gujarati
Raksha Bandhan
રક્ષા બંધન
July–August · 1 day
Raksha Bandhan — "the bond of protection" — is the day a sister ties a rakhi on her brother's wrist, he gives her a gift, and they both renew the promise to look out for each other through whatever comes next. It falls on Shravan Purnima, the full moon of the monsoon month. In Gujarat, the same day is also Pavitropana for many Brahmin families — the morning is given to changing the janoi (sacred thread) at a small home or temple puja, and the afternoon belongs to the siblings. The thread itself can be anything from a simple kalava to a beaded charm to whatever your sister picked out at Patel Brothers last week — what matters is the tying, the tilak, the sweet.
What to do
Rakhi tying ceremony
EssentialThe sister applies tilak on her brother's forehead, ties the rakhi on his right wrist, performs a brief aarti, and feeds him a sweet. The brother gives a gift and renews his promise of protection.
Pavitropana (janoi change)
For many Brahmin Gujarati families, the same purnima is Pavitropana — the morning is given to changing the janoi (sacred thread) at a home or temple puja, before the afternoon's rakhi ceremony.
Family gathering and afternoon meal
Extended family gathers for a long afternoon meal — siblings and parents and cousins, the day stretched into evening with photographs, sweets, and calls to grandparents back home.
Getting ready
Order or buy rakhi — Indian stores stock 2–3 weeks before; selection thins quickly
home
Mail rakhi if sibling is in another city — include a handwritten note
community
Plan or order gift for sister — something she'd actually want, not a formality
home
Order sweets from Indian sweet shop or buy at Patel Brothers (besan ladoo, mohanthal, kaju katli)
food
Set up small thali: diya, kumkum, akshat (turmeric-rice), rakhis, a sweet
home
For Brahmin Gujaratis observing Pavitropana — attend mandir morning seva or arrange home puja for janoi change
ritual
Tie the rakhi and feed the sweet (in person or over video call)
ritual
In the diaspora
Raksha Bandhan is one of the traditions that travels easiest — the whole festival fits in an envelope. Indian groceries and cultural stores stock racks of rakhis two to three weeks before; Amazon and Indian e-commerce sites carry the same selection. Siblings in different cities mail rakhis ahead, then do the tying over FaceTime or Zoom on the day itself — the ceremony loses nothing on screen. For Brahmin Gujarati families who also keep Pavitropana, a small home puja with the temple priest (most US Swaminarayan and BAPS mandirs offer Pavitropana morning seva) covers the janoi change before the afternoon's sibling ritual. Sweets — besan ladoo, mohanthal, kaju katli — come from the Indian sweet shop or Patel Brothers freezer aisle.
When is Raksha Bandhan?
- Raksha Bandhan 2025
- August 9, 2025
- Raksha Bandhan 2026
- August 28, 2026
- Raksha Bandhan 2027
- August 17, 2027
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