Govardhan_Puja

Ratha-yatra, or the Festival of Chariots, is a joyous event celebrated for thousands o f years in the Indian holy city of Jagannatha Puri, and more recently by Hare Krishna devotees in cities around the world. Another name for Krishna, Jagannatha refers to the ecstatic form of the Lord with large eyes and rugged features who is carried on a gigantic chariot during this festival (and worshiped in an ancient temple at the center of Jagannath Puri.) As the story goes, Lord Krishna once overheard a conversation about how His dearest devotees, t he cowhe rd maidens of Vrindavana, were lamenting in His absence. When He heard these accounts of ove rwhelming love in separation, the Lord’s hair began His absence. When He heard these accounts of overwhelming love in separation, the Lord’s hair began

Five hundred years ago, Lord Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, the combined incarnation of Radha-Krishna, encouraged all of His followers to celebrate Ratha-yatra with great enthusiasm. His biographies (such as Chaitanya Charitamrita) list many anecdotes surrounding the Ratha-yatra festival. It is said that Chaitanya M ahaprabhu got down on His hands and knees to scrub the Gundicha temple where Lord Jagannat ha would stay at the end of the Ratha-yatra parade. Srila Prabhupada, the founder of the Hare Krishna movement, was very fond of Ratha-yatra. As a child he began celebrating Ratha-yatra when he was five years old, using a small home-made cart and pulling it around the neighbor hood His biographies (such as Chaitanya Charitamrita) list many

Govardhan_Puja