Krishna Janmashtami celebrates the birth of Lord Krishna, the eighth avatar of Lord Vishnu, born on the Ashtami (eighth day) of the dark fortnight of the month of Bhadrapada. Krishna's birth is not merely a historical commemoration, it is understood as the moment the divine descended into the world to restore dharma, protect the devoted, and vanquish evil. The Bhagavata Purana and the Mahabharata both describe his extraordinary birth in a prison cell in Mathura, where his parents Devaki and Vasudeva were held captive by the tyrant king Kansa, who had been forewarned that Devaki's eighth child would be his end.
The timing of Krishna's birth at midnight, the darkest, most silent hour, carries deep spiritual symbolism. Darkness here represents ignorance, suffering, and the weight of adharma pressing upon the world. Krishna's arrival at that precise moment signals that divine light emerges not in comfort, but at the point of greatest need. For devotees, Janmashtami is an invitation to reflect on that inner darkness and welcome Krishna's grace as the light that dispels it.
Janmashtami is one of the most widely and joyfully observed festivals in the Hindu calendar. Devotees observe a day-long fast, sing devotional songs and bhajans, enact scenes from Krishna's life, and keep an all-night vigil, culminating in a jubilant celebration exactly at midnight when the birth moment, known as Nishita Kaal, arrives.