SJKT LADANG SIMPANG RENGGAM

LAMAN WEB RASMI SEKOLAH

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

SAMBUTAN HARI PONGGAL 2010

HARI PONGGAL


Pesta Ponggal is a harvest and thanksgiving festival. It is celebrated during the harvest season, where the first product of the grain is boiled in a clay pot under the sun to pay tribute to the sun for good harvest. The festival’s origins lie with India but it is celebrated widely in Malaysia.
The main event of this festival is the cooking of ponggal, a sweet rice based concoction including milk, water and sugar. To symbolise a bountiful harvest, the boiling froth is forced to spill over the mouth of the pot. Those cooking the ponggal will shout Ponggal!!! Ponggal!!! Ponggal!!!





The festival is celebrated for four days. On, the first day, Bhogi, the old clothes and materials are thrown away and fired, marking the beginning of a new life. The second day, the Pongal day, is celebrated by boiling fresh milk early in the morning and allowing it to boil over the vessel - a tradition that is the literal translation for Pongal. People also prepare savories and sweets, visit each other's homes, and exchange greetings. The third day, Mattu Pongal, is meant to offer thanks to the cows and buffaloes, as they are used to plough the lands. On the last day, Kanum Pongal, people go out to picnic.


A festival called Jalli kathu is held in Madurai, Tiruchirapalli and Tanjavur,all in Tamil Nadu, on this day. Bundles of money are tied to the horns of Pongal ferocious bulls which the villagers try to retrieve. Everyone joins in the community meal, at which the food is made of the freshly harvested grain. This day is named and celebrated as Tamilian Tirunal in a fitting manner through out Tamil Nadu.

Thus, the harvest festival of Pongal symbolizes the veneration of the first fruit. The crop is harvested only after a certain time of the year, and cutting the crop before that time is strictly prohibited. Even though Pongal was originally a festival for the farming community, today it is celebrated by all. In south India, all three days of Pongal are considered important. However, those south Indians who have settled in the north usually celebrate only the second day. Coinciding with Makara Sankranti and Lohri of the north, it is also called Pongal Sankranti.




                             with my pupils

Teachers are busy to prepared Ponggal Rice.

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