This sacred tradition redefines menstruation—not as taboo, but as symbolic of fertility, creation, and the earth’s regenerative energy.
What is Ambubachi Mela?
It is a celebration of divine femininity. Held from June 22–26, the festival honors the goddess’s natural cycle in a unique ritual rooted in Tantric and tantric-Shakti beliefs.
During this time, the temple observes a symbolic closure—reflecting the goddess’s menstruation—with complete rest and seclusion. Traditional restrictions extend beyond the temple: devotees refrain from farming, cooking, and even reading religious texts.
The temple doors close early on the first day (June 22, around 2:56 PM) and remain closed for three days. Behind the scenes, tantric rituals and purification ceremonies are performed by priests and initiated sadhus in a highly secretive manner.
At approximately 3:19 AM on June 26, following a sacred bathing and prayer ceremony, the temple doors reopen. The reopening marks the goddess’s return from her period, and devotees throng the sanctum to receive blessings and sacred prasad—including angabastra (the garment that covered the yoni stone) and angodak (holy water from the temple spring).
Why This Ritual Matters
Honoring Nature’s Cycles
Ambubachi reframes menstruation as sacred—not impure. As part of a Tantric fertility festival, it celebrates—rather than shames—the goddess’s natural rhythms, aligning with the monsoon and conjugating earth’s regenerative energy.
Social and Cultural Echoes
This four-day ritual echoes once-practiced social pauses: agricultural work stopped, women respected, and spiritual focus heightened. It also serves as a public reminder of women’s power and the need to honor natural cycles personally and collectively.
Pilgrimage & Economy
The festival draws lakhs of devotees, sadhus, tantrics, and cultural tourists. Local authorities prepare extensively—carpeting barefoot paths, installing CCTV cameras, and setting medical camps—to manage the influx of pilgrims and vendors who converge near the temple.
Doors Reopen: What to Expect
On June 26 at 5 AM, approximately 20,000 early devotees waited as the doors reopened. This follows an earlier spike in attendance—around two lakh devotees—on the final day before closing.
Prominent visitors—like the Assam Governor and Chief Minister—were present to bless the reopening. The CM prayed for national progress, and the Governor prayed for Assam’s well-being.
Night-time restrictions have slightly reduced crowds this year, but the energy around the reopening remains electrifying.
Ambubachi Mela is not just a regional observance—it’s a radical celebration of the feminine cycle, centuries old yet deeply resonant today. In a society that still often hides or ignores menstruation, this ritual lifts it up as holy, transformative, and powerful.
When the temple doors swing open after four days, it’s more than an announcement of devotions resuming—it’s a powerful reminder that nature's most basic processes are worthy of reverence.