Yet beyond its religious and spiritual depth, Chhath Puja also offers a uniquely syncretic and participatory cultural and political experience, representing a celebration of India’s civilizational renaissance and renewal. No wonder, its contemporary significance unfolds across multiple layers — ecological ethics, women’s agency, migrant identity, vernacular modernity, and political symbolism. The four days of Chhath- Nahay Khay, Kharna, Sandhya Arghya (offering the setting sun) and Usha Arghya (offering to the rising sun) are also a post-anthropocentric celebration of the blurring of spatial and species distinctions. The puja materials used—clay stoves, bamboo baskets, river water, fruits, and thekua (a jaggery-sweetened offering) are often locally sourced and home-made. There is no idol, no temple, only worshippers. Every participant, rich or poor, Dalit or Brahmin, man or woman, performs the same act of offering before the same sun. In this sense, Chhath Puja becomes a living metaphor for contemporary Bihar, a symbolic enactment of a republic of homo aequalis where caste hierarchies and clientelistic exchanges recede, if only for a fleeting but powerful moment, and everyone comes under the maternal protection of Chhathi Maiya.