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Committee on Multicultural Initiatives and
Diversity - COMID The
mission of the Committee on Multicultural Initiatives and
Diversity (COMID) is to foster our community and
environment where the richness of our diversity is
recognized, respected and embraced. Our view on diversity
includes, but is not limited to, ethnic, racial and
linguistic heritage; religious traditions; gender; sexual
orientation; age; and socioeconomic status.
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DIWALI - October 21,
2006

Diwali means “Lighting
the Lamps”. Every year Diwali
announces the celebration of the favorite festival
of Indians. Homes are decorated; sweets
are distributed by everyone and thousands of lamps
arelit to create a world of fantasy. Of all the festivals
celebrated in India, Diwali is by far the most glamorous and
important. Enthusiastically enjoyed by people of every
religion, its magical and radiant touch creates an
atmosphere of joy and festivity.
The ancient story of how
Diwali evolved into such a widely celebrated festival is
different in various regions and states of India. In the
north, particularly in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Bihar
and the surrounding areas, Diwali is the day when King
Rama's coronation was celebrated in Ayodhya
after his epic war with Ravana, the demon king
of Lanka. By order of the royal families of Ayodhya and
Mithila, the kingdom of which Sita was princess, the cities
and far-flung boundaries of these kingdoms were lit up with
rows of lamps, glittering on dark nights to welcome
home the divine king Rama and his queen Sita after 14 years
of exile, ending with an across-the-seas war in
which the whole of the kingdom of Lanka was destroyed.
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