Timeless Tales | Lohri: From bonfires to belief
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Timeless Tales | Lohri: From bonfires to belief

TH
The Indian Express
2 days ago
Edited ByGlobal AI News Editorial Team
Reviewed BySenior Editor
Published
Jan 5, 2026

Most Indian festivals follow the lunar calendar, but Lohri and Makar Sankranti are aligned with the solar calendar. That is why they fall around January 13 to 15 each year. (credit: pixabay)

India’s festivals are rooted in religion and tradition, but they are also about food, fun and shared joy with family and friends. Some are celebrated within homes, others with the wider community. Lohri, essentially a festival of north India, belongs firmly to the latter.

Winter in northern India is cold and foggy, and Lohri arrives at its peak. The festival is marked by community gatherings around a bonfire. Street vendors sell hot, sand-roasted peanuts and popcorn. Gachak and revadi begin appearing in markets weeks in advance. Made of gur, til and peanuts, these treats are believed to warm the body. Maroonda, prepared from puffed rice and gur, is considered a lighter alternative. Today, gachak has acquired gourmet twists, made with roasted chana, moong dal, popcorn, flax seeds and even makhanas.

As children, Lohri meant sitting around the bonfire while my father peeled peanuts and fed us. Sometimes he would roast whole green cholia plants in the fire. The smoky, charcoal flavour of the roasted cholia, called holaan, was unforgettable. My mother would make popcorn and gajar ka halwa. Today, many youngsters gravitate towards pizza, fries and chips, but traditional Indian snacks remain healthier and better suited to the season.

Our food habits have long followed nature. Cooling foods like dhokla and idli are preferred in summer. Ayurveda recommends fried snacks during the monsoon. My father-in-law fondly called them taleya-hoya, meaning pakoras of all kinds.

Now, at a later stage of life, I find myself drawn to a deeper meaning of Lohri. Interpreted as Lo + Hari, it means, “Take, O Lord.” It prompts reflection. What can we truly offer God? Flowers, fruits or money are not really ours to give. Everything already belongs to Him.

Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba expressed this beautifully: offering one’s love, hands, mind and soul to the divine. He went further, asking devotees to offer even their vices, trusting that He would take them away.

It is a powerful thought. While everyone wants pleasant gifts, here is the Lord willing to accept our flaws as well. Perhaps that is the essence of Lohri today. To let go, and let God.

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