diwali
diwali is a Hindu festival when easter is a Christian one!
Easter is celebrated by Christians and diwali is celebrated by Hindus.
Also Easter we don't hang lights up everywhere but at diwali they hang lights in the streets and around their houses.
So that is really the main reasons why diwali and easter are quite different
diwaliis a Hindu festival when easter is a Christian one!diwali is a Hindu festival when easter is a Christian one!
diwlai is a hindus festiavl , easter is a christian festival
diwali remarks return of lord rama. easter remarks return of jesus.
On Diwali-this indicates festival Diwali. At Diwali-It might indicates Diwali is some Place.
The population of christians is more than hindus in UK. Easter is the festival of christians.
Fathers day, Mothers day, Christmas, New Year, Diwali, Halloween and Easter.
Well Easter is celebrated by Catholics and Christians while Ramadan is celebrated by Muslims. Ramadan is a full month of fasting while Easter is not. Easter consists of bunnies and chocolates as a big symbol that everyone has but Ramadan does not have that.
The Mahabharat is the story of war between "kauravs" and "Pandavas". No their is no connection between Mahabharat and Diwali .
28 October 1962 was the date of Diwali according to Deepavali.netDiwali falls on the new moon night (Amavasya) between mid-October and mid-November. Diwali is celebrated for five days according to the lunisolar. It begins in late Ashvin (between September and October) and ends in early Kartika (between October and November).
They are both celebrated by 2 different religions. Christmas is celebrating Jesus's birth Diwali is the festival of light. The festival Diwali celebrates the victory of good over evil, light over darkness and knowledge over ignorance.
On diwali ladies draw rangoli on floor. They draw it using colours.
Easter is not an Islamic holiday; Muslims do whatever they would on any other Sunday when Easter rolls around. As a result, wishing a Muslim "Happy Easter" may be seen as awkward or offensive. Imagine how you, as a Christian, might feel if someone wished you "Happy Diwali".