6

Can one use ghee coated Akshadhai (Akshat raw rice) for daily pooja in place of flowers?

What is the best material to be used in absence of flowers to perform pooja?

2 Answers 2

4

Krishna Says in the Gita 9.26:

patram puspam phalam toyam yo me bhaktya prayacchati tad aham bhakty-upahrtam asnami prayatatmanah

patram—a leaf; puṣpam—a flower; phalam—a fruit; toyam—water; yaḥ—whoever; me—unto Me; bhaktyā—with devotion; prayacchati—offers; tat—that; aham—I; bhakti-upahṛtam—offered in devotion; aśnāmi—accept; prayata-ātmanaḥ—of one in pure consciousness.

TRANSLATION - If one offers Me with love and devotion a leaf, a flower, fruit a water, I will accept it.

Some believe the purport of this verse is to say this is the designation of what the Lord asks for, and therefore we should not offer other things. However, so many Saints have emphasized that it is the devotion that counts, and so I believe this verse is really emphasizing the simplicity of offering even just a leaf with devotion is okay. We should not be so concerned with following all the complexities of puja if they intrude on our devotional bhava. Swami Satyananda Saraswati is someone who has taught me this in particular, that if one is lacking the objects asked for in the puja, then offer it with your heart. I am sorry I cannot provide more specific reference than this, but his website and puja instructions are on shreemaa.org . The purpose of puja is to offer love and devotion to the divine, so if one cultivates this in the heart, then it has been said it can be more powerful than puja with the actual items.

I believe it is up to your own feeling of devotion. I have found in my own experience that it has changed over time. I used to try to replace the items with other things, but now I find myself doing more of manisaka puja (from the mind and heart). Do what suits you best, remember that the devotion is the primary purpose of puja, God sees that above all recipe or protocol for puja. There are many stories in Hindu lore about this.

Simply: The best substitute is love from your heart. How you show that love is up to you.

2
  • Edit suggestion: You can use blockquotes when quoting text, shlokas from scriptures or other websites/blogs. Also, it's a good idea to include a link to the shloka or at least cite the scripture/shloka # as reference. So in this case it would be BG 9.26. Commented Dec 28, 2015 at 20:03
  • This is an incorrect answer.Use of akashatas(yellow rice) is prevalent as the substitute of flowers or anything else.
    – Rickross
    Commented Feb 21, 2016 at 9:09
1

Yes. You can offer akshahatha (raw rice mixed with saffron powder and kumkum). This has been recommended by all acharyas - shankara, ramanuja and madhwa.

You can also make a mala from raw cotton. Spread the cotton in round shape in regular intervals from a thread. This you can offer it as mala.

The best substitute for flowers/leaves for puja is freshly made akshatha.

4
  • 1
    You should cite sources.
    – The Destroyer
    Commented Jan 12, 2016 at 12:58
  • While this is the correct answer the one above has got more upvotes.Only will misled those who will be reading this.Akshatas are to be used as substitute of everything that you are missing in puja including flowers.Even when you don't have gandham(sandal paste) you can offer akshatas instead by saying gandham artham akshatan samarpayami.
    – Rickross
    Commented Feb 21, 2016 at 9:07
  • @Rickross Why don't you make that mantra as an answer?
    – user6981
    Commented Mar 23, 2018 at 16:40
  • @KrishnaShweta Ok i will look for some reference first.. i think i can get them. I know it is allowed to use either rice or even water when certain actual ingredients are missing.
    – Rickross
    Commented Mar 24, 2018 at 5:29

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .