Happy Holi: Hindus around the world celebrate love and forgiveness

In India and Nepal, streets, parks and buildings are drenched in bold hues as people dance, drum and sing.

Woman at Holi Festival, India

Holi festival celebrations in Bhopal, India, 19 March 2019. Source: EPA/ SANJEEV GUPTA

People have taken to the streets, dousing each other with vibrant colours as part of this year’s Holi Festival.
Hindu devotees are seen playing with Colourful powders and water during the Holi Festival celebration at Gokul dham, Mathura. .
Hindu devotees are seen playing with Colourful powders and water during the Holi Festival celebration at Gokul dham, Mathura. Source: SIPA USA / Avishek Das
Also known as the Festival of Colours, Holi is a Hindu tradition that celebrates the beginning of Spring, new beginnings and forgiveness.
Holi festival celebrations at Durgiana Temple
Holi festival celebrations at Durgiana Temple in Amritsar, India, 20 March 2019. Source: EPA / RAMINDER PAL SINGH
The festival falls on the last full moon of the lunar month. It begins on the evening of Purnima, the Full Moon Day in the Hindu calendar month of Falgun and falls sometime between February and March each year. This year, Holi is celebrated on Wednesday 20 and Thursday 21 of March.
drumming at the Lathmar Holi Festival at Barsana
Devotees seen playing the drum before starting the Lathmar Holi Festival at Barsana. Source: SIPA USA / Avishek Das
Holi is mostly celebrated in India and Nepal where there are large Hindu populations. Streets, parks and buildings are drenched in colour as people dance, drum and sing.
Woman at Holi Festival
Indian students rub each other with paint as they celebrate the Holi festival at Tagore University in Kolkata, eastern India, 18 March 2019. Source: EPA / PIYAL ADHIKARY
Over time, the festival has gained popularity across the world, including in Australia. It is well-known for the colourful powder festivalgoers throw on one another, traditionally known as Gulal or Abeer.
Holi Festival of Barsana
Lathmar Holi Festival of Barsana. Source: SIPA USA / Avishek Das
This year, the Hindu Council of Australia has organised a celebration of Holi on Sunday 24 March at Civic Park in Pendle Hill, Sydney.
Feet at Holi celebration at Nandgaon
Colorful Legs of Transgenders seen on the ground of Radharani Temple after completion of Holi celebration at Nandgaon. Source: SIPA USA / Avishek Das
The origins of Holi can be linked to Prahlada and Holika, who are both found in Hindu Vedic scriptures. In the scriptures, Prahlada and god Krishna are known to have overpowered the evil king Hiranyakashipu and his sister, who was a demoness named Holika.
Hindu priest at Holi festival celebrations at Durgiana Temple
A Hindu priest is smeared with colors during Holi festival celebrations at Durgiana Temple in Amritsar, India, 20 March 2019. Source: EPA / RAMINDER PAL SINGH
The festival starts in the evening with Holika Dahan, a gathering around a bonfire which represents the burning of demoness Holika. The next morning this triumph over evil is celebrated with Rangwali Holi. This is when the colours are thrown.
An Indian street vendor sells colored powder.
An Indian street vendor sells color ahead of Holi festival in Gauhati, India, Wednesday, March 20, 2019. Source: AP / Anupam Nath
Each colour has its own meaning with red representing fertility and beauty, green representing the harvest and blue representing the blue-skinned god Krishna.
Holi at Barsana
week before the actual Holi date at Barsana called as Lathmar holi. Source: SIPA USA / Avishek Das
Hindu devotees at Gokul dham, Mathura. (Photo by Avishek Das/Sipa USA).
Hindu devotees are seen playing with Colourful powders and water during the Holi Festival celebration at Gokul dham, Mathura. Source: SIPA USA / Avishek Das

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By Amber Jacobs

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