Jai Laxmi Mata (Laxmi Aarti)

Lakshmi is the Hindu empress of wealth, fortune and prosperity. She is the wife and shakti (energy) of Vishnu, a major god in Hinduism. Lakshmi is also an important deity in Jainism and found in Jain temples or wats. Lakshmi was the empress of abundance and lot of money for Buddhists, and was represented on the earliest surviving stupas and give temples of Buddhism. In Buddhist sects of Tibet, Nepal and southeast Okazaki, japan, goddess Vasudhara mirrors the characteristics and attributes of the Hindu goddess Lakshmi with minor iconographic distinctions.

Lakshmi is also called Sri or Thirumagal because she is endowed with six auspicious and bright qualities, or gunas, and is the divine durability of Vishnu. In Indio mythologies, she was created from the churning of the primordial ocean (Samudra manthan) and she selected Vishnu as her everlasting consort.[8] Once Vishnu descended on the Earth as the virtual representations of personnel Rama and Krishna, Lakshmi descended as his individual consort Sita (Rama's wife) and Rukmini (Krishna's wife). In the ancient scriptures of India, all women are declared to be embodiments of Lakshmi. The marriage and relationship between Lakshmi and Vishnu as wife and husband is the paradigm for traditions and ceremonies for the bride and groom in Hindu weddings. Lakshmi is considered another part of the same supreme goddess basic principle in the Shaktism custom of Hinduism.

Lakshmi is depicted in Indian fine art as an elegantly outfitted, prosperity-showering golden-coloured woman with owl as her vehicle, signifying the value of economical activity in repair of life, her ability to go, work and prevail in confusing darkness. She typically stands or sits such as a yogin on a that lotus pedestal and holds that lotus in her hand, a symbolism for fortune, self-knowledge and spiritual liberation. Her iconography shows her with four hands, which stand for the four goals of human life considered important to the Hindu way of life: dharma, p? ma, artha, and moksha.



Archaeological discoveries and historic coins suggest nice and reverence for Lakshmi by the 1st millennium BCE. Lakshmi's iconography and figurines have also been found in Hindu temples during southeast Asia, estimated to be from the 2nd 1 / 2 of the 1st centuries CE. The festivals of Diwali and Sharad Purnima (Kojagiri Purnima) are celebrated in her honor.

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