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Vijayadashami 2031

Ashwin Shukla Dashami — Ram's victory, Durga's triumph, the most auspicious day

📍 Bangalore, India
2031
Vijayadashami · 2031
📍 Bangalore, India
October 25, 2031
Ashwin Shukla Dashami — Ram's victory, Durga's triumph, the most auspicious day
Timings · Bangalore
Sunrise
Oct/25/2031 06:12:34
Sunset
Oct/25/2031 17:55:12
Moonrise
Oct/25/2031 14:07:52
Moonset
Oct/25/2031 01:26:02
About

Vijayadashami

Vijayadashami — literally the tenth of victory — falls on Ashwin Shukla Dashami, the tenth day of the bright fortnight of Ashwin, immediately following the nine nights of Sharad Navaratri. It is simultaneously the celebration of Lord Rama's defeat of Ravana, the celebration of Goddess Durga's victory over Mahishasura, and the single most auspicious day of the Hindu year for beginning anything new. Two great victories, two great stories, one supreme moment of dharmic triumph.

In North India, Vijayadashami is known as Dussehra — literally the defeat (hara) of the ten-headed (das-sir) Ravana. Enormous effigies of Ravana, Kumbhakarna, and Meghnad are erected at open grounds across cities. As sunset approaches, Ram and his brothers arrive (usually played by local children or actors) in a procession, and Ram shoots a flaming arrow into Ravana's effigy — the Ravan Dahan. The effigy bursts into fire and explosions, symbolising the destruction of ego, pride, and the ten-headed demon who had ten vices. The largest Ravan Dahan in India is at Ramlila Maidan, Delhi, where effigies stand 70 metres tall.

In Karnataka, Mysore Dasara — known as Nada Habba (State Festival) — has been celebrated for over 400 years. For ten days the illuminated Mysore Palace draws hundreds of thousands of visitors. On Vijayadashami morning, a golden throne procession leaves the palace: a colourfully decorated elephant carries the goddess Chamundeshwari in a golden howdah, accompanied by caparisoned horses, decorated camels, folk performers, military bands, and thousands of marching soldiers. The procession is one of Asia's greatest ceremonial spectacles.

पापानां वा शुभानां वा वधार्हाणां प्लवङ्गम। कार्यं करोमि रामस्य दशमी विजयाय नः।।
Pāpānāṃ vā śubhānāṃ vā vadhārhāṇāṃ plavaṃgama, kāryaṃ karomi rāmasya daśamī vijayāya naḥ.
"Whether sinners or virtuous, those deserving to be slain — O one who leaps across (Hanuman), on the day of victory (Dashami) we accomplish Rama's work."
— Ramayana tradition
Tradition & Practice
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Ravan Dahan (Burning Ravana)
On Dussehra evening, effigies of Ravana, Kumbhakarna, and Meghnad — stuffed with firecrackers — are set ablaze at Ramlila grounds across North India. The burning symbolises the destruction of the ten vices Ravana represents: ego, anger, greed, lust, attachment, arrogance, selfishness, injustice, cruelty, and ego. Delhi's 70-metre Ravana effigy is the world's tallest.
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Mysore Dasara Procession
Karnataka's Mysore Dasara (Nada Habba) is a 400-year royal tradition. On Vijayadashami morning, a golden howdah bearing the goddess Chamundeshwari is carried by a magnificently decorated elephant through the streets of Mysore in the Jamboo Savari procession. The palace is lit with 100,000 bulbs each evening for ten days — visible from miles away.
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Durga's Victory Over Mahishasura
In the East Indian tradition (Bengal, Assam, Odisha), Vijayadashami is the day Durga slew Mahishasura after nine days of battle. On this day, the elaborate clay Durga idols are carried in emotional processions to rivers and lakes for visarjan (immersion). The crying crowds who follow the procession express genuine grief at Durga's departure — as a daughter leaves her parental home.
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Ayudha Puja (Weapon Worship)
On Vijayadashami (or the day before), Ayudha Puja is performed across South India — every tool, weapon, vehicle, and instrument of one's work is cleaned, decorated with flowers and kumkum, and worshipped. Mechanics worship their tools, farmers worship their ploughs, musicians worship their instruments, and soldiers worship their weapons. Work is suspended for the day; the tools are the deities.
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Auspicious Day for New Beginnings
Vijayadashami is considered the single most auspicious day of the year for Shubha Arambha — auspicious beginnings. Starting a new business, enrolling children in school (Vidyarambha), buying new property, taking up weapons training, beginning a new course of study, or setting out on a journey — all are powerfully blessed when begun on Vijayadashami. No muhurta lookup is needed; the day itself is the muhurta.
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Shamee Tree (Gold Shower) Leaves
On Vijayadashami, Shamee tree (Prosopis cineraria) leaves — called “sona” (gold) — are exchanged among friends and family as symbolic gold. This tradition dates to the Mahabharata, when the Pandavas retrieved their weapons from a Shamee tree after 13 years of exile. Exchanging Shamee leaves means wishing someone the wealth of gold without the attachment to it.
Auspicious Timings

Chogadia Muhurta

ChogadiaFromTo
Shubh Oct/25/2031 07:40:24 Oct/25/2031 09:08:13
Labh Oct/25/2031 13:31:43 Oct/25/2031 14:59:32
Amrit Oct/25/2031 14:59:32 Oct/25/2031 16:27:22
Gowri Panchangam
Day
Soram Bad 06:12:34 – 07:40:24
Uthi Good 07:40:24 – 09:08:13
Visham Bad 09:08:13 – 10:36:03
Amridha Best 10:36:03 – 12:03:53
Rogam Evil 12:03:53 – 13:31:43
Labham Gain 13:31:43 – 14:59:32
Dhanam Wealth 14:59:32 – 16:27:22
Sugam Good 16:27:22 – 17:55:12
Night
Labham Gain 17:55:12 – 19:27:24
Dhanam Wealth 19:27:24 – 20:59:35
Sugam Good 20:59:35 – 22:31:47
Soram Bad 22:31:47 – 24:03:59
Uthi Good 24:03:59 – 01:36:11
Visham Bad 01:36:11 – 03:08:23
Amridha Best 03:08:23 – 04:40:35
Soram Bad 04:40:35 – 06:12:47
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