Nepali open bath culture bagmati river nadi sali nadi. Nepali open bath sali nadi 2020 culture. Nepali open bath festival.Holy bath culture Nepal// Nepali women open bath bagmati river 2020 Nepal women open bath sali nadi 2020// nepaali women devghat open bath 2020.// Nepali women devghat snan // Nepali women sali nadi open snan// Nepali holy bath// Nepali culture //Nepal bagmati nadi open Maghe Sankranti is celebrated on the first day of Magh (around mid-January). Nepali people celebrate it as the beginning of the auspicious month of Magh.
The festival is a harbinger of longer and relatively warmer days in comparison to the cold month ofJanuary . On this day, the sun is believed to start moving toward the Northern Hemisphere. In that sense, Maghe Sankranti is similar to solstice festivals in other religious traditions.
Hindu devotees during Maghe Sankranti taking or preparing to take the holy bath at Devghat, Chitwan, Nepal.
Hindus celebrate this festival by taking ritual dip in holy river confluences, most notably in Devghat, Chitwan. Families get together during the day and eat meals together. Sesame seed laddus, molasses, ghee, sweet potatoes and yam are included in the menu. People worship Lord Vishnu during the month by offering him pujas and reading the sacred Bhagwad Gita, also known as The Song of the Gods.
The first day of Magh is also celebrated in the Terai by the Tharu community as Maghi or New Year. It is a weeklong festival celebrated by getting together as a family and friends, attending community get together or mela, dressing up in the traditional Tharu wear, eating, drinking and making merry.