Haribodhini Ekadashi Vrata / Tulsi Vivah/World Pneumonia Day | हरिबोधिनी एकादशी व्रत (तुलसी बिवाह)/विश्व निमोनिया दिवस | 2081 Kartik 27 | Hamro Patro

Upcomming Events

Jyotish

  • call
    TALK TO JYOTISH
  • Hororscope

    Oct/Nov 2024
    2081 Kartik
    27
    Tuesday
    Nov 12, 2024
    कार्तिक शुक्ल एकादशी
    Haribodhini Ekadashi Vrata / Tulsi Vivah/World Pneumonia Day
    MY NOTE
    You can add your notes here

    Haribodhini Ekadashi Vrata | Tulsi Vivah | World Pneumonia Day





    Haribodhani Ekadashi and Tulasi Bibaha
    It is believed that Lord Vishnu, who has been fast asleep since Harishyani Ekadashi, wakes up today. Haribodhini Ekadashi is an important Ekadashi, this Ekadashi is also called the biggest Ekadashi or Thuli Ekadashi, because of its glory. This Ekadashi shares an intrinsic attachment with the Tulsi plant.
    Tulsi (Basil) worship is of great importance in Vedic Sanatan Sanskar. For thousands of years, the Sanatan practitioners have been getting up in the morning, pouring water on Tulsi, and bowing down to their daily routine. Basil plants and leaves are important in every Sanatan Sanskar from birth to death. The practice of eating meals only by adding basil leaves and offering them to God is still prevalent in many homes and traditions. It is customary to use the Tulsi Moth (Tulsi idol or Tulsi home) near the courtyard as a sacred place for marriage ceremonies and even death.


    From Padma Purana
    In the Padma Purana, the importance of Tulsi is associated with the asceticism of Binda Devi who came to earth to find Lord Vishnu as her husband. Similarly, the divine qualities of the basil plant are explained in the 19th section of 3 of 5 of Srimaddha Bhagwat Geeta.

    Formally planted on Harishyani Ekadashi, the basil plant is now matured on Haribodhini Ekadashi. Today, Tulsi is ritually chanted and worshiped at home, and there is a tradition of marrying the Tulsi planted on Ashadh Shukla Ekadashi to the Peepal tree.

    देवी त्वं निर्मिता पूर्वमर्चितासि मुनीश्वरैः ।
    नमो नमस्ते तुलसी पापं हर हरिप्रिये ।।


    Known as Kartik Shukla Ekadashi i.e. Haribodhani, Thuli Ekadashi, or Tulsi Vivah, this day is especially celebrated with the worship of Lord Vishnu.

    According to the Sanatan Dharma, Lord Vishnu first woke up four months after Ashadh Shukla Ekadashi. On this holy day, Lord Vishnu first heard the prayer of Tulsi and woke up from the effect of the same prayer. It is a symbolic marriage to depict the holy unification of Lord Vishnu and mother Lakshmi.

    May the world learn from Sanatan rituals, we value plants and also symbolically marry them to acknowledge the role of plants and their contribution to our existence.

    Mat we know the unification and solidarity from the combination of Peepal and Tulsi and the anecdotes of Vishnu and Lakshmi.

    World Pneumonia Day


     

    World Pneumonia Day 2024, observed on November 12, serves as a global call to action against pneumonia, a respiratory infection that remains one of the deadliest diseases for children under five years old. Despite being preventable and treatable, pneumonia claims about 2.5 million lives each year, with children and the elderly most at risk. The day emphasizes awareness, prevention, and advocacy for expanded healthcare resources and vaccination coverage to combat this often-neglected health crisis.

    The theme for 2024, "Championing the Fight to Stop Pneumonia," seeks to galvanize communities, healthcare providers, and policymakers to focus on innovative strategies for reducing pneumonia’s toll globally. This includes promoting vaccines, antibiotics, improved nutrition, and clean water access—all crucial for minimizing pneumonia-related fatalities.

    To support these goals, organizations worldwide are hosting events, workshops, and social media campaigns. In Somalia, for instance, youth groups and civil society organizations will gather to share strategies and resources, focusing on how stronger health systems and youth involvement can make a difference.


    World Pneumonia Day highlights the urgent need for international collaboration to ensure that by 2030, no child dies from this preventable disease.

    -Suyog Dhakal



    Upcomming Events

    Jyotish

  • call
    TALK TO JYOTISH
  • Hororscope

    Liked by
    Liked by
    0 /600 characters
    Hamro Patro - Connecting Nepali Communities
    Hamro Patro is one of the first Nepali app to include Nepali Patro, launched in 2010. We started with a Nepali Calendar mobile app to help Nepalese living abroad stay in touch with Nepalese festivals and important dates in Nepali calendar year. Later on, to cater to the people who couldn’t type in Nepali using fonts like Preeti, Ganesh and even Nepali Unicode, we built nepali mobile keyboard called Hamro Nepali keyboard.