Rani Mukerji,Tanisha and other bollywood celebrities attended Durga Puja Pandal to celebrate Sindoor Khela.
Gorgeous Rani Mukherji also distributed Sweets to all during the Sindoor Khela cerrmony at North Bombay Durga Puja Pandal.
The festive season is in full swing in India, and Bollywood is celebrating the occasion with zest. The Bong beauties, Kajol and Rani Mukherji were going all out to make the most of the festive season. The cousins share a close bond and are often seen together on occasions. Recently, the Mukerji family organized the Durga Puja celebrations in Mumbai. At the celebrations, Kajol and Rani Mukerji made heads turn in their traditional saree looks. Their visuals garnered a lot of love. The cousins celebrated Sindoor Khela, and the visuals were, a witness that they had a blast.
Kajol and Rani Mukerji are celebrating Durga Puja with great zeal and their adorable sindoor khela pictures will totally give you festive vibes. The actresses are enjoying the festival with their family and friends from the industry. In the pictures, we can see Kajol alongside her sisters, Tanisha Mukerji and Rani Mukerji, savouring the occasion. The ladies can be seen radiating grace in Bengali sarees with red color on their faces.
Significance of Sindoor Khela:
<span;>In the Bengali community, Sindoor Khela is a customary element of the Durga Puja celebrations. During the culmination of Durga Puja on Vijayadashami, the ceremony entails applying sindoor, or vermilion powder, to the idols of Goddess Durga and among married ladies. This is prior to the idols being immersed. After the “ghat visarjan” (a symbolic immersion of Durga signalling the conclusion of the Puja ceremonies) on the day of Dussehra or Vijayadashami, Goddess Durga is said to bid adieu for the year. In the Bengali culture, it is standard practise to make an offering of sindoor to married daughters as a parting gift.
Sindoor Khela is traditionally played by married ladies who adhere to certain customs and traditions. Sindoor Khela is thought to represent the strength of femininity, which grants them luck and extends the lives of their spouses. Currently, the ceremony has changed into a pleasant event when even single women and men participate in the celebration by dancing to the “Dhaki” drummers’ beats.