Janai Purnima Festival Is Being Celebrated Today Nepal 2081 Janai Purnima is celebrated every year on the day of Shravan Shukla Purnima.
According to the Nepal Panchang Adjudicatory Development Committee, special persons who are in power or perform special roles in the administration of the state and perform high administrative work should change clothes, tie ropes, and not look at others after 1:30 pm today.
On the day of Shravan Shukla Purnima, Vedic Sanatan Dharma followers go to rivers, lakes, and ponds and take baths and tie Rakshasutra from Guru Purohit. For the protection of human beings, the Brahmin priests tie the right wrist of the host while reciting the mantra of Doro Vedic tradition called Raksha Bandhan, chanting, penance, and worship.
Dr. Dr. Vasudevkrishna Shastri informed. He said that there is a religious belief that if Guru Purohit wears a doro (Rakshasutra) that is properly chanted, one will get protection from negative elements.
Tagadharis go to ponds, lakes, ponds, rivers, and ponds in the morning on the full moon day and bathe and offer tarpan to the sages with barley, sesame seeds, and kush and perform a new ritual (yajnopavit) prescribed by the Vedic Rudrabhishek method.
Along with Arundhati, eight sages, namely Kashyapa, Atri, Bharadwaja, Vishwamitra, Gautama, Jamadagni, Vashishta, and Agastya, are worshiped and offered on this day, so this day is also called Rishi Tarpani. Dr. According to Shastri, according to the Vedic guru tradition, Yajnopavit means people are called Brahmasutra, or the thread of knowledge.
Similarly, fairs have been held since early morning at Gosainkund in Rasuwa, Kumbheshwar in Lalitpur, Panchpokhri in Sindhupalchok, Janakpurdham in Dhanusha, Dhanushsagar, and Gangasagar, Dansadhu in Jumla, and Trivenidham in Nawalparasi.
In Nepal’s Terai Madhesh, on this day, sisters tie rakhi to their brothers and celebrate this festival. There is a social belief that this will increase the love relationship between sisters and brothers.
It is customary to eat quanti made by soaking different types of pulses and soaking them in the Janai Purnima. It is a religious and Ayurveda classical belief that the quantity of food does not cause disease in the body, cleanses the stomach, and removes the cold from the body during the rainy season.