Pics: Spoorthi Ullal
Daijiworld Media Network - Mangaluru
Mangaluru, Aug 13: Nagara Panchami is being observed on Friday August 13. On this day, people visit holy places where stone forms of the serpent gods are installed and worshipped since the times of their ancestors, and offer tender coconut water, ghee, sugar, milk, yogurt and honey to the serpent gods.
Devotees are expected to follow the Covid appropriate behaviour at places of worship. A few devotees were seen approaching the historically famous Sharavu temple. A handful of devotees were seen at the nearby Umamaheshwara temple also.
It is believed that the coastal belt of Karnataka was formed out of land reclaimed by Lord Parashurama from the Arabian Sea. Therefore, as the land which belonged to serpents was reclaimed by humans, it is said, the practice of performing puja to them became a part of life of the people here.
As per mythology, emperor Janamejaya, great grandson of Arjuna, with the help of religious scholars, had started a fire sacrifice in which serpents were compelled to fall into the fire places and lost their lives. Janamejaya was angry at the serpents because his father was killed on account of serpent bite. The sacrifice of serpents was stopped at the instance of sage Asteeka. The day on which the sacrifice was stopped by sage Asteeka is being celebrated as Nagara Panchami.
The belief that serpent gods have the power to grant offspring to those who appease them, and also that performing puja in their honour can rid of ill-effects of Naga Doshas are deep-rooted in the lives of people living in coastal Karnataka. Because of these pujas, nature has been preserved in the form of Nagabanas as cutting down of trees or undertaking development activities in them is thought to be inauspicious for the families concerned.