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| Pusnâ | |
|---|---|
Rice cakes eaten during Pusnâ. The round ones are called Tel Pi-thâ and the rice cake shaped like the half-moon are stuffed with sesame seeds and jaggery and are called Chore Pi-thâ, literally meaning rooster rice cake. | |
| Also called | Spring Cake Festival |
| Observed by | Hajong people |
| Type | Cultural |
| Significance | Marks the arrival of spring |
| Celebrations | Making and eating ofglutinous rice cakes andrice wine |
| Observances | Visiting relatives and friends,ancestor worship, honouring the Sun, harvest feasts with rice cakes andrice wine |
| Begins | A day before the Sun begins its movement away from the Tropic of Capricorn |
| Duration | Three days |
| Frequency | Annual |
| Related to | Thingyan,Sangken |
Pusnâ is one of the most important festivals celebrated by theHajong people on or around January 14. In 2016, the festival falls on January 15. Pusnâ is a solar event making one of the few traditional Hajong festivals which fall on the same date in theGregorian calendar every year, that is January 14, with some exceptions when the festival is celebrated on January 13 or 15. It is the celebration ofSankranthi, with feasts lasting for a week. Traditionally, Pusnâ is also a time for the family to get together. One activity that occurs during these get-togethers is the making and eating of Pi-thâ. Pi-thâs are made of glutinous rice flour.
During pusnâ people prepare different kinds of traditional cakes with ground rice, scraped coconut, banana and juice extracted fromPalmyra palm. Some of theserice cakes are deep fried, and some are steamed in bamboo or banana leaves. Ancestors are honoured on the first day of Pusnâ. People visit their relatives and friends during this festival.[1]
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