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Sharad Navratri

Representative image for Indian religious and cultural topics
Representative image for Indian religious and cultural topics Image: Wikimedia Commons. Nagarjun Kandukuru / CC BY 2.0

Overview

Sharad Navratri is one of the most widely observed festivals within the broader Hindu tradition, falling under the cohort of Hinduism. The term itself is generally understood to refer to a nine-night observance dedicated to the worship of the Goddess in her various forms, celebrated during the autumn season in the Indian subcontinent. The festival is observed across many regions of India and by Hindu communities abroad, with regional customs, ritual emphases, and cultural expressions varying considerably from one part of the country to another.

This draft is intended as a starting framework for editors at IndiaWiki and should not be treated as a finished article. It deliberately avoids citing specific dates, naming particular temples in association with claims, attributing rituals to specific lineages, or asserting statistical details about participation, economic impact, or historical chronology. Editors are encouraged to expand each section with citations from reliable secondary sources, including academic studies of Hindu festivals, published works on Indian religious traditions, and reputable encyclopaedic references. Where regional variations are described, attribution to a specific source is essential, as practices differ across linguistic and cultural communities. Sensitive areas, such as theological interpretation, should be presented neutrally and with attribution.

Background

Sharad Navratri sits within a wider pattern of Navratri observances in the Hindu calendar, of which more than one is traditionally recognised over the course of the year. The Sharad observance, as the name suggests, is associated with the autumn season, and is generally regarded as the most prominent of these observances in popular practice. The festival is connected with the worship of the Devi or Goddess, and various textual, narrative, and regional traditions have been invoked to explain its origins and significance.

Editors should approach the historical background with care. While popular accounts often link the festival with episodes from epic and Puranic literature, the precise textual genealogy and the historical evolution of its public observance involve scholarly debate. The relationship between household ritual, temple practice, and large-scale public celebration has shifted over time and varies by region. Sources differ on the antiquity of specific customs, and on the question of how older rites have merged with more recent cultural forms. Editors are advised to distinguish clearly between popular tradition, textual references, and historical evidence, and to note where claims are contested or where reliable scholarship is limited. Place this article within the larger context of festival cycles in Hindu practice without overstating uniformity.

Significance

The significance of Sharad Navratri can be approached from several complementary perspectives, each of which deserves separate, sourced treatment in the final article. From a devotional standpoint, the festival is associated with the worship of the Goddess in her multiple aspects, and many practitioners observe fasts, recite particular hymns, and participate in temple rituals during the period. From a cultural standpoint, the festival is a major occasion for community gatherings, music, dance, and the public display of religious imagery, with characteristic forms varying by region.

The festival also has social and economic dimensions. It provides occasions for community organisation, for the patronage of artisans associated with image-making and decoration, and for various forms of seasonal commerce. It intersects with educational, agricultural, and family rituals in ways that differ from one community to another. Editors should be cautious about generalising any one regional pattern as representative of the whole, and should avoid asserting specific figures relating to attendance, economic activity, or numbers of organised events unless these are drawn from clearly identified, reliable sources. The article should reflect plurality of practice without privileging any single regional or sectarian interpretation.

Common topics for editors to verify

The following list identifies areas where unverified claims commonly appear in popular writing on Sharad Navratri. Each item should be checked against reliable secondary sources before inclusion in the final article.

  • Calendrical placement: The exact months and tithis associated with Sharad Navratri should be sourced from authoritative references on the Hindu calendar, with attention to lunar-solar variations and regional almanac traditions.
  • Names and forms of the Goddess: Lists of the nine forms worshipped, sometimes referred to collectively in popular writing, vary across sources. Editors should verify any list against textual or scholarly references rather than relying on undocumented online compilations.
  • Regional customs: Practices in different states and linguistic regions are distinctive. Editors should source descriptions of regional observances, including those associated with western, eastern, northern, and southern parts of India, separately and with care, avoiding conflation.
  • Ritual elements: Specific ritual sequences, including those involving fasting, image installation, recitation, and processions, should be described with attribution to ethnographic, devotional, or scholarly sources.
  • Historical claims: Statements about the antiquity of particular customs, royal patronage, or the origin of public celebrations require historical sourcing and should be flagged clearly when contested.
  • Connections with other festivals: The relationship between Sharad Navratri and adjacent observances, including those that follow it in the calendar, should be described carefully, distinguishing between liturgical continuity and popular association.
  • Cultural performances: Music, dance, theatre, and other performative traditions associated with the festival vary regionally. Editors should avoid assuming that one regional form is universal.
  • Diaspora practice: Observances by Hindu communities outside India deserve attention but should be sourced from community or scholarly accounts rather than generalised.
  • Statistics and economic claims: Any numerical claims relating to attendance, organisers, or economic activity must be cited from authoritative reports.

Suggested structure for the final article

Editors may find the following section outline useful as a basis for the published article, subject to refinement based on the sources available:

  1. Lead section: A concise summary describing Sharad Navratri as an autumn observance within the Hindu festival calendar, noting that it is one of several Navratri observances. The lead should avoid making unsourced specific claims.
  2. Etymology and naming: A brief discussion of the term and its variants, with attention to regional names and transliterations.
  3. Calendrical context: A sourced account of how the festival is placed within the Hindu calendar, with reference to authoritative almanac traditions.
  4. Religious and textual background: A neutral account of the textual references and devotional traditions associated with the festival, distinguishing popular narrative from scholarly reconstruction.
  5. Regional observances: Separate, sourced subsections on practices in major regions, drafted to avoid privileging any one tradition.
  6. Cultural dimensions: Music, dance, image-making, and related cultural forms, with attention to regional variation.
  7. Contemporary practice: Public organisation, urban celebrations, and diaspora observances.
  8. See also, references, and further reading.

This structure is indicative; editors should adapt section headings to the sources available and to IndiaWiki style conventions.

Editorial notes

This draft has been prepared as a scaffolding document for human editors and is not intended for public publication in its current form. It deliberately omits specific dates, named individuals, named institutions in association with claims, statistical assertions, and historical particulars that cannot be verified from the title and cohort alone. Editors are requested to add citations to every factual statement they retain or introduce, and to remove or rewrite sentences that cannot be sourced.

Particular attention should be paid to the following editorial concerns. First, neutrality of tone is essential when describing religious practice; devotional language should be attributed rather than asserted. Second, regional plurality must be respected, and editors should resist the tendency in popular writing to generalise from one regional tradition. Third, contested historical claims should be presented with appropriate qualification. Fourth, contemporary social and political associations of the festival, where they exist, should be handled with sensitivity and balanced sourcing. Finally, editors should ensure that the final article complies with IndiaWiki's verifiability and neutral point of view standards, and that any images used are appropriately licensed and captioned.

References

References are to be added by editors. Suggested categories of sources include: published academic studies of Hindu festivals and Goddess traditions; reputable encyclopaedic references on Indian religion; ethnographic accounts of regional practice; established almanac references for calendrical details; and reliable journalistic coverage where contemporary practice is described. All claims retained or added during revision should be supported by inline citations to such sources. Unsourced popular-web material should not be relied upon.