

Hare Krishna

JULY 19TH, 2025
Lord Jagannath is coming soon! We are pleased to host our 15th annual Ratha Yatra festival in the Harrisburg city. This year, there are new and exciting features to this festival and even more things to stay on top of. Read below for more details on the festival weekend and how you can be a part of it!
To donate any amount specifically towards the 2025 Harrisburg Festival of India, you can:
-
Click to visit our Donation page and pay via PayPal
-
Click to donate via CashApp to the user $FestivalofIndiaHbg (Festival of India Harrisburg)
-
Donate via check. To do so, contact Anasuya Devi Dasi.

SaturDAY, JULY 19TH | 11am - 5pm
The Ratha Yatra Festival will take place on Saturday, July 19th beginning at 11 a.m. If you attended this festival last year in Harrisburg, it will take place in the same place. If not, not to worry. Click here for the location of the celebration!
This Ratha Yatra festival takes place in numerous countries all over the world. Originating from the ancient religious culture in Orissa, India, it was brought to the streets of the West as well by His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada. Learn more about this international festival!
Ratha-yatra, or the Festival of Chariots, is a joyous event celebrated for thousands of years in the Indian holy city of Jagannatha Puri, and more recently by Hare Krishna devotees in cities around the world. Another name for Krishna, Jagannatha refers to the ecstatic form of the Lord with large eyes and rugged features who is carried on a gigantic chariot during this festival (and worshiped in an ancient temple at the center of Jagannath Puri.) The festival of Ratha-yatra represents Lord Jagannatha’s longing to reunite with His dear devotees in Vrindavana, foremost among them, Srimati Radharani. According to tradition, the Lord gets lovesick once a year just prior to the festival. To cheer him up, His servants arrange for Him to go on a lavish procession to meet up with His devotees. Lord Jagannatha rides on a grand, three-story-high chariot, accompanied by thousands of onlookers and marching bands with scores of drummers, singers, and dancers. India’s colonial British rulers coined the term “juggernaut” from the large, heavy chariot used to celebrate this festival in the city of Jagannatha Puri.
ACTIVITIES
FREE VEGETARIAN FEAST
MANTRA MEDITATION
CULTURAL MARKETPLACE
DELICIOUS FOOD
LIVE MUSIC & DANCE


HOW TO GIVE BACK
DONATE
To donate any amount towards the Harrisburg Festival of India, you can:
-
Visit our Donate page and pay via PayPal
-
Donate via CashApp here (Festival of India Harrisburg)
-
Donate via check. To do so, contact Anasuya Devi Dasi or Jitamitra Govinda Dasa.
