Ganesh Jayanti 2025: Significance, Rituals, and the Birth Story of Lord Ganesha
Mon - Jan 13, 2025
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Ganesh Jayanti, also known as Magha Shukla Chaturthi or Maghi Ganesh Jayanti, marks the birth of Lord Ganesha. Ganesh Jayanti is observed on Shukla Chaturthi in the month of Magha of the Hindu calendar, however it normally falls in January or February of the Gregorian calendar, as opposed to Ganesh Chaturthi, which is celebrated in September.
Table of Contents:
1. What is Ganesh Jayanti and When is it Celebrated?
2. The Birth Story of Lord Ganesha
3. Different Versions of Lord Ganesha’s Birth
4. The Legend of Ganesha’s Broken Tusk
5. Why Should You Avoid Seeing the Moon on Ganesh Jayanti?
6. Ganesh Jayanti Puja Vidhi for 2025

What is Ganesh Jayanti and When is it Celebrated?
Ganesh Jayanti, a one-day Hindu festival celebrated throughout Maharashtra and most Konkan districts, draws the entire country together to thank the Lord of Wisdom. Ganesh Jayanti 2025 is observed on Saturday, February 1, 2025. Basant Panchami is held on Sunday, February 2, 2025.
Vinayaka Chaturthi, also known as Shukla Paksha Chaturthi, falls on February 1st, 2025, Saturday, and the next Sankashti Chaturthi is on February 16th, 2025, Sunday.
The Birth Story of Lord Ganesha
In Ganesha, the God and Goddess achieve peace by combining material pleasure and spiritual insight. When life had always played its game of uncertainties scaling joy and sorrow, it was thought that there were primarily two ways to live life: one as a hermit contemplating the nature of the world, and the other as a householder who remains anchored to the earth, fearlessly facing what life has to offer. In ancient times, people imagined the recluse as Lord Shiva, the male manifestation of divinity, and the householder as Shakti, the female form of divinity, the Goddess.
Lord Shiva did not want to father a child and deal with the pains and tribulations of earthly life, whereas Shakti desired a child to assist all creatures discover God. Shakti rubbed her body with turmeric and oil when she decided to have a child on her own. Shakti scraped the turmeric-oil combination off her body and used the rubbings to create a son. She named him Vinayaka (vin-without, nayaka-man) without the assistance of a man. She instructed her son to guard the gate and not allow anyone in. Vinayaka obeyed his mother's orders and did not allow Shiva to enter the gate.
This enraged the Lord, who lifted his trident and beheaded the youngster. An inconsolable Shakti demanded her son's return, and Lord Shiva ordered his minions, the Ganas, to bring him the head of the first creature they discovered and encountered in the north. Shiva revived the kid with the head of an elephant brought to him and declared him Ganapati or Ganesha, the king of the Ganas. Thus were born Shiva, the father, and Ganesha, the prince of knowledge.
Ganesh Jayanti 2025 occurs on February 1, Saturday.
Lord Ganesha represents knowledge, prosperity, and pleasures, with his head signifying worldly happiness and his human body representing spiritual bliss.
Different Versions of Lord Ganesha’s Birth
According to the Varaha Purana, when Lord Shiva opened his eyes, he laughed, and Lord Ganesha was created as a result of that laughing, looking quite like his father. To differentiate the son from his father, Shakti is claimed to have given Ganesha the head of an elephant, a symbol of material magnificence.
Shakti manifests in two forms: Kali, a terrible wild goddess with an insatiable hunger for blood, and Gauri, a lovely, domesticated divination idol full of love. It is believed that when Lord Shiva closes his eyes, Shakti takes the shape of Kali, who dances ferociously on his body, determined to wake him, and when he opens his eyes, she transforms into Gauri, who sits on his lap and looks after him. According to the Brihaddharma Purana, Lord Shiva knotted a cloth into knots, forming an elephant-headed doll, and handed it to Kali. When Kali hugged the doll near her breasts, it sprang to life and gave them Ganesha. Ganesha's arrival changed Kali into Gauri.
When Shiva promised Shakti that he would replace the child's head, he instructed his ganas to deliver the head of the first creature they encountered on their journey north. The north holds special significance in Hindu mythology. The north is connected with everything auspicious; it represents longevity, stability, and wealth, whereas the south represents death, ignorance, and decay. Thus, Lord Shiva sought the child's head from the north. In Tantra, Shiva is referred to as Dakshina-murti, the one who sits in the north facing south, and Shakti as Dakshina-kali, the one who walks from the south. Together, they become Ganesha.
The Legend of Ganesha’s Broken Tusk
Parashurama is one of Lord Vishnu's ten avatars, or incarnations, who is said to have murdered unjust monarchs with his ax. According to the Brahmanda Purana and the Brahma Vaivarta Purana, near the conclusion of his earthly life, Parashurama traveled to Mount Kailash, Shiva's celestial abode, to deliver the blood-soaked ax. Ganesha, Mount Kailash' gatekeeper, refused to let Parashurama pass until he presented himself. A reluctant and enraged Parashurama swung his ax, accidently breaking one of Ganesha's tusks. This incensed Shakti, who transforms into Durga and challenges Parashurama to a combat. Parashurama apologized to Durga, bowed to her situation and handed over his axe to Ganesha in exchange for a promise not to fight.
Later, he became a sage and meditated in the foothills of Mount Kailash.
Why Should You Avoid Seeing the Moon on Ganesh Jayanti?
It is stated that the Moon God derided the concept of an elephant-faced fat God riding a mouse. Lord Ganesh, who did not like the mockery, cursed anybody who saw the moon on the fourth day of the waxing moon, or Shukla Chaturthi, in the sacred month of Bhadrapada with bad luck. Lord Ganesh was also envious since his unattractive body never attracted women, whereas the Moon God did. The moon is also associated with Lord Shiva, who had been severed.
He and others were continuously competing for Goddess Parvati's attention. Devotees of Lord Ganesha avoid looking at the moon on days when they rejoice and honor him. A mantra is written for anyone who mistakenly glances at the moon on Shukla Chaturthi, and the person is instructed to drink water after repeating the mantra. The chant to cleanse one's misfortune when looking at the inauspicious moon is as follows:
sinha prasenmavadheet sinho jambavataa hatah
sukumarak ma rodeestav hyesh syamantakah
Ganesh Jayanti Puja Vidhi for 2025
Wake up during Brahma Muhurta and begin the day with prayers to Lord Ganesha.
First thing in the morning, take a bath and put on clean clothing.
Clean and tidy the place of worship.
Decorate the place of worship with lights and flowers.
Purify and purify oneself with Aachman and achieve a quick resolution. (The definition of Aachman is to drink water. The small copper jar and spoon used for Aachman is known as Aachmani. Before pooja, the container is filled with water and Tulsi leaves, which are considered holy. Aachman is the process of pouring water on the palm with a spoon and drinking it.)
It is considered auspicious to wear yellow clothing during the puja.
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