Chetri Chandra | |
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![]() Jhulelal, theIshta Devta of the Sindhi Hindus | |
Also called | Sindhi new year |
Observed by | Sindhi Hindus |
Type | Hindu |
Celebrations | 2 days[1][2] |
Observances | Sindhi New Year's Day,mela (fairs), social feast, processions, dancing[3] |
Date | March/April |
Related to | Ugadi,Gudi Padwa |
Chetri Chandra (Sindhi:چيتي چند, Moon of Chaitra) is a festival that marks the beginning of the LunarHindu New Year forSindhi Hindus.[3][8] The date of the festival is based on the lunar cycle of the lunisolarHindu calendar, falling on the first day of the year, in the Sindhi month ofChet (Chaitra).[3] It typically falls in late March or early April in theGregorian calendar on or about the same day asGudi Padwa in Maharashtra,Ugadi in other parts of the Deccan region and Hindu Samvat Nav Varsha or beginning on New Year in Hindu Samvat Calendar of India.
The festival marks the arrival of spring and harvest,[9] but in the Sindhi community, it also marks the birth of Uderolal in 1007, after they prayed to theHindu god Varun Dev on the banks of River Indus to save them from the persecution by the tyrannical Muslim ruler Mirkhshah.[8][10][11] Varun Dev morphed into a warrior and old man who preached and reprimanded Mirkhshah that Muslims and Hindus deserve the same religious freedoms. He, as Jhulelal,[8] became the champion of the people in Sindh, from both religions. Among hisSufi Muslim followers, Jhulelal is known as "Khwaja Khizir" or "Zindapir". The Hindu Sindhi, according to this legend, celebrate the new year as Uderolal's birthday.[8][10]
The tradition likely started with Daryapanthis. During the British colonial rule era, major annual fairs (melas) used to be held in Uderolal and Zindapir (nearHyderabad, Pakistan).[3] In contemporary times, the Sindhi community celebrates the festival of Cheti Chand with major fairs, feast parties, processions withjhankis (glimpse stage) of Jhulelal (an avatar of [Varun dev], similar toVithoba),[12] other Hindu deities, and social dancing.[3]
On this day, manySindhis take Baharana Sahib, a representation of Jhulelal, to a nearby river or lake. Baharana Sahib consists of jyot (oil lamp), misiri (crystal sugar), fota (cardamom), fal (fruits), and akha. Behind is kalash (water jar) and a nariyal (coconut) in it, covered withcloth, phool (flowers) and patta (leaves).[13][14] There is also aMurti (statue) of Pujya Jhulelal Devta. Cheti Chand is a major festival of Sindhi Hindus in India and Pakistan,[1] and also celebrated by the HinduSindhi diaspora around the world.[3][11]
Month no. | Name | Sindhi Naskh | Sindhi Nagari | Western months |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Wesakh | ويسخ | वेसाख | Mid April – Mid May |
2 | Jheth | جيٿ | जेठ | Mid May – Mid June |
3 | Akhar | اکڙي | आखर | Mid June – Mid July |
4 | Saanwanr | سانوڻ | सावनवार | Mid July – Mid August |
5 | Baddo | بدو | बडो | Mid August – Mid September |
6 | Asav | آساو | आसव | Mid September – Mid October |
7 | Katee | ڪيٽي | केटी | Mid October – Mid November |
8 | Nahri | نهري | नाहरी | Mid November – Mid December |
9 | Poh | پوهه | पोह | Mid December – Mid January |
10 | Maangh | مانگھ | मांग | Mid January – Mid February |
11 | Phagun | ڦاڄن | फागुन | Mid February – Mid March |
12 | Chet | چيٽ | चेट | Mid March – Mid April |