Hindus celebrate the festival of religious Ganesh in polluted rivers

On the last day of the Ganniche Festival, New Delhi, India, on 27 September, local time, Hindus observed the immersion of elephants.

"Ganesh Chaturthi" is the largest Hindu festival of 12 days.

Ganniche Day is a commemoration of the birth of the Elephant Elephant Elephant Ganesh, the World Customs Network, which celebrates a large-scale celebration in the cities in August or September every year throughout India.

Following the ceremony, the faithful will take the statues to the rivers surrounding them, shouting in their mouths, “Praise the saints and beg him to be sanctified again next year”, and then let the idols flow into the river and return to heaven on behalf of the elephant God.

One of the popular Hindu gods, the son of Shiva and Parvati, the master of wisdom and wealth, is the happy day as it is called in late Buddha.

In addition to his wisdom, he is in charge of the good things of wealth, pleasure, peace and love.

The role of Gannis is to determine success or failure and to remove or create obstacles, if necessary.

According to one of the many accounts, after one trip, Shiva returned home and found a man in her wife Parvati's house who thought that he had acted in peace, and cut off the man's head with a knife in anger.

Only after Pafferty had explained that she had cut off the head of her son Ganesa.

In order to make up for the error, she went out and cut off the head of the first creature she saw as a replacement, and the likes were the choice of fate.

Ganesa, like the God of Ganesh, is often portrayed as a man with a fat, intestines, yellow skin, four arms and an elephant with an ivory on his head with a screw, a wheel's treasure, a stick or a wolf's tooth and a sleeping lotus.

He used to ride a mouse or be accompanied by a mouse.

I don't know

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