The plains know Navratri for garba and city pandals; the hills celebrate it as pilgrimage, procession, and a public season of faith. In Himachal and Uttarakhand the nine nights centre on ancient hill temples — many identified as Shakti sites — and on lived village traditions where local deities, not just pan-Indian idols, take pride of place. Pilgrims stream up narrow roads, priests perform extended yajñas and whole communities pitch in to host fairs and folk performances that convert austere slopes into vibrant festival grounds.
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Navratri On The Hills: How The Goddess Is Worshipped In Himachal & Uttarakhand
Navratri in the Himalaya is equal parts devotion and local colour—village god processions, hilltop Shakti peeths and month-long melas. From Kullu’s deity convocation to Almora’s Nanda Devi mela, the hills celebrate Durga with their own rhythms

The Gangotri temple, which is dedicated to the Hindu goddess Ganga, is nestled among Himalayan peaks, glaciers and dense forests
Photo: SauravRawat/Shutterstock
The Gangotri temple, which is dedicated to the Hindu goddess Ganga, is nestled among Himalayan peaks, glaciers and dense forests
Photo: SauravRawat/Shutterstock

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