Get exact time
Get present weather
Your money converter
Type address for map:
Oxford AL Dictionary:
Sitemap (Index to site)
The World's My Home
UEFA Euro 2012 draw
Visiting Europe
Visiting China
Visiting Morocco
Visiting Malaysia
Online hotel booking
Anything to translate?
HOME                
Useful tips for YouTube
Your own password
Using RssReader
Using Cobian Backup
Internet/Computer tips
Useful software
Inspiring quotes/ideas
2012 Calendar/Events
Brainteasers
Just for laughs
Email spams and scams
Special characters
Six search engines
Old songs new singers
Deezer playlists
Popular English songs
Popular French songs
Sing with the lyrics
English-Malay Dictionary
Malay language course
Learn Chinese pinyin
Chinese characters
Chinese songs
Malay songs
Contact us


This year's Ganesh procession will be held on Sunday August 28, 2011. Full details here.

 Yearly Ganesh procession in Paris 


Husked coconuts nicely piled up...

...only to be smashed to smithereens later.

The video below shows the breaking of husked coconuts during the Ganesh (Ganesha) procession at La Chapelle in Paris on August 31, 2008. What is the significance of the breaking of coconuts? According to Swami Guhabhaktananda, President, Divine Life Society, Malaysia: "The coconut represents the head. When the husk is removed, it is like removing the impurities of the mind. The shell represents the ego. It is said that this shell should be crushed at the feet of the Lord (Ganesha), so that the ego goes away and only the purity of the soul is left."



Getting ready for the procession. The starting point is at Rue du Faubourg Saint Denis near La Chapelle.

A father and his son perched on the roof of a bus-stop at La Chapelle for an unimpeded view of the procession.


The main chariot in the procession to celebrate the birthday of Lord Ganesha, the elephant-headed Hindu deity .

Women holding claypots containing burning camphor above their heads in the incense-filled air.
The 2007 procession.