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This draft has been prepared as a starting point for editors working on an IndiaWiki article provisionally titled Sacred Festivals within the Hinduism cohort. It is intentionally cautious in tone and refrains from asserting specific dates, regional customs, scriptural citations, or numerical claims that have not been independently verified by the editorial team. The aim of the present fragment is to provide a structural skeleton, neutral framing, and a checklist of verification tasks rather than a finished encyclopaedic article.
Sacred festivals within Hinduism comprise a broad and diverse field of religious, cultural, social, and seasonal observances. They are celebrated across the Indian subcontinent and within the global Hindu diaspora, and they vary considerably in form, scale, and theological emphasis. Because the title is general rather than specific, editors will need to make early decisions about scope: whether the article is to function as an overview that surveys the entire field, a list-style entry that points readers to dedicated articles on individual festivals, or a thematic essay focusing on shared features such as ritual structure, calendrical basis, or regional adaptation. The sections below are written so that any of these directions can be supported, and so that contributors can develop the article without inadvertently introducing inaccuracies during the drafting stage.
Hindu festival traditions draw upon a long and layered history that is documented unevenly across textual, epigraphic, oral, and ethnographic sources. Editors should treat any single narrative of origin with caution, since festivals widely observed today often combine elements from several traditions, including Vedic ritual practice, Puranic narrative, regional folk religion, agrarian and seasonal cycles, sectarian theology, and pilgrimage culture. Many observances have evolved over centuries and may have shifted in meaning, timing, or emphasis as communities have moved, intermarried, or come into contact with other traditions.
The calendrical framework underlying most festivals typically involves lunisolar reckoning, with regional variations in the choice of reference calendar (for example, different new-year conventions across linguistic regions). However, the specifics of any given calendar should not be asserted in the article without consulting authoritative references. Likewise, scriptural associations—links between a festival and a particular text, deity, or narrative episode—are sometimes contested between traditions, and editors should record such variation neutrally rather than privileging one account. The Background section in the final article will benefit from clearly distinguishing what is broadly accepted, what is regionally specific, and what is matter of scholarly debate.
The significance of sacred festivals in Hindu life can be discussed at several levels, and editors are encouraged to treat each level with appropriate nuance. At the personal and household level, festivals often structure devotional practice, family gatherings, dietary observances, and rites of passage. At the community level, they frequently coordinate temple worship, processions, fairs, and cultural performances, and they may serve as occasions for charitable giving, reconciliation, or the renewal of social bonds. At a wider cultural level, festivals shape calendars of public life, influence the arts, and contribute to regional identity.
It is also worth noting that festivals carry economic, ecological, and civic dimensions—relating to markets, tourism, public infrastructure, and environmental stewardship—which contemporary coverage increasingly addresses. Any treatment of these dimensions in the article should be sourced carefully and presented with neutrality, avoiding both promotional and dismissive framings. Where festivals have been the subject of public debate or reform efforts, editors should summarise the range of positions accurately rather than adopting one. The Significance section should ultimately help readers appreciate why these observances matter to practitioners while remaining accessible to readers from other backgrounds.
The following checklist identifies areas where errors are most likely to creep in if a contributor relies on memory or generalisation. Each item should be confirmed against reliable secondary sources, and ideally cross-checked across more than one tradition or region before being included.
Editors may find the following outline a useful starting point, to be adapted once the scope has been settled:
Each section should be kept proportionate and should defer to dedicated articles for detail on individual festivals.
This draft is explicitly not intended for publication in its present form. It has been written to support human editors who will research, verify, and rewrite the content before it appears on IndiaWiki. Contributors are asked to keep the following points in mind while developing the article:
References are to be added by editors during research. Suggested categories of source material include: scholarly monographs and edited volumes on Hindu ritual and festival traditions; peer-reviewed journal articles in religious studies, anthropology, and South Asian history; encyclopaedias and reference works from established academic publishers; and reputable journalistic coverage for contemporary developments. Primary religious texts may be cited where appropriate, but should be accompanied by scholarly commentary. Each citation should include author, title, publisher, year, and page or section reference, and online sources should record access dates. Placeholder citations have been deliberately omitted from this draft to prevent unverified material from being carried forward.