattila Ekadashi 2026: Definitive Guide to Date, Tila Rituals, and Dharmic Unity (Shadtila/Tilda)

Shattila Ekadashi (Shadtila/Tilda/Tiladaana) in 2026 is observed on 14 January, Wednesday. It falls in Magh Krishna Paksha in the Purnimanta system and corresponds to Paush (Pushya masam) in the Amanta system followed in Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Karnataka. The observance centers on six sacred uses of sesame (tila), highlighting purification, charity, and devotion to…
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Magh Month 2026 Guide: Exact Magha Masam Dates, Key Rituals, and Shared Dharmic Traditions

Magh Month 2026—also called Magha Masam or Magh Mahina—falls from 3 Jan to 1 Feb in the North Indian (Purnimanta) calendar and from 19 Jan to 17 Feb in the Marathi, Gujarati, Telugu, and Kannada (Amanta) systems. This guide explains why the dates differ, how to align personal observances with local panchang, and which practices—such…
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Bhagavan Sri Ramana Maharshi Jayanti 2026: Sacred Date, Punarvasu Meaning, and Ways to Observe

Bhagavan Sri Ramana Maharshi’s 146th Jayanti will be observed on January 4, 2026, aligned with Punarvasu (Punarpoosam/Punartham) Nakshatra in Margazhi Masam per the Tamil calendar. The day is traditionally marked at Sri Ramanasramam, Tiruvannamalai, with Veda parayana, recitations of Ramana’s works, meditative silence, and reflective satsanga. Observing the Jayanti by Nakshatra rather than solar birthdate…
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Sacred Gateways Open: Vaikunta Ekadashi at TTD Sub-Temples, 30–31 December 2025

TTD sub-temples across Andhra Pradesh will observe Vaikunta Ekadashi on 30 December 2025 and Vaikunta Dwadashi on 31 December 2025. Key participating shrines include Soumyanatha Swamy (Nandalur), Sri Prasanna Venkateswara Swamy (Avulapalle, Somala Mandal), the shrine at Borragmanda (Sadum Mandal), Sri Konetiraya, and other TTD-managed temples. Devotees can anticipate the opening of the Vaikunta Dwaram,…
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Tirupati Sri Kodandaramaswamy Temple: Unmissable January 2026 Festivals and Ritual Guide

January 2026 at Sri Kodandaramaswamy Temple in Tirupati promises a serene and uplifting sequence of Sri Rama–focused observances shaped by a tenth-century Chola heritage and the living devotional culture of Tirumala–Tirupati. Pilgrims can anticipate Makara Sankranti, Pongal-season worship, and Ekadashi-inspired alankarams as announced by the temple, complemented by daily sevas, Veda parayana, and prasad distribution.…
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Kanuma 2026: Date, Rituals, and Heartfelt Traditions of Sankranthi in Andhra Pradesh

Kanuma 2026, the third day of the Sankranthi festivities in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, falls on January 15. The day centers on Govardhana Puja (Go puja), where cows and bulls are worshipped in gratitude for their role in agrarian life. Families decorate cattle, prepare offerings from the new harvest, and visit temples, recalling Sri Krishna’s…
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Makara Sankranthi at Arasavalli Temple: Sacred Sun Worship, Blessings, and Living Tradition

Makara Sankranthi at Arasavalli Temple is a radiant celebration of sun worship observed each January in Andhra Pradesh. Centered on Makar Sankraman, it features special Abhishekam and Archana to Lord Suryanarayana Swamy. Devotees hold that Darshanam of Suryanarayanaswamy on this day bestows health and prosperity. The temple’s serene ambience, Vedic recitations, and orderly darshan create…
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Sankranthi Bommala Koluvu: Meaning, Rituals, and Community Joy from Bhogi to Mukkanuma

Bommala Koluvu (Bommala Nomu) is a beloved Andhra tradition during Makara Sankranti that begins a day prior to Bhogi and concludes on Mukkanuma. The tiered display of dolls (koluvu padi) forms a narrative altar depicting deities, harvest life, and cultural scenes. Families invite women and girls for haldi-kumkum, share prasadam, and pass on stories to…
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Vaikunta Ekadasi and Moksha Patam: Decoding Snakes and Ladders as a Path to Liberation

Vaikunta Ekadasi invites a reflective return to dharma, and the traditional game Moksha Patam (Snakes and Ladders) becomes a meditative tool for understanding karma and moksha. Ladders symbolize virtues like truth, compassion, charity, and devotion, while snakes represent vices such as anger, pride, greed, and delusion. The game aligns naturally with Ekadashi fasting and vrata,…
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Magh Mela 2026: Jan 3–Feb 1 at Prayagraj (Allahabad) Triveni Sangam with Sacred Snan

Magh Mela 2026 will be observed from January 3 to February 1 at the Prayag Sangam in Allahabad (Prayagraj), where devotees undertake the sacred Magh Snan at the Triveni Sangam. The observance emphasizes inner austerity, communal devotion, and service, reflecting values shared across Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. Key bathing observances typically include Poush Purnima,…
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Harsu Brahma Jayanti 2026: Date, Tithi, and the Enduring Legacy of Courage and Dharma

Harsu Brahma Jayanti 2026, observed on January 27, honors the birth anniversary of Harsu Brahmaji and the values of courage, dignity, and devotion. Rooted in regional memory from the time of Raja Saliwahan, the remembrance inspires ethical reflection without dwelling on contention. The day’s observances—home puja, stotra recitation, diya lighting, and annadanam—connect personal faith with…
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Khodiyar Mata Jayanti 2026: Magha Shukla Ashtami Date, Significance, Puja Vidhi, and Traditions

Khodiyar Mata Jayanti 2026 (Khodiyar Maa Pragatya Din) falls on Magha Shukla Ashtami and will be observed on 26 January. The Jayanti honors the goddess’s first appearance and her protective grace, especially venerated in Gujarat. Devotees perform puja, observe vrata, recite aarti and stutis, and engage in seva that aligns devotion with service. Rooted in…
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Auspicious Mauni Amavasya 2026: Date, Sacred Silence, Magh Mela and Triveni Sangam Rituals

Mauni Amavasya (Mauna Amavasya) in 2026 falls on January 18, coinciding with the Magh Mela at Prayagraj. Observed on the No Moon day of Magha, it is renowned for Magh Snan at the Triveni Sangam and for the discipline of sacred silence (mauna). The day encourages japa, dana, vrata, meditation, and scripture reading, with many…

