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Editorial draft for internal review. This document is intended as a starting body for IndiaWiki editors. It deliberately avoids specific unverified claims and should be expanded with citations from reliable sources before publication.
Navratri is a Hindu festival observed across many parts of the Indian subcontinent and within the Hindu diaspora. The name is generally understood to refer to a period of nine nights, with associated days of religious observance, fasting, devotional music, dance and worship of the goddess in her various forms. The festival is part of the broader Shakta tradition, in which the divine feminine is venerated, although it is also marked in vaishnava and other Hindu communities with localised customs and emphases.
The festival is observed at more than one point in the Hindu lunisolar calendar, with regional variations in name, ritual focus and accompanying cultural practices. In some regions it culminates in a tenth-day observance commonly associated with the triumph of good over evil. Editors should treat the festival as a cluster of related observances rather than a single uniform celebration, as customs differ considerably between communities, linguistic regions and sectarian traditions. This article should aim to describe the festival's commonly recognised features while highlighting regional and sectarian diversity, and should avoid privileging the practices of any one community as definitive. Specific dates, ritual sequences and named deities associated with each day should be verified against scholarly and community sources before inclusion.
Navratri is rooted in long-standing traditions of goddess worship within Hinduism, drawing on Puranic narratives, regional folk traditions and temple-based ritual cultures. Textual references to goddess-centred observances appear in several Hindu scriptural and devotional traditions, although the precise relationship between any given text and the contemporary festival as practised today should be examined carefully and supported with academic citations rather than asserted from general knowledge.
Historically, the festival has accumulated layers of meaning over time, incorporating agricultural, seasonal and martial themes in different regions. In some areas it is associated with the change of seasons; in others, with community-level celebrations involving processions, performances and temporary shrines. Royal and princely patronage in earlier periods is often cited in popular accounts as having shaped some public observances of the festival, though such claims should be checked against historical scholarship before being included as fact.
The festival has also evolved in modern urban settings, where civic organisations, residents' associations and cultural bodies often coordinate public celebrations. Migration within India and abroad has further diversified its expression. Editors are encouraged to draw on ethnographic, historical and religious-studies sources to present this background in a balanced manner that recognises continuity as well as change.
For practitioners, Navratri carries devotional, social and cultural significance. Devotionally, it is regarded as a period for intensified worship, fasting, scriptural recitation and reflection on the qualities associated with the goddess. Many households and temples observe specific routines during this period, which may include the lighting of lamps, the preparation of particular foods and abstention from certain activities or items of diet. The exact prescriptions vary widely and should not be generalised in the article without sourcing.
Socially, Navratri serves as an occasion for community gathering, intergenerational transmission of customs, and participation in collective rituals or performances. In several regions it is closely associated with distinctive forms of music and dance, which have in recent decades acquired wider popular and commercial dimensions, including organised public events.
Culturally, the festival has influenced literature, the performing arts, textiles and cuisine. It is also an occasion that intersects with public life through holidays, market activity and tourism in certain regions. The article should present these dimensions of significance with care, distinguishing between traditional religious meaning, contemporary cultural practice and commercial or political appropriations, each of which can be discussed with appropriate citations.
The following items frequently appear in popular writing on Navratri but should be independently verified before being included in the final article. Editors should consult peer-reviewed scholarship, established encyclopaedic references, and reputable journalistic or community sources, and should clearly attribute claims where appropriate.
Editors should be particularly cautious about statements that present a single regional tradition as representative of the festival as a whole, and about narratives that conflate religious, mythological and historical claims.
A balanced final article on Navratri may consider adopting the following structure, adapted as evidence allows:
This structure should be considered indicative. Editors should adjust headings and sequencing in light of the strongest available sources and avoid creating sections that cannot be supported by reliable references.
This draft has been prepared as scaffolding only. It is not intended for direct publication. Editors taking this forward should:
Once verified content has been added, the placeholder language in this draft should be removed or rewritten so that the final published article reads as a coherent encyclopaedic entry rather than as an editorial scaffold.
To be added by editors. Suggested categories of sources include:
All factual claims in the final article must be supported by inline citations to such sources.