Magha Shukla Pratipada — the winter secret Navaratri of Devi
Magha Gupt Navaratri begins on Magha Shukla Pratipada — the first day of the bright fortnight of the month of Magha (January–February) — and continues for nine nights to Navami. It is the winter secret Navaratri, one of the two Gupt (hidden) Navaratris in the Hindu calendar year. Where Chaitra Navaratri celebrates Devi's spring awakening with public pandals, aartis, and festive processions, and Sharad Navaratri marks the dramatic autumn season before Dussehra, the Magha Gupt Navaratri belongs to the interior world — to the quiet, cold, pre-dawn hours of deep winter when the devotee withdraws from outer activity and turns inward toward the Goddess in her most profound forms.
Like its counterpart the Ashadha Gupt Navaratri, the Magha observance centers on the Dasha Mahavidyas — the ten tantric forms of the Divine Mother: Kali, Tara, Tripura Sundari, Bhuvaneshwari, Bhairavi, Chhinnamasta, Dhumavati, Bagalamukhi, Matangi, and Kamala. Each Mahavidya embodies a facet of reality that the regular mind tends to avoid: Kali confronts mortality, Chhinnamasta faces the dissolution of ego, Dhumavati holds the energy of grief and loss, Bagalamukhi wields the power to stop the enemy (including the enemy within). These are not comfortable deities to approach — and the secrecy of the Gupt Navaratri reflects that these energies are not for spectacle, but for sincere inner work. Practitioners who undertake sadhana during Magha Gupt Navaratri typically commit to intensive mantra repetition (japa), fasting, and sometimes extended meditative practices across the nine nights.
Winter deepens the symbolism. Magha is a month of cold clarity — the harvest is complete, the year is at its quietest, and the mind naturally turns toward consolidation and depth. In tantric cosmology, winter is associated with the Earth element's withdrawal and the inner fire (tapas) that sustains life. The Dasha Mahavidyas, worshipped in this cold stillness, are understood to reveal themselves more readily to the sincere practitioner precisely because the outer world offers fewer distractions. The Navarna Mantra — the nine-syllable seed mantra of the Durga Saptashati — is considered the master key that unlocks the energy of all ten Mahavidyas, and its recitation forms the heart of Magha Gupt Navaratri practice in most Shakta lineages.
| Chogadia | From | To |
|---|---|---|
| Amrit | Jan/21/2026 06:47:16 | Jan/21/2026 08:13:04 |
| Shubh | Jan/21/2026 09:38:51 | Jan/21/2026 11:04:38 |
| Labh | Jan/21/2026 15:22:00 | Jan/21/2026 16:47:47 |
| Amrit | Jan/21/2026 16:47:47 | Jan/21/2026 18:13:34 |
| Amridha | Best | 06:47:16 – 08:13:04 |
| Visham | Bad | 08:13:04 – 09:38:51 |
| Rogam | Evil | 09:38:51 – 11:04:38 |
| Labham | Gain | 11:04:38 – 12:30:25 |
| Dhanam | Wealth | 12:30:25 – 13:56:12 |
| Sugam | Good | 13:56:12 – 15:22:00 |
| Soram | Bad | 15:22:00 – 16:47:47 |
| Uthi | Good | 16:47:47 – 18:13:34 |
| Sugam | Good | 18:13:34 – 19:47:47 |
| Rogam | Evil | 19:47:47 – 21:22:01 |
| Uthi | Good | 21:22:01 – 22:56:14 |
| Amridha | Best | 22:56:14 – 24:30:28 |
| Visham | Bad | 24:30:28 – 02:04:41 |
| Rogam | Evil | 02:04:41 – 03:38:54 |
| Labham | Gain | 03:38:54 – 05:13:08 |
| Dhanam | Wealth | 05:13:08 – 06:47:21 |
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