A majority of the population of India depends on agriculture. As a result,
most of the festivals are also related to the agricultural activities of the
people. These festivals are celebrated with different names

and
rituals in almost all the states of India. Pongal is an important festival
of Tamil Nadu, which is celebrated to mark the withdrawal of the Southeast
monsoons as well as the reaping of the harvest. It falls in the month Thai
and is strictly a rural festival.
About The Festival The festival is celebrated
for four days and the celebrations on the first day of the Tamil month Thai
and continues for the three days. The month of Thai is supposed to be very
auspicious for every kind of activity. The Sun is worshipped for his rays
are responsible for the life on earth.
It is the biggest harvest festival, spread over four days. 'Bhogi' is
celebrated on January 13, 'Pongal' on January 14, 'Mattu Pongal' on January
15, and 'Thiruvalluvar Day' on January 16. Thiruvalluvar has done a great
contribution to Tamil literature with 'Thirukkural'. There are 1,330 verses
in this work and they talk about all aspects of life.
In fact, the name of the festival is derived from Pongal, a rice pudding
made from freshly harvested rice, milk and jaggery. The first day, "Bhogi
Pongal", is a day for the family. "Surya Pongal", the second
day, is dedicated to the worship of Surya, the Sun God. The third day of
Pongal, "Mattu Pongal", is for the worship of the cattle.
Cattle are bathed, their horns polished and painted in bright colours, and
garlands of flowers placed around their necks. Pongal is associated with
cleaning and burning of rubbish, symbolizing the destruction of evil.
All the four days of Pongal have there own individual significance. On the
first day, delicious preparations are made and homes are washed and
decorated. Doorways are painted with vermilion and sandalwood paste with
colourful garlands of leaves and flowers decorating the outside of almost
every home. On this day 'Bhogi' or the Rain God is worshipped.
The Legend Behind The Celebrations

There
are few interesting legends behind the Pongal celebrations. The most popular
among them related to the celebrations of the first day of the Pongal
festival goes like this - Lord Krishna lifted the Govardhan Mountain on his
little finger to shelter his people and save them from being washed away by
the rains and floods.
According to another the third day of Pongal is celebrated because Lord
Shiva once asked Nandi, his bull, to go to earth and deliver his message to
the people - to have an oil bath every day and food once a month. But Nandi
got it all mixed up when he delivered the message, and told the people that
Shiva asked them to have an oil bath once a month and eat every day. Shiva
was displeased, and told Nandi that since the people would now need to grow
more grain, Nandi would have to remain on earth and help them plough the
fields.
Mattu Pongal is also called "Kanu Pongal", and women pray for the
welfare of their brothers. This is similar to the festivals of Raksha
Bandhan and Bhai Dooj celebrated in some states of North India.
The Tempting Recipes
Sweet rice, known as "Pongal", is cooked in a new earthenware pot
at the same place where puja is to be performed. Fresh turmeric and ginger
are tied around this pot. Then a delicious concoction of rice, Moong Dal,
jaggery and milk are boiled in the pot on an open fire. This Pongal,
according to ritual, is allowed to boil and spill out of the pot. Pongal,
once ready, is offered to God first, on a new banana leaf along with other
traditional delicacies like Vadas, Payasam, etc. Besides this, sugarcane,
grain, sweet potatoes, etc are also offered to the Sun God.
Rituals Followed
A typical traditional Pongal celebration has a number of rituals attached
to it. The place where the Pongal Puja is to be conducted is cleaned and
smeared with dung, a day prior to the festival. People generally choose an
open courtyard for this purpose.
'Kolams' (Rangoli) generally drawn with rice flour are special to the
occasion. The idea behind using rice flour is that the insects would feed on
it and bless the household. At the centre of it a lump of cow dung holds a
five-petal pumpkin flower, which is regarded as a symbol of fertility and an
offering of love to the presiding deity. In a similar way the houses are
also cleaned, painted and decorated. Kolams (Rangoli) are made in the front
yards of the houses and new clothes for the whole family are bought to mark
the festivities. Even the cattle are gaily caparisoned with beads, bells and
flowers-their horns painted and capped with gleaming metals.
Processions
A procession is taken out from the Kandaswamy (also spelt as Kandaswami)
Temple in Chennai. In Madurai, Tanjore and Tiruchirrapalli, where Pongal is
known as Jellikattu, bundles of money are tied to the horns of bulls, and
villagers try and wrest the bundles from them. Community meals are made from
the freshly gathered harvest and enjoyed by the entire village.