When the sound of “Ya Devi Sarvabhuteshu” or “Om Dum Durgaye Namah” fills temples and homes during Navratri, devotees feel an instant surge of energy. Chanting the names of Goddess Durga is not just ...
Pārvatī is an adjectival form of parvata, denoting her descent from her father, the personification of the Himalayan Mountains, whose names include “Himavan” and “Himavat” (also meaning “mountain”). In this sense, “Parvati” means either “Mountainous One” or “Daughter of the Mountain.”
Devi and Deva mean 'heavenly, divine, anything of excellence', and are gender-specific terms for deity in Indian religions. Reverence for the divine feminine in Hinduism appears in the Vedas, composed around the 2nd millennium BCE.
Devi, also known as Mahadevi or 'Great Goddess', is an all-embracing Mother Goddess first worshipped in India in Prehistoric times. In the Vedic period, she was assimilated into the Hindu pantheon and so came to represent the female energy or Sakti (Power) of her husband Shiva.
Devi is the feminine form of the word Deva, which means god. Therefore, Devi can be termed as a goddess. Devi represents the feminine aspect of the divine power. Devi is also considered a mother and is called “Mata” or “Maa.” E.g., Santoshi Mata and Maa Durga.
In the diverse and intricate world of Hindu mythology, Devi stands as a pivotal figure, a deity woven into the spiritual fabric of South Asia with threads of power, grace, and mystique.
Devi, often referred to as Shakti, is the divine feminine energy in Hinduism. She is the universal mother and the supreme force behind creation, preservation, and destruction.
In the form of Durga, Devi is a warrior goddess charged with protecting the gods and the world from powerful demons. The gods used their combined strength to create Durga when they were unable to overpower a terrible buffalo demon named Mahisha.