Tag: Sutak Period

  • Chandra Grahan Sutak: NCR Mandirs Closed for Devotees

    March 3 dawned with a wave of devotion sweeping NCR as lunar eclipse preparations took center stage. Nine hours before the Chandra Grahan, the sutak bell tolled, leading temple administrations to close kapats to pilgrims, enforcing a sacred pause in daily darshans.

    Closures commenced sharp at 6:20 AM with Vedic hymns echoing through the premises. Priests conducted final aartis prematurely, then evacuated the areas, counseling worshippers to sustain their bhakti from home altars. This ritual halt preserves the temples’ aura from presumed astral negativities.

    Core tenets dictate covering murtis, sequestering worship aids, and abstaining from any sadhana indoors. The sutak thus becomes a meditative interlude for the community, redirecting focus inward.

    Post-grahan, by 7 PM, sanctification resumes: holy ablutions, fragrant offerings, and resonant invocations restore the shrines. Evening festivities will draw crowds eager for collective prayers.

    With enthusiasm peaking, officials and pandits jointly promote orderly conduct—honoring timings, avoiding rushes. NCR’s temples stand as beacons of tradition, guiding devotees through the eclipse’s mystical veil.

  • March 3 Eclipse: Ram Lalla Darshan Halted 9 AM to 8:30 PM

    In observance of the March 3 total lunar eclipse, Shri Ram Janmabhoomi Temple in Ayodhya suspends darshan from 9 AM to 8:30 PM. The Trust upholds Vedic traditions mandating such pauses during eclipses to safeguard sacred proceedings.

    Dawn brings opportunity: Standard Mangala and Shringar Aartis invite participation. Thereafter, the temple enters quiet mode for grahan-specific observances.

    Official communique details the protocol, ensuring priests conduct rituals undisturbed. This aligns with broader Hindu practices across temples nationwide.

    Security alignment is key. Trust member Dr. Anil Mishra notified Ayodhya’s Additional SP, specifying hours and urging vigilant perimeter control.

    Pilgrims, strategize accordingly. Morning slots offer darshan; the day demands waiting. Normalcy resumes March 4 for uninterrupted access.

    Ayodhya, reborn as a spiritual epicenter, exemplifies how ancient wisdom navigates contemporary crowds during cosmic phenomena.

  • Ayodhya Temple Darshan Halted for March Lunar Eclipse: Details

    Devotees of Lord Ram take note: March 3, 2026, brings temple closures across Ayodhya for the inaugural lunar eclipse. Expect no entry from morning sutak till nightfall, a ritual steeped in Hindu astronomy.

    Grahan begins 3:19 PM, ends 6:07 PM—prime viewing in India. Nine-hour pre-eclipse sutak clamps down around 8 AM, extending bans to 8:30 PM at key sites including Ram Mandir.

    Ayodhya District Collector Nikhil Tikaram Funde confirmed the protocol: ‘Standard practice here—temples close during eclipses, reopening post-puja.’ Alerts ensure smooth pilgrim flow.

    This mirrors closures in temples countrywide, a unified front against perceived impurities. Smart travelers will sidestep the date, maximizing darshan on adjacent days amid Ayodhya’s rising pilgrimage fame.

    Zooming out, lunar eclipses in scripture demand ‘sutra’ discipline, fostering inner focus. Ayodhya, reborn with its grand temple, embodies this harmony—where lunar shadows prompt deeper faith, not disruption.

  • 2026 Ring of Fire Eclipse: Full Guide, No Sutak for India

    Get ready for 2026’s debut solar eclipse on February 17, coinciding with Dars Amavasya. This annular eclipse delivers the dramatic ‘ring of fire’ as the moon frames the sun incompletely. Indian stargazers draw the short straw – not visible anywhere in the nation.

    Visibility hotspots: Antarctica dominant, plus South Africa, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Tanzania, Mauritius, South America segments. In IST, onset 3:26 PM, peak 5:42 PM, finale 7:57 PM. Tied to Aquarius/Dhanistha, it piques Vedic astrology followers.

    Sutak? Skipped in India due to non-visibility; Drik Panchang rules confirm no pre-eclipse taboos on Feb 17. Engage freely in worship, ceremonies, everyday affairs. Panchang highlights: Amavasya ends 5:30 PM, Dhanistha till 9:16 PM (Shatabhisha next), moon Capricorn-bound.

    Rise/set: Sun 6:58 AM-6:13 PM. Fortuitous windows – Abhijit 12:13-12:58 PM, Vijay 2:28-3:13 PM, Godhuli 6:10-6:36 PM, Amrit 10:39 AM-12:17 PM. Dodge pitfalls: Rahukaal 3:24-4:48 PM, Yamaganda 9:47-11:11 AM, Adal Yoga 9:16 AM-6:57 PM.

    Antarctica basks in the full annular glory, ring ablaze across the continent and southern waters. Partial views grace South America, southern Africa, South Atlantic/Pacific, Antarctic peripheries. Blank slate for India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Asia, Europe, most North America, central/northern Africa, Australia – purely a southern hemisphere extravaganza.