1994 | Odia Kohinoor Calendar

A major festival celebrating womanhood and the preparation of the soil, marked by festivities, special dishes, and traditional games.

: It provided detailed daily "Panji" elements essential for 1994, including: Panchang Elements : Tithi (lunar day), Nakshatra (star), Yoga, and Karana. Auspicious Windows

: Marked unlucky hours called Bela and Kala Bela to avoid new tasks.

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The Legacy of the 1994 Odia Kohinoor Calendar: A Cultural and Agricultural Guide

Autumn brought the grand celebrations of Dussehra. Immediately following it was Kumar Purnima, where unmarried girls worshipped the moon, a date strictly calculated by the moonrise timings printed in the 1994 almanac.

His dedication to accuracy and authenticity caught the attention of the , the highest religious authority of the Sri Jagannath Temple in Puri . At the time, the only available almanac, published by the Arunodaya Press, contained errors. Trusting in Aminul's meticulous work, the Pandit Sabha approached him in 1935 with a sacred responsibility: to produce a new, more accurate almanac. The first "Oriya Kohinoor Press panjika" was born, a publication that would go on to become an indispensable guide in every Odia household. A major festival celebrating womanhood and the preparation

If you need to know specific festivals or auspicious dates from 1994,

The calendar indicated the precise dates for the lunar month of Kartika, a highly sacred time for fasting and prayer.

The year 1994 in the Gregorian calendar corresponds roughly to the years and 2050–2051 of the Vikram Samvat , which are the traditional dating systems used in the Panji. 1. Major Festivals and Jagannath Temple Rituals This public link is valid for 7 days

Despite being owned and published by a Muslim family ( Aminul Islam and later his descendants), the Kohinoor Panji is the most trusted source for Hindu rituals in Odisha.

In 1994, just as they do today, families relied on the Kohinoor Calendar to determine: