2016 Durga Puja Festival Wallpaper
Durga Puja is a time to rejoice in fun and glory. It is celebrated with joy all over India, especially West Bengal, Assam , Bihar, Jharkhand, Orissa and Tripura where it is a five-day annual holiday in worship of Goddess Durga. It is also celebrated as Dussehra and Navaratri in other parts of India. Bengalis all over the world celebrate Durga Puja with joy and enthusiasm. This Durga Puja come together to celebrate the festival with our special collection of Durga Puja ecards and comments. You can also send durga puja messages to your near and dear ones and decorate your desktops with beautiful wallpapers. These durga puja ecards, comments, messages and wallpapers are all for free!!!!
English: Navratri Durga Puja (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: Durga puja at Burdwan (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: Durga Puja, 1809 watercolour painting in Patna Style. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: Festival of the Goddess Durga at Calcutta by Alexis Soltykoff (1859) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: a photo of theme based durga puja (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: Durga puja at Burdwan (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Durga Puja Kolkata WB India (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Godess Durga during Dussserah Festival in BBSR (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Durga Puja in Koln (Cologne), Germany (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: Maa Durga Idol at the Nashik Sarbojanin Durga Puja 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Durga Puja Celebrations in Singapore arranged by Bengali Association of Singapore (BAS) in 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: Street Lights in Kolkata during Durga Puja festivities (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Durga slaying Mahisasur - golden statue. The priest is performing navami arati in front (on festival Durgapuja) (Chittaranjan Park, Delhi, Oct 22, 2004). (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Clay images under preparation at Kumortuli, Calcutta's potters' town. The ten handed goddess with her lion is Durga, the images are prepared for the festival Durgapuja. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: Durga idol at a puja pandal in Siliguri, West Bengal. On the last day of the festivity (Dashami) women offer flowers, vermilion and sweetmeats to the deity as homage and as parting token. They then share this amongst other women and devotees. Married women apply this vermilion to their forehead as a sign of prosperity. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)