The last two days we celebrated Makar Saṅkrānti, followed by Māṭu Poṅgal in South India, where we expressed gratitude towards farm animals. Nowadays, many people dismiss it merely as a harvest festival—a
grave misunderstanding that attempts to secularise and sever it from its Hindu roots.
India traditionally had two to three grain harvests annually. If this were simply about celebrating harvest, why only Makar Saṅkrānti? Why not mark the other harvests with equal significance? This question itself reveals the deeper truth.
Astronomical and spiritual significance
Makar Saṅkrānti marks the sun’s transit from Dhanus (Sagittarius) to Makara (Capricorn)—a definite astronomical shift signifying the sun’s apparent northward movement from its southernmost point. This moment holds profound significance: winter’s peak has passed, harvest is complete, and spring approaches, arriving fully with Vasanta Pañcamī.
The celebration’s essence lies in expressing gratitude towards Īśvara, or Bhagavān, symbolised and invoked in the sun. This is fundamentally religious, not merely agricultural.
Nature and cosmic intelligence
This change of season is, of course, a part of nature and its laws, but it is also an expression of the cosmic intelligence that is a dimension of Īśvara.
Our ancestors understood what modern minds often miss: what we casually dismiss as “just nature” actually reveals cosmic intelligence that is worthy of reverence. Yes, Makar Saṅkrānti follows harvest, but more importantly, it marks this sacred transition from winter’s depths towards spring and summer, when fresh sowing begins anew. The entire cycle of seasons became a vehicle for understanding and honouring the cosmic intelligence orchestrating existence.
Sanctifying everyday life
This shows how Sanātana Dharma sanctified every aspect of human life. Our religious attitudes of devotion were not confined to temples or rituals—they touched everything. Through this sacred awareness, ordinary human life became divinised.
When we reduce such observances to secular harvest festivals, we lose this transformative dimension—the capacity to see divine intelligence permeating all existence, making every moment an opportunity for gratitude and recognition of the sacred.
The writer is the founder of Aarsha Vidya Foundation. He can be contacted at aarshavidyaf@gmail.com.










