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The Savitri lcstival falls on the lull moon day of the month of Jyeshtha, around
June. On this day, women fast and worship the Vat tree to pray for the growth
and strength of their families, like the sprawling tree which lives for centuries.
Newly married women visit a nearby Vat tree and worship it by tying red threads
of love around it. They offer flowers and sweets to the tree. When the moon rises
full and resplendent on the horizon, special feasts are shared by families.
Almost every woman in India knows the Puranic legend of Savitn, one of the most
venerated women of Indian mythology. Savitri was a princess, born by the blessing
of the sun godto King Ashwapati. A lustrous woman of great beauty, she was sent
to the forest ashmms of sages to look for a suitable bridegroom for herself.
Eventually, she met Satyawan, a prince living in the forest because his blind
father had been banished from his empire. When Savitri revealed to her parents
her determination to marry Satyawan, the court astrologers tried to stop her.
They said that the prince's lifeline clearly showed that he would die within
a year. Savitri had however, accepted him as her husband and would not be deterred
from her resolve. She married him and went to the forest ashram to live with
him and his parents.
On the full moon night of Jyeshtha, the couple went into the jungle to collect
firewood. As Satyawan rested under a Vattree, Yama, the god of death came to
snatch away his life. Savitri, seeing Yama take away her husband's breath, followed,
pleading with him to return her husband's life. At eacn milestone, going from
earth to heaven, Yama tried to persuade the determined princess to return home
and accept the destiny of her husband as unchangeable. In the face of her resolve
to conquer what appeared to be insurmountable obstacles, all his efforts were
in vain. Then, to persuade her more effectively, he offered her three boons,
excluding the life of her dead husband.
Savitri, a woman of great intelligence, couched her requests in such a manner
that she got back everything that her family had lost. First, she asked for the
lost sight of her blind father-in-law. Next, she asked for their lost empire
and prosperity. And finally she asked for worthy progeny. When Yama had granted
her the boon of progeny, she reminded him i hal his boon could not be fulfilled
without Satyawan. Yama, defeated by her strength and faith, had to surrender
the life-force of Salyawan to her, and bless her with an immortal place in the
hearts of her people.
To this day, Savitri's power and her tenacity to overcome insurmountable problems
remains an inspiration for every woman. She is venerated on the Jyeshtha full
moon day which is named after her and the tree under which ibis leuend unfolded.