September 2025 is an auspicious month across religions in India and South Asia, marked by Hindu vrats and festivals, Jain parvas, Sikh observances, and Buddhist spiritual days. It coincides with the transition from Bhadrapada to Ashvina month (Vikram Samvat 2082) in the Hindu calendar. The month falls during Dakshinayana (southern solstice) and the Sharad Ritu (autumn season).
🌙 Lunar Months & Panchang Context
Bhadrapada Shukla Navami → Sep 1, 2025
Ashvina Krishna Paksha begins → Sep 8, 2025 (Pitrupaksha starts)
Ashvina Shukla Paksha → Sep 22, 2025 (Navratri begins)
Samvat: Vikram Samvat 2082
Ritu: Sharad Ritu
Ayana: Dakshinayana
Daily sunrise timings range between 6:13 AM – 6:22 AM, and sunset from 6:40 PM – 6:11 PM.
Hindu Festivals & Vrats in September 2025
Major Festivals
Sep 02 (Tue): Ramdev Jayanti
Sep 03 (Wed): Parsva Ekadashi
Sep 05 (Fri): Onam, Teachers’ Day, Milad-un-Nabi, Pradosh Vrat
Sep 06 (Sat): Anant Chaturdashi, Ganesh Visarjan
Sep 07 (Sun): Bhadrapada Purnima, Satyanarayan Vrat
Sep 08 (Mon): Pitrupaksha begins (Shraddha rituals start)
Sep 10 (Wed): Sankashti Chaturthi
Sep 14 (Sun): Kalashtami, Mahalakshmi Vrat ends, Hindi Diwas, Rohini Vrat
Sep 17 (Wed): Vishwakarma Jayanti, Kanya Sankranti, Indira Ekadashi
Sep 19 (Fri): Masik Shivratri, Pradosh Vrat, Magha Shraddha
Sep 21 (Sun): Mahalaya Amavasya (Pitru Paksha ends)
Sep 22 (Mon): Sharad Navratri begins, Agrasen Jayanti
Sep 25 (Thu): Chaturthi Vrat
Sep 26 (Fri): Lalita Panchami
Sep 27 (Sat): Durga Puja Shashthi
Sep 29 (Mon): Saraswati Avahan
Sep 30 (Tue): Durga Ashtami, Saraswati Puja, Maha Ashtami Vrat
Daily Vrat & Panchang Notes
Ekadashi Fasts: Parsva Ekadashi (Sep 3), Indira Ekadashi (Sep 17)
Pradosh Vrat: Sep 5 & Sep 19
Purnima Vrat: Sep 7 (Bhadrapada Purnima)
Amavasya: Sep 21 (Mahalaya Amavasya)
Navratri: Begins Sep 22 → continues into October
Masik Shivratri: Sep 19
Sankashti Chaturthi: Sep 10
Jain Festivals in September 2025
September is very important for Jains as it coincides with Paryushan Parva and related observances.
Sep 2 (Tue): Samvatsari Pratikraman (for some sects)
Sep 3 (Wed): Parsva Ekadashi (observed in Jain tradition too)
Sep 7 (Sun): Purnima – end of Bhadrapada rituals
Sep 17 (Wed): Kanya Sankranti – marks certain Jain rituals
Sep 22 (Mon): Navpad Oli Vrat begins (biannual Jain observance leading to Ayambil fasts)
Jains observe fasting, meditation, forgiveness rituals (Kshamavani) during this month.
Sikh Observances in September 2025
While the Sikh Nanakshahi calendar differs from the Hindu lunar system, some key events observed in September 2025 include:
Sep 5 (Fri): Teachers’ Day – commemorated in Sikh institutions too
Sep 22 (Mon): Agrasen Jayanti (respected in some Sikh communities)
Sep 28 (Sun): Shaheedi Diwas of Shaheed Bhagat Singh (remembrance in Sikh & national context)
Sikhs also observe Sangrand (monthly start of the solar month) → Sep 17, 2025 (Kanya Sankranti).
Buddhist Observances in September 2025
Buddhist communities follow different lunar calendars (Theravada, Tibetan, East Asian). Key observances for September 2025:
Sep 7 (Sun): Full Moon (Purnima) – observed as Uposatha Day (a day of intensified meditation, chanting, and sila).
Sep 21 (Sun): New Moon (Amavasya) – Uposatha Day.
Sep 22 (Mon): Beginning of Sharad Navratri (though not Buddhist, some Vajrayana traditions overlap with Durga worship).
Sep 30 (Tue): Durga Ashtami – Vajrayana Buddhists in Himalayan regions sometimes integrate local goddess worship.
Significance of September 2025
For Hindus: A spiritually dense month with Pitrupaksha, Navratri, and Durga Puja.
For Jains: Season of forgiveness (Kshamavani), austerity, and fasting.
For Sikhs: Sangrand (solar month start) and remembrance of heroes.
For Buddhists: Observance of Uposatha Days with meditation and Dharma practice.
September 2025 is one of the most spiritually active months of the year, combining fasting, ancestor worship, harvest celebrations, and the grandeur of Durga Puja & Navratri. For Jains, it brings Paryushan and Navpad Oli; for Sikhs, the solar month change and community commemorations; for Buddhists, the Uposatha meditation cycles.
This month symbolizes renewal, discipline, and devotion, uniting diverse traditions in India and beyond.
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