Karva Chauth is a very significant
festival for the women of North Indian. Traditionally the Indian woman
was expected to uphold family honour and repute. And in order to do
that, she was compared to myriad goddesses and heroines in Hindu
mythology whose personal and spiritual achievements thus set the way of
life for every Indian woman who, in turn, was expected to emulate them.
As a child she submitted to the dictates of the paterfamilias the
father, and after marriage to those of the husband. Her failure to do so
supposedly brought doom and dishonor upon the concerned families and
their genealogical ramifications.
The notion of female chastity, respectability, tolerance and demureness
slowly but surely seeped into every layer of the Hindu society and
literature, and great care was taken to glorify the woman, while the
reigns of social control were firmly held by the mikado of morality
the male. In such a social construct, the womans identity hinged
first on that of her father, and later and more importantly on that of
her husband. Therefore, in certain pockets of India, a widow was
expected to immolate herself on the funeral pyre of her departed husband
an act hailed by many that guaranteed her the status of an exalted
woman, a devi (roughly translated as a demigoddess). Hence, not
only was her status, but even the mere survival of the woman was
dependant on that of the man. The corollary was that the woman did
everything within her means to ensure the well being of her
patiparmeshwar, or husbandalmighty.
Today, however, the festival of Karva Chauth is not only a day when
women pray to God for the long and prosperous lives of their husbands,
but is also symbolic of their unflagging loyalty towards their spouses.
The festival is celebrated nine days before Diwali, or the festival of
lights, on the fourth day of the waning moon in the Hindu month of
Kartik, around October-November. Married women, old and young, begin
their fast on the day of Karva Chauth well before sunrise (around 4
a.m.), and eventually partake of food and water only after spotting the
moon, which generally rises at about 8.30 p.m. But this is not to say
that it is a solemn day solely symbolic of privation, as a good measure
of festivity, rituals and merriment complement its more serious
implications. In fact many women do not adhere very strictly to the
guidelines laid down for the fast, and while they choose to abstain from
food, they drink water, tea and coffee.
Karwa Chauth 2008
In the year 2008, Karwa chauth falls on the October 18th.



