
Maha Saptami, the second day of the five-day Sharadiyo Durga Puja, was celebrated on Monday amid due religious fervour and gaiety across Bangladesh.
Temples and makeshift mandaps witnessed huge numbers of devotees and visitors as beautifully crafted idols of Goddess Durga were installed formally on Maha Shasthi on Sunday.
Though puja began from Maha Shasthi, devotees started visiting puja pandals and mandaps from today (the day of Maha Saptami).
Dressed in traditional red and white coloured sharees and panjabis, a huge number of devotees were seen visiting puja pandals across the country this evening.
Temples and mandaps have been illuminated and decorated gorgeously, marking the puja.
Earlier, Maha Saptami puja was held across the country this morning as nabapatrika, nine plants including a banana tree tied together and wrapped in a white saree with red borders, were bathed in the water of nearby rivers or ponds (the holy Ganges) and later placed next to Lord Ganesha.
Some Bangalees call it 'Kolabou' (the banana-bride), and it is regarded by many as one of the wives of Lord Ganesha. But this is actually not one of Ganesha's wives. It is considered a representation of Goddess Durga.
It is also known as 'Nabapatrika', as nine plants are tied together to form it, and each plant represents the nine forms of the goddess – Brahmani (banana), Kalika (colocasia), Durga (turmeric), Kartiki (jayanti), Shiva (wood apple), Raktadantika (pomegranate), Sokrahita (ashoka), Chamunda (arum) and Lakshmi (paddy).
Maha Saptami puja was offered later to Goddess Durga at temples and makeshift mandaps countrywide, followed by the offering of Anjali to the Goddess by devotees who kept fasting till the puja.
Later, prashad (food and water offered to a deity during worship) was distributed among devotees.
Identical rituals were also held at all temples countrywide, including the capital, Dhaka.
The annual five-day Sharadiyo Durgotsab commenced with Kalparambho on Sunday (September 28), and it will end with the immersion of idols on the day of Bijoya Dashami on October 2.
Maha Ashtami, the third day of the Sharadiyo Durgotsab, will be celebrated tomorrow.
On Maha Ashtami, different rituals, including the offering of Anjali and Kumari Puja, will be held in the morning.
Kumari Puja means worshipping a prepubescent girl as the living incarnation or avatar of Maa Durga. She is dressed in new clothes and dressed up in floral ornaments. This ritual has its origins in the Puranas.
Like in previous years, special security arrangements have been made across the country, including in the capital, this year to celebrate Durga Puja in a peaceful atmosphere.