2020-2021 Birthdays And

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2020-2021 Birthdays And Vedanta Society of Sacramento: 2020-2021 Birthdays and Celebrations 1337 Mission Avenue, Carmichael, CA 95608 Telephone: (916) 489-5137 Email: [email protected] Website: http://www.vedantasacto.org April, 2020 Thursday April 2 Sri Rama Navami Puja 7:30 p.m Sunday April 12 Easter Sunday 11:00 a.m. Tuesday April 28 Sri Shankaracharya May, 2020 Thursday May 7 Lord Buddha* 7:30 p.m. Thursday May 21 Phalaharini Kali Puja/ Sri Shodashi Puja June, 2020 Friday June 5 Snana Yatra Monday June 22 Ratha Yatra (Jagannath Puri) July, 2020 Sunday July 5 Guru Purnima * 7:30 p.m. Saturday, July 18 Swami Ramakrishnananda August, 2020 Monday August 3 Swami Niranjanananda Tuesday August 11 Sri Krishna Puja/ Janmastami Actual Saturday, August 15 Sri Krishna/Janmashtami Observed* 7:30 p.m. Tuesday August 18 Swami Advaitananda Friday August 21 Sri Ganesh Chaturthi September, 2020 Friday Sept. 11 Swami Abhedananda Thursday Sept. 17 Mahalaya Thursday Sept.17 Swami Akhandananda October, 2020 Friday October 23 Sri Durga Puja Saptami* 7:30 p.m. Monday October 26 Vijaya Dashami** 7:30 p.m. Saturday October 30 Sri Lakshmi Puja November, 2020 Saturday Nov. 14 Sri Ma Kali Puja/ Diwali * 7:30 p.m. Thursday Nov. 26 Swami Subodhananda Saturday, Nov. 21 Sri Jagaddhatri Puja* Observed 10:30 a.m. Monday, Nov. 23 Sri Jagaddhatri Puja Actual Sunday Nov. 29 Swami Vijnanananda December, 2020 Wednesday, Dec. 23 Swami Premananda Friday Dec. 25 Christmas Day Service 11:00 a.m. Thursday Dec. 31 New Year’s Eve Celebration 10:00 p.m. January, 2021 Friday Jan. 1 New Year’s Day (Kalpataru Day) Tuesday Jan. 5 Sri Sri Ma Sarada Devi Puja* 7:30 p.m. Saturday Jan. 9 Swami Shivananda Puja ** 7:30 p.m. Tuesday Jan.19 Swami Saradananda Wednesday Jan. 27 Swami Turiyananda February, 2021 Thursday Feb.4 Swami Vivekananda’s Puja* 7:30 p.m. Saturday Feb.13 Swami Brahmananda’s Puja** 7:30 p.m. Monday Feb.15 Swami Trigunatitananda Tuesday Feb. 16 Sri Saraswati Puja Saturday Feb. 27 Swami Adbhutananda March, 2021 Thursday March 11 Shiva Ratri Puja* 7:30 p.m. Monday March 15 Sri Ramakrishna Puja* 7:30 p.m. Sunday March 28 Sri Gauranga/ Chaitanya Puja** 7:30 p.m. April, 2021 Thursday April 1 Swami Yogananda Sunday, April 4 Easter 11:00 a.m. *Meditation, worship, devotional singing and prasad. **Meditation, simple worship, singing and prasad. .
Recommended publications
  • Bengali Association of Greater Rochester (BAGR) Presents Its Annual Bijoya Celebrations Which Comprise of Equally Enthralling Programs
    Bengali Association of Greater Rochester September 30th2016 2015 Bengali association of greater Rochester www.bagrusa.org ♦ [email protected] On sixth day of Navratri, we get new touch, on seventh filled with mist in air, on Executive Committee eighth we offer flowers, on ninth day we have fun, and on tenth day, we enjoy sweets. 2016-2017 Hope Durga Puja is fun-filled for all. Anindita Biswas President Elo Sharad, Somoy Sharodotsab Er Email: [email protected] Over the last year, there has been a lot going on in our personal lives, our Krishna Chakraborty communities and throughout the world. Whether it is the economic crisis, Secretary Email: [email protected] political issues or natural calamities all over the world, we all have a lot of Shusanta Choudhury worries occupying our minds and hearts. But with the advent of autumn or fall Treasurer all those thoughts, worries are pushed to the back of our mind and a strange Email: [email protected] nostalgic feeling grips our hearts. It takes us back to the bylanes of our Anusri Sarkar hometowns back in India and brings up memories of crowded bazaar with Member people frantically finishing last minute Puja shopping. At the same time Uttara Bhattacharya neighborhood clubs collecting chanda (donation) for Puja and folks setting up Member bamboo scaffoldings desperately trying to finish pandal set up which Nandita Maity ultimately will resemble the White House or Victoria Memorial. Member Durga Puja, the most widely celebrated festival of the Bengalis can be enjoyed Padmini Das by its spurt of fanfare on all the four days of the Durga Puja festival visible Member throughout India, and particularly in Bengal.
    [Show full text]
  • The Disporia of Borders: Hindu-Sikh Transnationals in the Diaspora Purushottama Bilimoria1,2
    Bilimoria International Journal of Dharma Studies (2017) 5:17 International Journal of DOI 10.1186/s40613-017-0048-x Dharma Studies RESEARCH Open Access The disporia of borders: Hindu-Sikh transnationals in the diaspora Purushottama Bilimoria1,2 Correspondence: Abstract [email protected] 1Center for Dharma Studies, Graduate Theological Union, This paper offers a set of nuanced narratives and a theoretically-informed report on Berkeley, CA, USA what is the driving force and motivation behind the movement of Hindus and Sikhs 2School of Historical and from one continent to another (apart from their earlier movement out of the Philosophical Studies, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia subcontinent to distant shores). What leads them to leave one diasporic location for another location? In this sense they are also ‘twice-migrants’. Here I investigate the extent and nature of the transnational movement of diasporic Hindus and Sikhs crossing borders into the U.S. and Australia – the new dharmic sites – and how they have tackled the question of the transmission of their respective dharmas within their own communities, particularly to the younger generation. Two case studies will be presented: one from Hindus and Sikhs in Australia; the other from California (temples and gurdwaras in Silicon Valley and Bay Area). Keywords: Indian diaspora, Hindus, Sikhs, Australia, India, Transnationalism, Diaspoetics, Adaptation, Globalization, Hybridity, Deterritorialization, Appadurai, Bhabha, Mishra Part I In keeping with the theme of Experimental Dharmas this article maps the contours of dharma as it crosses borders and distant seas: what happens to dharma and the dharmic experience in the new 'experiments of life' a migrant community might choose to or be forced to undertake? One wishes to ask and develop a hermeneutic for how the dharma traditions are reconfigured, hybridized and developed to cope and deal with the changed context, circumstances and ambience.
    [Show full text]
  • Numbers in Bengali Language
    NUMBERS IN BENGALI LANGUAGE A dissertation submitted to Assam University, Silchar in partial fulfilment of the requirement for the degree of Masters of Arts in Department of Linguistics. Roll - 011818 No - 2083100012 Registration No 03-120032252 DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS SCHOOL OF LANGUAGE ASSAM UNIVERSITY SILCHAR 788011, INDIA YEAR OF SUBMISSION : 2020 CONTENTS Title Page no. Certificate 1 Declaration by the candidate 2 Acknowledgement 3 Chapter 1: INTRODUCTION 1.1.0 A rapid sketch on Assam 4 1.2.0 Etymology of “Assam” 4 Geographical Location 4-5 State symbols 5 Bengali language and scripts 5-6 Religion 6-9 Culture 9 Festival 9 Food havits 10 Dresses and Ornaments 10-12 Music and Instruments 12-14 Chapter 2: REVIEW OF LITERATURE 15-16 Chapter 3: OBJECTIVES AND METHODOLOGY Objectives 16 Methodology and Sources of Data 16 Chapter 4: NUMBERS 18-20 Chapter 5: CONCLUSION 21 BIBLIOGRAPHY 22 CERTIFICATE DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES ASSAM UNIVERSITY SILCHAR DATE: 15-05-2020 Certified that the dissertation/project entitled “Numbers in Bengali Language” submitted by Roll - 011818 No - 2083100012 Registration No 03-120032252 of 2018-2019 for Master degree in Linguistics in Assam University, Silchar. It is further certified that the candidate has complied with all the formalities as per the requirements of Assam University . I recommend that the dissertation may be placed before examiners for consideration of award of the degree of this university. 5.10.2020 (Asst. Professor Paramita Purkait) Name & Signature of the Supervisor Department of Linguistics Assam University, Silchar 1 DECLARATION I hereby Roll - 011818 No - 2083100012 Registration No – 03-120032252 hereby declare that the subject matter of the dissertation entitled ‘Numbers in Bengali language’ is the record of the work done by me.
    [Show full text]
  • Ananda Katha
    ANANDA KATHA BY NAGINA PRASAD CONTENTS Introduction 1 Chapter One October 1953: My friend Chandranathji and my vision of Baba. Baba sends His blessings and accepts me as a disciple. My initiation in November 1953 2 Chapter Two I am persecuted by my boss. Baba explains the real meaning of ahim’sa and the importance of iis’t’a mantra. 9 Chapter Three Jamalpur and the tiger’s grave. 11 Chapter Four Baba explains the meaning of varn’aghdana and warns against mean mindedness. The downfall of my persecutor. 15 Chapter Five February 1954: I get a sympathetic boss and am transferred to Begusarai. Manan Prasad miraculously loses weight. 19 Chapter Six Rainy Season 1954: My boss Asthanaji takes initiation and Baba appears before him. 22 Chapter Seven September 1954: Baba gives me the boon of only getting demotion when I myself desire it. My daughter dies and is miraculously resurrected and my wife takes initiation. 26 Chapter Eight The sufi saint Dattaji and his prophecy about Baba 30 Chapter Nine Winter 1954: Baba solves my difficulties in meditation and explains how His assistance is given from a distance. Shyam Charan Lahiri becomes ‘Vajra Bhairav’ at the tiger’s grave. Baba’s disciples of His previous lives. The ‘white lady’. The power and use of iis’t’a and guru mantras. Bindeshwariji’s daughter is initiated and her life is extended. My methods of pracar. 33 Chapter Ten November 1954: Demonstrations. Sunday 7th: Samadhis Sunday 14th Savikalpa and Nirvikalpa samadhi. Sunday 21st: Demonstration of death. Sunday 28th: Nirvikalpa samadhi. 42 Chapter Eleven Deep Narayanji and Vishvanathji are initiated and I try to feed Harisadhanji.
    [Show full text]
  • Environmental Impact Assessment Due to Festivals
    International Journal of Engineering Technology Science and Research IJETSR www.ijetsr.com ISSN 2394 – 3386 Volume 3, Issue 5 May 2016 Environmental Impact Assessment Due To Festivals Praveen Shivhare1, Professor Deepak Rastogi2 Civil Engineering Department, MITS College, Gwalior , (M.P.), India ABSTRACT In India, various festivals like Holi, Ganesh Chaturthi, Maa Durga Puja,and Deepawali are also generate water, air, and noise pollution and affects the all environmental attributes (air, water, land, ecology, sound, human aspect, economy, and resources). The festival of ‘Holi’ is proving to be an environmental risk due to the toxic colors used during the celebrations. Unlimited use of such toxic colors affects the human health an ecological balance. Present study analysis the trend and status of pollutants generated during festivals. As per data obtained from M.P. pollution control board Gwalior, it is observed that noise level is high than CPCB standards at three locations of Gwalior city. SPM level is also high during Deepawali festival. Study shows that characteristics of water are also affected. Celebrate dry Holi. Don’t use water. Use natural and home- made holi colors. Stone idols are worshipped. Idols made of stone are best as they can be worshipped every year. Immerse only those idols which are made of unbaked mud, clay or other biodegradable material. Use less number of firecrackers. The manufacture, sale or use of fire-crackers generating noise level exceeding 125 dB(AI) or 145 dB(C)pk at 4 meters distance from the point of bursting shall be prohibited. KEYWORDS: - Festivals, Air, Water, and Noise Pollution, Holi, Deepawali, Idol immersion.
    [Show full text]
  • BHAKTI Temple Hours Mon to Fri: 9 AM – 12:30 PM & 4 PM – 8:30 PM January 2011
    Greater Cleveland Shiva Vishnu Temple A Non-profit 7733 Ridge Road Organization P.O. Box 29508 US POSTAGE Parma, OH 44129 PAID Cleveland, OH Permit No. 03879 Phone (440) 888-9433 www.shivavishnutemple.org A Non-Profit Tax-Exempt Organization REGULAR WEEKLY & MONTHLY PUJA SCHEDULE Sunday 9:30 AM Shiva Abhishekam; 11 AM Vishnu Puja st rd 1 Sunday 12:30 PM Jagannath Puja 3 Sunday 12:30 PM Jain Puja Monday 10 AM Shiva Abhishekam; 6 PM Jagannath Puja Tuesday 10 AM Ganesha Abhishekam; 6 PM Hanumanji Puja Wednesday 10 AM Ram Parivar Puja 6 PM Aiyappa Puja; Thursday 10 AM Radha Krishna Puja; 6 PM Shrinathji Puja: Friday 10 AM Parvati Puja (Abhishekam 1st Fri 7:15 p) 6 PM Lakshmi Puja: 6:30 PM Durga Puja 7:15 PM Abhishekam for Sridevi 2nd Fri for Bhudevi 3rd Friday (7:15 p) Saturday 11 AM Vishnu Abhishekam 10 AM Aiyappa Puja 1st Sat 5 PM Karthikeya Puja 6 PM Saraswati Puja; 6:30 PM Navagraha Abhishek 11 AM Venkateswara Abhishekam 2nd & 4th Sat Puja 1st &3rd Sat NITYA PUJA (Monday – Saturday ) 10 AM Shiva Abhishekam; 10 AM Vishnu Puja Highlights of Feb 2011 events Date Day Time Description Feb 2 Wed Amavasya Feb 5 Sat 10 a Sri Aiyappa Puja Feb 7 Mon 10 a Vasant PanchamiSri Saraswati Puja Feb 8 Tue 6 p Sukla Shashthi, Murugabhishekam Feb 17 Wed 7.15 p Pournima, Satyanarayanpuja Feb 20 Sat 6 p Sankatahara Chaturthi,Ganeshabhishekam Mar 2 Wed 6 p Mahashivaratri Visitors are requested to wear appropriate attire in the Temple premises 10pm Mini Aarati Bhajan,Prasad Greater Cleveland Shiva Vishnu Temple BHAKTI Temple Hours Mon to Fri: 9 AM – 12:30 PM
    [Show full text]
  • Vedanta Center of Greater Washington, DC
    Vedanta Center of Greater Washington, DC 3001 Bel Pre Road · Silver Spring, MD 20906 Phone: (301) 603-1772 E-mail: [email protected] Website: vedantadc.org JANUARY 2020 SCHEDULE Minister: Swami Sarvadevananda Resident Monks: Swami Atmajnanananda Swami Brahmarupananda Swami Chidbrahmananda Br. Kumar Ramakrishna Order of India Sunday Lecture: 11 AM Tuesday Discussion Group 10 AM Talks with Swamiji 5 Swami Mahayogananda Own the Day Wednesday Discussion Group 11 AM Practice of the Presence of God 12 Swami Chidbrahmananda The Beauty of Age Wednesday Night Class 8 PM Vivekacudamani 19 Swami Vivekananda Puja See Under Special Programs Thursday Discussion Group 10 AM 26 Swami Brahmarupananda Bha g avad Gita What is in a Name? Friday Night Class 8:00 PM 3 Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna 10 Bha g avad Gita 17 Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna 24 Life of Holy Mother 31 Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna 1 Special Programs Social Service The Vedanta Center participates in a volunteer 1 January Kalpataru Day program at Shepherd’s Table in Silver Spring. Please Puja 11 am: let us know if you would like to take part. Service is : Flower offering and bhajans 12 noon on the third Friday of the month. 12:30 pm: Prasad lunch 19 Swami Vivekananda Puja Grocery Gift Cards 11 am: Introductory Talk We urge all of you to take part in our gift card 11:30: Puja, Bhajans, Flower Offering program. Gift cards for Giant, Shopper’s, and 1 pm: Prasad Lotte/Assi Plaza may be purchased at the Center following the Sunday lecture or during visiting hours, Ram Nam and are used just like a debit card when purchasing Ram Nam will be held at the Center on Saturday groceries.
    [Show full text]
  • ZEEMEDIA [email protected]
    ZEEMEDIA [email protected] Collaborative Strategies C o h e s i v e G r o w t h ZEEMEDIA ZEE MEDIA CORPORATION LIMITED REGISTERED OFFICE 14th Floor, A Wing, Marathon Futurex, NM Joshi Marg, Lower Parel, Mumbai - 400013 Maharashtra Tel.: +91 22 7106 1234 Fax: +91 22 2300 2107 Website: www.zeenews.india.com Annual Report 2017-18 OUR ZEEMEDIA PRESENCE INSIDE THIS REPORT Corporate Overview Collaborative Strategies Cohesive Growth 01 Growing Together with Viewer Engagement 02 Growing Together with Advertisers' Reach 03 Growing Together with Society and Government 04 Growing Together with Our Employees - Our Trusted Aides 05 Srinagar Steadfast Progress, Nurturing New Ventures 06 Jammu Raising the Bar with Innovations 08 Message to Shareholders 10 Growth Firmly Embedded in Value System 12 Chandigarh Dehradun Our Channels and Digital Platforms 13 Corporate Information 16 Noida STATUTORY REPORTS Lucknow Varanasi Notice 17 Jaipur Ajmer Directors' Report 26 Patna Corporate Governance Report 43 Kota Management Discussion and Analysis 56 Ranchi Kolkata Ahmedabad Bhopal Indore Vadodara FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Rajkot Raipur Surat Standalone Financial Statements 67 Nagpur Consolidated Financial Statements 121 Bhubaneswar Nasik Aurangabad Thane Mumbai BSE, Mumbai Pune Kohlapur Hyderabad FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS Bengaluru Certain statements in this annual report concerning our future growth prospects are forward-looking statements, which involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in such forward-looking statements. We have tried wherever possible to identify such statements by using words such as 'anticipate', 'estimate', 'expect', 'project', 'intend', 'plan', 'believe' and words of similar substance in connection with any discussion of future performance.
    [Show full text]
  • Christ the Messenger December 31, 2017
    VEDANTA CENTER OF ATLANTA Br. Shankara Christ the Messenger December 31, 2017 GOOD MORNING… ANNOUNCEMENTS Tonight Midnight Meditation 11:30pm-12:15am, for an auspicious start to the New Year — followed by snacks and fellowship in the Monastery until 1am. • Tomorrow (Monday, New Year's day), there is a Kalpataru Day Observance from 2:30-3:30pm. Join us in the Chapel. For followers of Sri Ramakrishna, Kalpataru Day is an extremely significant occasion. It was on January 1st, 1886 that Sri Ramakrishna revealed himself as ‘Kalpataru’ (the 'wish-fulfilling tree’), and spiritually awakened a large number of devotees who were present at the Cossipore Garden House on that sacred day. This event is commemorated annually to invoke the blessings of Sri Ramakrishna and to pray for the spiritual awakening of the devotees. Followed by snacks and fellowship in the Monastery, from 3:30pm to 4:30pm. • Next Sunday, Jan 7, we will celebrate Swami Vivekananda’s Birthday with a puja from 11am - noon, followed by a potluck prasad lunch in the Monastery. Christ the Messenger Page !1 of !8 Dec 31, 2017 • Jan 13 Seva Saturday from 10am to 2pm. Help clean and prepare the Center for the next Sunday’s puja. Pizza etc. served for lunch at 12:30pm. No need to stay the entire 4 hours — come for as long as is practical for you. • Sunday, Jan 21, we will celebrate Swami Brahmananda’s Birthday with a puja from 11am - noon, followed by a potluck prasad lunch in the Monastery. • From Friday, Jan 26 to Sunday morning, Jan 28, Pravrajika Vidyapranaji will again offer us a three-day spiritual retreat.
    [Show full text]
  • Pacific Affairs: Volume 85, No. 4 – December 2012 844 This Reordering of Events in the Chronology I Am Arguing for Is Hugely S
    Pacific Affairs: Volume 85, No. 4 – December 2012 This reordering of events in the chronology I am arguing for is hugely significant from a political point of view. Putting the agitation for Khalistan before the 1984 Operation Bluestar, apart from being factually wrong, might suggest that Operation Bluestar was an action to stop the Khalistan movement and almost provides legitimacy to the army action. However, putting the agitation for Khalistan after 1984 is not only historically accurate; it also signifies that it is the Operation Bluestar itself that alienated the Sikhs so deeply from India that a section of them launched the movement for Khalistan to secede from India. Although clearly Jakobsh does not offer any justification for Operation Bluestar, her unintended placing of events in the order that I have questioned here provides support to a likely, and indeed, common misinterpretation of the order of events. Her discussion on the Sikhs and the internet is absolutely fascinating and refreshing in raising challenging questions about the potentialities of the internet in not only opening new spaces for discussion on taboo subjects but also in creating new forms of authority in articulating what Sikhism is. This book, a scholarly work of high quality, is written in the spirit of critical reverence for the Sikh tradition and deserves wide circulation and readership. Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, United Kingdom Pritam Singh REVELRY, RIVALRY, AND LONGING FOR THE GODDESSES OF BENGAL: The Fortunes of Hindu Festivals. By Rachel Fell McDermott. New York: Columbia University Press, 2011. xviii, 372 pp. (Figures.) US$34.00, paper.
    [Show full text]
  • Vedanta Center of Greater Washington, DC
    Vedanta Center of Greater Washington, DC 3001 Bel Pre Road · Silver Spring, MD 20906 Phone: (301) 603-1772 E-mail: [email protected] Website: vedantadc.org JANUARY 2019 SCHEDULE Minister: Swami Sarvadevananda Resident Monks: Swami Atmajnanananda Swami Brahmarupananda Swami Chidbrahmananda Br. Kumar Ramakrishna Order of India 6 Swami Mahayogananda Friday Class 8:00 PM Unleashing the Power to Choose 4 Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna 13 Swami Atmajnanananda Swami Saradananda: 11 Bhagavadgita Sri Ramakrishna’s Ganesha 18 Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna 20 Swami Brahmarupananda Purity 25 Life of Holy Mother 27 Swami Vivekananda Puja See Under Special Programs Wednesday Class 8:00 PM Vivekacudamani 1 Web Site Please visit our Web Site at www.vedantadc.org. Special Programs Listen to lecture recordings, see photographs of the center, and find out about upcoming events. 31 December New Year’s Eve 11 pm: Reading from Sri Ramakrishna the Great Master Social Service 11:20 pm: Meditation 12 Midnight: Arati The Vedanta Center participates in a volunteer program at Shepherd’s Table in Silver Spring. Please let us know if you would like to take part. Service is 1 January Kalpataru Day & Holy Mother Puja on the third Friday of the month. 11 am: Puja 12 noon: Flower offering and bhajans : Prasad lunch Grocery Gift Cards 12:30 pm We urge all of you to take part in our gift card 27 Swami Vivekananda Puja program. Gift cards for Giant, Shopper’s, and 11 am: Introductory Program Lotte/Assi Plaza may be purchased at the Center 12 noon: Puja, Bhajans, Flower Offering following the Sunday lecture or during visiting 1 pm: Prasad hours, and are used just like a debit card when Ram Nam purchasing groceries.
    [Show full text]
  • RE Curriculum Skills Progression
    RE curriculum skills Term 1 Term 2 Term 3 Term 4 Term 5 Term 6 Vocabulary EYFS Talk about members of their Recognise some similarities and differences between life love, harvest, immediate family and community. in this country and life in other countries. thank you, trust, Name and describe people who are Explain some similarities and differences between life in generosity, familiar to them. this country and life in other countries, drawing on knowledge from stories, nonfiction texts and (when courage, Bible Understand that some places are appropriate) maps. Christmas, special to members of their Bethlehem, community. Opportunities: Mary, Joseph, Life in other countries donkey, inn, Recognise that people have different Easter beliefs and celebrate special times in shepherds, Star, different ways. stable Easter, Talk about the lives of the people disciples, Palm around them and their roles in Sunday, cross, society. tomb, risen Know some similarities and friend, differences between different friendship, religious and cultural communities in trust, this country, drawing on their Church, experiences and what has been read Holy, in class. Temple. Pray, Opportunities: prayer, Family photos christening, Our environment baptism, Festivals and celebrations – Harvest, wedding, Bonfire Night, Diwali, Christmas, celebration, birthdays birthday Year 1 Describe simply some Christian beliefs Identify Identify some ways Christians Recognise and name some Harvest, about God special celebrate symbols of belonging from their Harvest Describe simply some Christian beliefs objects and Christmas/Easter/Harvest/Pentecost own experience, for Christians Festival, about Jesus symbols and some ways a festival is and at least one other religion, Christian, gift, Retell a story that shows what found in a celebrated in another religion (A1).
    [Show full text]