Snana Yatra 2025: Puri Jagannath Temple gears up for bathing festival on Monday
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The ancient coastal town of Puri is fully prepared to host the annual Snana Yatra — the sacred bathing festival of Lord Jagannath, Lord Balabhadra, and Devi Subhadra — on Monday, 30 June 2025, with the district administration and police deploying extensive security and crowd-management measures at the 12th-century Jagannath Temple. Lakhs of devotees from across Odisha and the country are expected to converge on Puri to witness the divine spectacle.
What is Snana Yatra
Also known as Deva Snana Purnima, the festival marks the birthday celebration of the holy triad and is observed on the full moon day of the Jyestha month of the Hindu almanac, typically falling in May or June. It is considered one of the most significant annual rituals of the Jagannath Temple tradition, drawing pilgrims from across India.
During the ritual, the deities are brought to the Snana Vedi Mandap (bathing platform) from their sanctum sanctorum in a ceremonial procession called Pahandi Bije. Servitors then pour 108 pitchers of water infused with sandalwood paste, camphor, and other sacred substances over the deities. Following the bath, the siblings are adorned with elephant masks in a ritual known as Gajanana Besha.
Schedule and Ritual Timeline
According to the schedule released by the Shree Jagannath Temple Administration (SJTA), the holy triad will be brought out of the sanctum sanctorum between 5 am and 7 am on Monday. The bathing ritual is scheduled to be completed between 12 noon and 2 pm.
After the Snana Yatra concludes, the deities will be moved to the Anasara Gruha — an isolation chamber within the temple — where they will remain for 15 days until the commencement of the Ratha Yatra. This period of seclusion is a deeply held part of the temple's ritual calendar.
Security Deployment and Crowd Management
Around 80 platoons of police personnel will be deployed inside and around the Jagannath Temple and at strategic locations across Puri to manage traffic and crowd movement. According to Odisha Police, the deployment includes four Commandants/SP-rank officers, 14 Additional SPs/Deputy Commandants, 31 DSPs/Assistant Commandants, 83 Inspectors/Sub-Inspectors, and 340 SIs/ASIs, supported by specialised units.
Advanced security measures are also in place, including Quick Action Teams (QATs), sniffer dog squads, rooftop surveillance, Integrated Command and Control Centre (ICCC) monitoring, anti-sabotage checks, and marine security arrangements along the coast.
Facilities for Devotees
Help desks, Police Control Rooms (PCRs), medical assistance centres, and dedicated support facilities for senior citizens, women, children, and Divyang devotees will remain operational throughout the festival. The Puri district administration, along with health and fire services departments, has coordinated to ensure the smooth and peaceful conduct of the event.
With the Ratha Yatra to follow in a fortnight, the Snana Yatra marks the formal beginning of Puri's most celebrated religious season of the year.