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  2. Upanayana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upanayana

    Upanayana (Sanskrit: उपनयन, romanized: upanayana, lit. 'initiation') is a Hindu educational sacrament, [ 2 ] one of the traditional saṃskāras or rites of passage that marked the acceptance of a student by a preceptor , such as a guru or acharya , and an individual's initiation into a school in Hinduism .

  3. Samskara (rite of passage) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samskara_(rite_of_passage)

    Upanayana samskara ceremony in progress. Typically, this ritual was for eight-year-olds in ancient India, but in the 1st millennium CE it became open to all ages. [66] Upanayana (IAST:Upanayana, Sanskrit: उपनयन) literally means "the act of leading to or near". [67] It is an important and widely discussed samskara in ancient Sanskrit ...

  4. Tagadhari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tagadhari

    Upanayana is a ceremony in which a guru (teacher) accepts and draws a child towards knowledge and initiates the second birth, that is, of the young mind and spirit. [11] Thus, the person completing the Upanayana ceremony and receiving the sacred thread is referred to as Dvija ( twice-born ).

  5. Iyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iyer

    The Upanayana ceremony of initiation is solely performed for the members of the dvija or twice-born castes, generally when the individual is between 7 and 16 years of age. [ 28 ] [ 29 ] In ancient times, the Upanayana was often considered as the ritual which marked the commencement of a boy's education, which in those days consisted mostly of ...

  6. Rajopadhyaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rajopadhyaya

    In theory, the Chatharīyas of the Kathmandu Valley do not call on other Brahmin group, as Rajopadhyayas alone serve as their historical purohits and perform all their life-cycle Sanskara rituals, including attaining their Gayatri Mantra verse and the sacred thread ('janai') in the Upanayana ceremony.

  7. Puja (Hinduism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puja_(Hinduism)

    The deity is invited to the ceremony from the heart. Asana. The deity is offered a seat. Padya. The deity's feet are symbolically washed. Water is offered for washing the head and body; Arghya. Water is offered so the deity may wash its mouth. Snana or abhisheka. Water is offered for symbolic bathing. Vastra ("clothing"). Here a cloth may be ...

  8. Worship in Hinduism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worship_in_Hinduism

    Worship in Hinduism is an act of religious devotion usually directed to one or more Hindu deities, invoking a sense of Bhakti or devotional love. This term is probably a central one in Hinduism, but a direct translation from the Sanskrit to English is difficult.

  9. Ritu Kala Samskaram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ritu_Kala_Samskaram

    Her maternal uncle then gifts her her first sari, which she wears during the second half of the ceremony. This marks her transition into womanhood. The tradition of presenting a langa voni begins with the girl's namakaran, or naming ceremony, and her annaprashana, or first rice-feeding ceremony. She receives her final langa voni at the ritu ...