Pitru Paksha 2025: Pitru Paksha will run from 7 to 21 September. Shradh, Tarpan and Pinddaan performed during this time bring blessings of ancestors. But if you want the blessings of ancestors, then remove some things from the house. Pitru Paksha 2025
In Hinduism, Pitru Paksha is called the festival of ancestors. During the 15 days of Pitru Paksha, Pinddaan and Tarpan are performed to attain peace of the souls of ancestors and to get their blessings.
It is believed that during Pitru Paksha, the souls of the dead relatives come to meet their family members. Therefore, during this time, the house should be kept clean and pure. Also, such negative things should be removed from the house, which the ancestors do not like.
Broken utensils- The utensils which you do not use or the utensils which are broken should be removed from the house before the beginning of Pitru Paksha. These utensils increase negative energy and the blessings of ancestors are also not received.
Broken idols- Never keep broken idols or broken pictures of gods and goddesses at home. Keeping such idols at home or worshipping them is considered very inauspicious. You should immerse them in a holy river before the beginning of Pitru Paksha.
Useless things- It is not considered good to keep useless rusty things, junk items or old clothes at home. Such things disrupt the sanctity of the house. Therefore, remove these things before Pitru Paksha.
Stopped clocks- Stopped or damaged clocks impede the pace and progress of life. If you also have such clocks in your house, get them repaired or remove them before Pitru Paksha. But never hang stopped clocks on the wall.
PC: ABPNews
You may also like
F16 pilot killed in horror air show crash named as decorated squadron leader
Minneapolis school shooter 'obsessed with killing kids' fired 116 rounds
Bhopal Municipal Corporation To Spend ₹31 Lakh On 22 New Open Gyms Even As Old Ones Lie In Ruins
Donald Trump's two-word response as Russia kills four children in Ukraine strike
Tennis star releases statement refuting racism claims after furious US Open bust-up