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sindhi culture
  1. Cheti Chand
    Celebrating the birth of the Avatar of god Water (Varun Devta) Sai Uderolal,
    famous as Jhulelal. Much has been said and written about it
    may need to talk about the event again. In Sindh the beginning of
    New Year’s Eve was considered Cheti Chand. Some entrepreneurs have opened a new account
    letters to Cheti Chand; many, however, did so on the night before Diwali. It’s full
    on the day of the month, people used to go to the river or lake and offer ‘Aho’ a handful of rice
    mixed with milk and flour. If there was no river or ‘Darya’, a ritual was performed
    at the fountain. Even the Sindhi Sikhs go to temples or Gurudwaras, for Gugu Nanak’s
    birthday also falls in Pūrnima.
  2. Sagra (Holy rope) Sindhi Bhaibands usually resides in foreign countries;
    therefore, their wives were always concerned about their good health
    husbands. For this purpose they performed pooja and fasted on the four Mondays of
    The moon of Sawan, after which they make pooja, spread the delicious rice and get it
    a sacred cord tied to the wrist by a priest (Bandhan).
    Mahalakshmi Holy Thread (Mahalakshmi-a-jo-Sagro) This sacred cord
    it had 16 strips and 17 days. On the day when the sacred cord was to be loosed
    it was celebrated as an important day with special savors like satpura as well
    pakwan of Suji & Maida were made and distributed for the first time to the priests as well
    poor and after that the remaining remnants were used by family members.
  3. Fasting in Sindhis, usually on Mondays and Saturdays, Giyara or Umaas were
    considered to be vrats. During Satyanarayan’s fasting period and nine days of
    In Aanaas, only one meal was served.
  4. Teejri
    The ceremony took place in the month of Sawan when women and girls were married
    paint their hands and feet with Mehndi, keep it fast all day, there
    they used to play games, turn to Jhulas and sing love songs. Orthodox or strict
    Sindhi women do not even drink water until they break their fast. In the program
    on the night after making the offering to the moon, they were breaking the fast. This too
    called the Sindhi version of the Karara Chauth [3]
  5. Akhan Teej
    In Sindh, Akshaya Tritiya is known as Akhandi celebrated in Vaisakha.
    On this day new jars of water (mataka) were kept and everyone was kept
  1. AUnn-Matyo In the month of Sawan, in the Baaras of Krishna Paksha, grain
    were modified in the diet, meaning that instead of wheat and rice, chapatis were made from gram flour
    (Besan) was eaten.
  2. Ban Badhri In the month of ‘Bado’, during the Baaras of Shukla Paksha,
    the god Varun had taken a picture. Instead small insects like ants etc are fed
    Gur (jaggery) and Musti. Married daughters are invited by their parents to a meal.
  3. Somavati Umaas For some months the Umaas take place on Mondays. That
    the day is considered important by having a “dumb dip” in water; without speaking
    to anyone very early in the morning. It is also called, “Gungee Umaas”.
  4. Nandhi and Vaddi Thadri Both of these things happened in the month of Sawan. On
    On the day before the third day, people are cooking lola (delicious flour cakes) and rote (fried
    cakes) because there should be no light in the house in Thadree
    day. Lol and Rotes are eaten with curd or pickle. On that day drops of water
    they are also sprinkled on a cooking fire to appease Sitladevi Mata.
  5. Janamashtami, Ram Navmi and Shivratri Since Krishna was born in the background
    at midnight, in Jananashtami, bhajans and kirtans were kept in the temples until midnight.
    For Ram Navmi, the birthday of Lord Rama is celebrated. In Shivratri people drink
    ‘Thaadhal’ has another ‘bank’ in it, after donating it to Mahadev
    the temple. In towns and cities, large ‘Taahri’ pots (sweet rice) are prepared
    and they were scattered abroad.
  6. Tirmoori On this holiday parents send ladoos & chiki (Laaee) made from Tils
    to their married daughters. On the day of Makar Sankrant the sun moves from the south
    in the north. Therefore it is also called ‘utraan’ or ‘Tirmoori’. In the battle of Mahabharat
    Bisham Pitamah did not breathe for the last time until the ‘utraan’ from this day there
    a bright light occurred in Dev Lok.
  7. Dussehra A few days before Dussehra there was a plan by Ramlila
    it was attended by crowds of people. On the day of Dussehra the effigies are colored
    of Ravana, Kumbhakarna and Meghnath were burned.
  8. Diyaaree Two days before Diwali, Sindhis begins to light Diyaas (clay lamps)
    from ‘Dhan Teras’. The markets are full of potential buyers. Friends too
    relatives reunite with love and increase fun too
    sweetness. At night, Laxmi Poojan happened when all the members e
    the family prays respectfully and respectfully. At night, people often took their own
    The hands on which the iron rod was fastened were burned. It was called
    ‘Mollawaro’; everyone shouted ‘Mollawaro …. Mollawaro’ …
  9. Kati Giyara Before the independence of Pakistan in 1947, on this day
    The people of Sindh used to do charitable work. The whole bazaar will be
    it was full of hundreds of beggars and the needy, who would spread the cloth before
    to them, when the people, to the best of their ability, would throw money, Bhugra,
    fruits etc. Jugglers used to organize their Tamashas on the street with monkeys
    and bears dancing in tunes played by jugglers. Anxiety disorder
    and gays prevailed all day.
  10. Navratra These days devotees to Devi eat one meal a day and have not
    even shaving and cutting hair. The ladies sang bhajans. In Nagarparkar they used to dance

offer clean and cool water. The significance of this day was to provide water
it is dry. So throughout the site and around the corner, the sharbat, with pieces of apple in it, was present
given to passers-by and ‘prasad’. On this day, and it was customary to
send new clay pots and fruit to the priests and Gurdwara.

SINDHIS INHABITAT IN INDIA


Although the Sindhi community is accompanied throughout India, it stands out
small (5-10%). living in various cities in India.
Maharashtra = Jalgaon, Ulhasnagar, Kalyan, Mumbai, Pune, Nagpur, Dhule,
Aurangabad,
Gujrat =
Gandhidham, Surat, Rajkot, Adipur, Gandhinagar, Ahmedabad, Bhavnagar,
Madhya Pradesh = Bhopal (Bairagarh), Indore, Jabalpur, Katni, Satna, Sagar, Rewa,
Maihar, Italy,
Chhatisgarh = Bilaspur, Raipur,
Rajasthan = Ajmer, Jaisalmer, Jaipur
South India = Banglore, Vijaywada, Hyderabad, Chennai,
Others = Delhi, Kolkatta, Chandigarh

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