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Ganesh
(redirected from Ganesha)

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Ganesh

Hindu god of prophecy, son of Shiva and Parvati; he is represented as elephant-headed and is worshipped as a remover of obstacles. Hindus seek his aid before difficult undertakings, such as an examination or job interview.

Ganesh is shown as pot-bellied, partly because he loves sweetmeats; he also sometimes holds sweets in one of his hands. His elephant's head has one whole and one broken tusk; the whole tusk symbolizes the perfect, hidden, spiritual world and the broken one represents the seen, living world. Another explanation is that he used one tusk to write the Mahābhārata . His vehicle is the mouse, as both animals overcome obstacles in different ways. Ganesh has four arms, and holds a rosary, a goad showing his authority, and a noose showing the need to resist being led by desires, even though he has the power to grant them.

His birthday is celebrated with the festival of Ganesha Caturthi, when small clay models of Ganesh are purchased and used in ceremonies of worship, including immersion in the sea.

Several stories are told about his birth. One popular version is that the goddess Parvati was lonely, so she created a son from scrapings of her skin. She told him to guard the door while she had a bath. When her husband Shiva returned home Ganesh refused him entry, so Shiva cut off his head in anger. Parvati was distraught and Shiva promised to replace the head. He asked a servant to go out and bring back the head of the first living thing he saw. The servant saw an elephant, and dutifully brought back his head, which Shiva placed on Ganesh's body.



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On the eve of the festival of Ganesha, passionately celebrated in India for a god whose special power is in removing obstacles, Seelu may well sense a providential hand in this extraordinary chance encounter; but credit is due to her own presence of mind and to all those who have helped her quietly rebuild her life since her rescue two years ago.
Mike Ponce, a personal trainer who has helped NBA players such as Kirk Hinrich, Rafael Araujo, Casey Jacobsen, Kirk Snyder and Ike Austin prepare for the NBA draft and combine, has been a friend of Efevberha's since he first saw him play as a ninth-grader at Ganesha High in Pomona.
Hicks, for example, complained to the board about a small statue of the Hindu god Ganesha in the Zoo's Elephant Encounter Museum.
 
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