nine nights, nine forms of durga
Decoding the Feminine Power of Navaratri
Every year, for nine nights, Indian celebrates Navaratri. Lamps are lit, colours are sought out, and the air feels ancient and alive.
At its heart, Navaratri is a celebration of the feminine force that holds the universe together — Shakti. Over nine days, she takes nine forms, each one a goddess with her own story, her own weapons, her own wisdom. Together, they trace the journey of a power that is tender and ferocious, creative and destructive, deeply personal and entirely cosmic. And at the end of it, she defeats Mahishāsura, the demon of ego and inertia — not through force, but by becoming whole.
In each of the nine videos that follow, acclaimed Bharatanātyam dancer, educator, and filmmaker Swati Gupté Bhisé decodes one goddess — her symbolism, her significance, and why her message feels more urgent today than ever. Drawing on a lifetime of living inside this tradition through dance, scholarship, and storytelling, Swati brings each deity off the altar and into the room with you.
Celebrate Shailaputri
We begin with Shailaputri. She was born of mountains. Not metaphorically — her father is Himavat, the Himalayan range itself. And from that immovable, ancient bedrock comes Shailaputri: the first form of the Mother Goddess, the purest, simplest expression of Durga, the one from whom all of nature flows.
Meet Brahmacharini
Brahmacharini — the second form of the Mother Goddess — is the story of Parvati’s great austerity. She gave up food, comfort, shelter, and the company of others in pursuit of a single truth. Not power. Not victory. Knowledge. Self-mastery. On Day 2 of Navaratri, we sit with the most quietly radical idea in the entire nine-day journey — that the path to power runs straight through discipline.
Honour Chandraghanta
Calm on the outside. Ten weapons at the ready. Day 3 of Navaratri honours Chandraghanta — the goddess who proves that serenity and strength were never opposites. The crescent moon rests on her forehead like a crown of serenity. Ten arms radiate outward, each one armed and ready. She is not at war with herself. It is power, fully owned, held in perfect stillness — until it is needed.
New Beginnings With Kushmanda
The universe didn’t begin with a bang. It began with a smile. Kushmanda is that beginning. Her name alone is a cosmology — Ku, meaning little; Ushma, meaning warmth and energy; Anda, meaning the cosmic egg. She is the original creative force, the goddess whose inner light was so abundant that she spun the entire universe outward from within herself. Scientists call it the Big Bang. The ancients called it Kushmanda’s smile. On Sindoor Tritiya, the goddess who created the cosmos asks us: what have you created lately? And did you make it with joy?
Nurture With Skandamata
When the gods needed a leader, they turned to a mother the fifth form of Durga, is Parvati in her role as mother to Skanda, Lord Kartikeya, chosen commander-in-chief of the celestial armies. Fierce, loving, and seated on a lion, she is the reminder that nurturing someone toward greatness is its own kind of greatness.
Be Unstoppable like Katyanani
Every god had a weapon. Every god had power. And on the day that mattered most, every one of them gave it away to Katyayani. Born from the collective fury and devotion of the entire pantheon to destroy Mahishāsura. Syāmalrupini, the dark and radiant one, is honoured on Shasthi with an offering of marigolds and honey to symbolise brightness and sweetness. What does her dark radiance mean? And what does this ancient story tell us about the unstoppable force of women who are backed, believed in, and given every tool they need to win.
Confront Your Fear With Kalarātri
She doesn’t fight the darkness. She is the darkness — and everything evil runs from her. Saptami or Day 7 of Navaratri honours Kalarātri black and beautiful as the night — the wild, fearsome, night-born goddess who destroys ignorance, commands respect, and offers absolute protection to those who walk in truth. She comes to confront shadows we avoid and ignorance we underestimate. She is the form of Durga we need most and instinctively fear most.
Hope With Mahagauri
After the darkest night comes the most radiant dawn. Ashtami or Day 8 of Navaratri honours Mahagauri or Shwetāmbari, the luminous white one. She is the goddess of purity, serenity, and transformation. Adorned with tambourine, conch, and discus, she arrives on Ashtami as living proof that the deepest darkness is always followed by the most brilliant light.
Fortify With Siddhidatri
Siddhidatri — the ninth and final form of the Mother Goddess is the goddess who gave birth to Brahma, the creator; Vishnu, the preserver, and Shiva, the destroyer of ignorance. The siddhis — the supernatural powers she bestows — are not magic. They are the gifts that come to those who have done every step of the work the previous eight days asked of them. On Day 9 of Navaratri or Navami, we arrive at the end of the journey and discover it was never really about acquiring something. It was about returning to something, where the divine and the seeker unite as one.
Celebrate Vijayadashami
Lord Rama defeated Ravana. Durga defeated Mahishāsura. Two stories. One eternal truth. Darkness loses. What falls today is not just a demon. It is ignorance. Vijayadashami also celebrated as Dussehra is the day the universe resets and ignorance falls. Because the victory was never just Rama’s or Durga’s. It belongs to everyone who faced their own demons. A day to honor the education of the mind, body and soul.