A typical traditional Pongal celebration has a number of rituals attached to it.
The preparations for the festival are quite elaborate.
The place where the Pongal puja is to be performed is cleaned and smeared with dung, a day prior to the festival.
The place chosen for this purpose usually happens to be in the courtyard or an open terrace.
Kolams (ground patterns made out of rice flour) generally drawn with rice flour are special to the occasion.
The idea behind using rice flour is that the insects would feed on it and bless the household.
The kolam also bears sociological significance and is even today religiously performed daily as a threshold ceremony before dawn in traditional Tamil homes.
The Sankranti Rath (chariot) is a typical Pongal kolam.
The ropes of the rath are supposed to be kept open till on the next day they are joined from house to house to symbolize a collective desire to realize an uninterrupted cosmic cycle.
At the centre of it a lump of cow dung holds a five petal pumpkin flower, which is regarded as a symbol of fertility and an offering of love to the presiding deity.
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