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Ashadha Gupt Navaratri 2026

Ashadha Shukla Pratipada — the secret Navaratri of the Dasha Mahavidyas

📍 Bangalore, India
2026
Ashadha Gupt Navaratri 2026
Date not available for this year or city.
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Ashadha Gupt Navaratri

Most Hindus are familiar with two Navaratris: the spring Chaitra Navaratri and the autumn Sharad Navaratri that precedes Dussehra and Diwali. Far fewer know that the Hindu calendar holds four Navaratris in all — and two of them are called Gupt (secret) Navaratris, celebrated with particular intensity in tantric and Shakta traditions. The Ashadha Gupt Navaratri begins on Ashadha Shukla Pratipada, the first day of the bright fortnight of Ashadha (June–July), and continues for nine nights to Navami. These nine days fall during the monsoon season, when the world is transformed by rain, the earth turns lush and fertile, and the energies of the Goddess are understood to be active and potent.

The word gupt means secret or hidden. These Navaratris carry this name for two reasons. First, they are less widely known and celebrated compared to Chaitra and Sharad — kept alive primarily within Shakta communities, tantric lineages, and households with deep Devi devotion. Second, the mode of worship during Gupt Navaratris tends toward the esoteric: practitioners focus on the Dasha Mahavidyas, the ten tantric forms of the Goddess — Kali, Tara, Tripura Sundari (Shodashi), Bhuvaneshwari, Bhairavi, Chhinnamasta, Dhumavati, Bagalamukhi, Matangi, and Kamala. Each Mahavidya represents a distinct aspect of divine energy, from fierce and transformative (Kali, Chhinnamasta, Dhumavati) to nurturing and beautiful (Kamala, Tripura Sundari, Bhuvaneshwari). During the nine nights of Ashadha Gupt Navaratri, each Mahavidya receives dedicated worship, mantra recitation, and in traditional households, homa (fire ritual).

The four Navaratris together trace the arc of the solar year: Magha Gupt Navaratri in winter, Chaitra Navaratri in spring, Ashadha Gupt Navaratri in early monsoon, and Sharad Navaratri in autumn. For devotees of the Goddess, this means Devi's presence is not seasonal but constant — she is worshipped in her different aspects across all four seasons, with the Gupt Navaratris serving as the deep, inward, mystical complement to the outer, public celebrations of Chaitra and Sharad. The Ashadha observance is especially associated with tantric sadhana, where the practitioner may undertake intensive mantra japa, yantra worship, and specific vrats to invoke the Mahavidya energies during these nine auspicious nights.

शक्तिः शक्तिर्महाशक्तिः सर्वशक्तिः सनातनी। तन्त्रयन्त्रमयी देवी त्वमेव सकलं जगत्॥
Śaktiḥ śaktirmahāśaktiḥ sarvaśaktiḥ sanātanī, tantrayantramayī devī tvameva sakalaṃ jagat.
"Power, Power, great Power, eternal Power — O Goddess, the entire universe is pervaded by your tantric and mystical energy."
— Devi Stotra
Tradition & Practice
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The Four Navaratris
The Hindu year has four Navaratris: Magha Gupt (winter), Chaitra (spring), Ashadha Gupt (early monsoon), and Sharad (autumn). The two Gupt Navaratris are observed with tantric intensity and are not widely publicized — they are sacred seasons for serious Shakta practitioners and lineage-based Devi devotion.
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Why "Secret" Navaratri?
"Gupt" means hidden or secret. These Navaratris are secret in two senses: they are less publicly known than Chaitra and Sharad, and the mode of worship is esoteric. Tantric rituals, specific mantras of the Dasha Mahavidyas, and inward sadhana (spiritual practice) characterize these nine nights rather than the festive public celebrations seen in Navaratri pandals.
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Dasha Mahavidyas
The ten Dasha Mahavidyas — Kali, Tara, Tripura Sundari, Bhuvaneshwari, Bhairavi, Chhinnamasta, Dhumavati, Bagalamukhi, Matangi, and Kamala — are the primary objects of worship during Gupt Navaratri. Each represents a distinct energy of the Goddess: from fierce (Kali, Chhinnamasta) to serene (Kamala), from sorrowful (Dhumavati) to blissful (Tripura Sundari).
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Monsoon Sacred Season
Ashadha Gupt Navaratri falls during the heart of the Indian monsoon (June–July). The transformation of the earth by rain mirrors the transformative energy of the Mahavidyas — creation and destruction, growth and dissolution. The season itself is considered a living expression of Shakti, making this a naturally auspicious time for intense Devi sadhana.
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Ritual Practice
Traditional observance includes Durga Saptashati recitation, mantra japa of individual Mahavidya mantras, yantra worship, and sometimes havan (fire ritual). Many practitioners undertake a vrat (vow) for the nine days — eating once daily, or only sattvic food — as an act of tapas (austerity) to invoke Devi's grace and shakti.
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Tithi and Timing
Ashadha Gupt Navaratri begins on Ashadha Shukla Pratipada (the first day of the bright fortnight of Ashadha) and ends on Navami (the ninth day). The exact English-calendar dates vary each year. On the ninth day, Navami, the culminating puja is performed with special offerings to the presiding Mahavidya of the devotee's lineage.
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