Śraddha
Sraddha (Sanskrit श्राद्ध, tr. śrāddha, related to faith, faithfulness, worship) - a ritual of offering food to the deceased ancestors in Hinduism.
The addressees of Sraddha's victims are those of the male ancestors of the house master (gryhasty) who, through the sapindakarana ritual celebrated one year after their death, obtained the status of "father" (pitry) and already live in the pitryloki sphere. Feeding the sacrificial ancestors is usually cooked rice with additions in the form of a pinda (pinda). Victims such a gentleman should place mythical ancestors and the last generations of ancestors before a meal. The most prosperous time for the celebration of sraddha is the month of Augustus. The interruption of the sacrifice of sraddha causes adverse consequences, including the transformation of the ancestor from the form of the pitra into the essence of the preta spirit.
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