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Baisakhi,
derived from the month of Vaisakh, is New Year's Day in Punjab.
It falls on April 13, though once in 36 years it occurs on
14th April.
Baisakhi
marks the ripening of the Rabi harvest. It was on this day
that the tenth Sikh Guru, Guru Gobind Singh, founded the Khalsa
(the Sikh brotherhood) in 1699. The Sikhs, therefore, celebrate
this festival as a collective birthday.
Sikhs
visits gurdwaras (Sikh temples) and listen to kirtans (religious
songs) and discourses. The holy scriptures known as the Grantha
are read, and the book is then carried in a procession led
by five leaders of the congregation, carrying drawn swords.
After the prayer, kada prasad (sweetened semolina) is served
to the congregation. The function ends with langar, the community
lunches served by volunteers. The bhangra is also performed
on Baisakhi with great vigour and enthusiasm.
Processions
are taken out, at the head of which are the panj piaras. Mock
duels and bands playing religious tunes are part of the processions.
Schoolchildren also enthusiastically take part in them.
For
people in villages this festival is a last opportunity for
relaxing before they start harvesting of corn.
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