IndianSanskriti
Skandmata

Maa SkandamataThe Divine Mother Who Holds Kartikeya and the Cosmos

Maa Skandamata: The Divine Mother Who Holds Kartikeya and the Cosmos | Sanskriti Magazine
Chaitra Navratri 2026 · Day 5 of 9

Maa Skandamata
The Divine Mother Who Holds Kartikeya and the Cosmos

"In the lap of the mother, the warrior-god found his first courage."
📅 March 23, 2026 ⚪ Colour of the Day: White 🪷 Divine Mother · Lotus · Mercury

There is an image in the Hindu tradition that is at once completely familiar and endlessly mysterious. A mother holding her child. It is the most universal scene in human experience — found in every culture, every century, every corner of the world. And yet when we contemplate it in its divine form — when the mother is the goddess herself and the child in her arms is the commander of the celestial armies — it becomes something far greater than the familiar. It becomes a window into the nature of the cosmos itself.

On Day 5 of Chaitra Navratri, we bow to Maa Skandamata — the mother of Skanda (Kartikeya), the divine commander and son of Shiva and Parvati. In her, we do not merely worship a goddess. We worship the principle of divine motherhood itself — the force that nurtures the warrior, enables the hero, and holds the universe in the steadiest, most fearless, most unconditional embrace that creation has ever known.

"She who worships Skandamata with a pure heart receives not only the blessings of the mother but also, through her, the blessings of her son Kartikeya — for the two are inseparable. The mother always carries the child within her heart." — Devi Bhagavata Purana

The Story of Skandamata: How Parvati Became the Warrior's Mother

To understand Skandamata, we must understand the story of her son — for in many ways, she is defined by him, just as every great mother is partly defined by the extraordinary being she brings into the world and sends forward into it.

The birth of Kartikeya — also known as Skanda, Murugan, Subramanya, or Kumara — is one of the most dramatic stories in Hindu mythology, and it begins with a crisis that threatened the entire cosmos.

The demon Tarakasura had received a powerful boon from Brahma: he could be killed only by the son of Shiva. Since Shiva had been immersed in deep meditation since Sati's death, the gods calculated this was effectively immortality — for who could rouse the great ascetic from his tapas? Into this situation stepped the gods, who sent Kamadeva (the god of love) to awaken desire in Shiva. The plan partially worked — Shiva was disturbed from his meditation, and in his anger, burned Kama to ash with the fire of his third eye — but not before a seed of divine energy was released.

This seed — too powerful to be held even by Agni (fire) or Ganga (the sacred river) — was eventually received by the six Kritikas (the Pleiades star cluster). From these six mothers, Kartikeya was born with six heads, one for each mother who nursed him. Parvati, recognising her son, embraced him — and as she held him, his six heads merged into one. The warrior-god was complete.

Kartikeya went on to lead the celestial armies against Tarakasura and defeated him. And Parvati, in her role as his mother, became Skandamata — the mother of Skanda.

✦ ✦ ✦

The Sacred Iconography of Maa Skandamata

The Lotus Throne

Maa Skandamata is seated on a lotus flower — the Padmasana — which is why she is also known as Padmasana Devi. The lotus throne is the seat of enlightenment, of the bodhisattva and the awakened being. That the divine mother sits on the lotus tells us that motherhood at its highest is not a limitation but a flowering — the full, open-petalled expression of the soul's capacity for love.

Four Arms

She has four arms: two holding lotus flowers, one holding the infant Kartikeya (who sits in her lap), and one in Abhaya mudra — the gesture of protection and fearlessness. The Abhaya mudra raised toward the devotee is one of the most reassuring gestures in all of Hindu iconography: it says, simply and absolutely, "Do not be afraid. I am here."

White Complexion

Skandamata is described as having a pure white complexion — the white of snow, of moonlight, of milk. White in the Hindu tradition is the colour of Sattva — the quality of purity, clarity, and spiritual luminosity. The white goddess holding her golden-bright son is a study in contrasts that reveals a deeper unity: purity as the ground from which all brilliance arises.

The Lion

She rides a lion, just as the other warrior forms of the Goddess. Even in her most tender, maternal expression, Skandamata is not passive. She is the fierce protector. Any mother who has ever felt her child threatened knows this energy: the instant, absolute, all-consuming readiness to fight that arises when what you love most is in danger.

🪷 Maa Skandamata at a Glance
  • Form: Parvati as the divine mother of Kartikeya (Skanda)
  • Also known as: Padmasana Devi (the lotus-seated goddess)
  • Vehicle: Lion — fierce protection; maternal courage
  • Complexion: Pure white — Sattvic purity and luminosity
  • Colour worn today: White — purity, peace, divine motherhood
  • Planet governed: Mercury (Budh) — intellect, communication, agility of mind
  • Bhog (offering): Banana — blesses children with intelligence and health
  • Chakra: Vishuddha (Throat Chakra) — expression, truth, communication

Skandamata and Mercury: The Governance of Budh

Among the Navdurga, Maa Skandamata governs Mercury (Budh) — the planet of intellect, communication, learning, agility, and commercial acumen. Mercury is the planet of the student, the writer, the trader, the scientist — anyone whose work requires clarity of thought and grace of expression.

The connection between the divine mother and Mercury is profound when understood through the lens of early childhood development. It is the mother's voice — her stories, her songs, her explanations of the world — that first activates the child's Mercury, the child's capacity for language and thought. Before any school, before any teacher, it is the mother who teaches the child the most fundamental cognitive skills: how to name things, how to ask questions, how to string words into sentences that carry meaning.

Worshipping Skandamata is said to bless devotees with enhanced intellect, improved communication skills, and success in studies and learning. Students preparing for examinations, writers working through difficult projects, and professionals who depend on clear communication are all encouraged to pray to her with particular devotion during these nine days.

Navratri Day 5 · Maa Skandamata · Sacred Mantra
ॐ देवी स्कन्दमातायै नमः
Om Devi Skandamatayai Namah

सिंहासनगता नित्यं पद्माञ्चित करद्वया ।
शुभदास्तु सदा देवी स्कन्दमाता यशस्विनी ॥

Sinhaasanagata Nityam Padmaanchita Karadvaya
Shubhadaastu Sadaa Devi Skandamaataa Yashasvinee


"Always seated on the lion throne, with lotus-adorned hands — may Skandamata, the illustrious goddess, always be auspicious to me."

The Spiritual Significance of Kanya Puja: Worshipping the Goddess in the Child

Day 5's theme of divine motherhood is a fitting moment to reflect on one of the most beautiful practices of Navratri: Kanya Puja, the worship of young girls as living embodiments of the nine forms of Devi. While Kanya Puja is formally performed on Ashtami (Day 8) or Navami (Day 9), the spirit of it permeates the entire festival — and finds its most direct expression in the worship of Skandamata.

In the Kanya Puja tradition, nine young girls (ideally between two and ten years of age) are invited to the home, their feet are washed by the host family, they are seated on the altar, offered food (the traditional Halwa-Puri-Chana), gifted with new clothes or a small amount of money, and worshipped with flowers, kumkum, and prayer. Each girl represents one of the nine forms of the Goddess.

This practice carries a teaching that is as radical today as it was when it was first instituted: that every girl child is not merely human, but divine. That the divine feminine is not something confined to idols on an altar — it lives and breathes in the daughters, sisters, nieces, and students of the world. Skandamata, the goddess who holds a child in her lap, invites us to look at the children in our lives and see the divine staring back at us.

"The greatest yajna is to raise a daughter who knows her own divinity. The greatest puja is to look at a girl child and genuinely see the Goddess."

Bhog: Sacred Offering for Maa Skandamata

The traditional bhog for Maa Skandamata is the banana. Offering bananas to Skandamata is said to grant the devotee's children with intelligence, longevity, and freedom from illness. Bananas also represent fertility, abundance, and the sweetness of life's simplest gifts. They are one of the most ancient and universally beloved fruits on earth — humble, nourishing, and complete in themselves.

🍌 Banana Prasad Ideas for Skandamata
  • Kela halwa: Mash ripe bananas, cook in ghee with sugar and cardamom until thick and fragrant — a simple, sattvic sweet.
  • Banana milk: Blend a ripe banana with warm milk, a pinch of cardamom, and a drizzle of honey. Offer and serve as a wholesome Navratri drink.
  • Fresh offering: Simply place five or seven ripe bananas on the altar, offer them with prayer, and distribute as prasad. Sometimes the most direct offering is the most powerful.

Why White? The Significance of Today's Navratri Colour

White is the colour of Day 5 — and in the context of Skandamata, it is perfect. White is the colour of Sattva — the quality in Vedic philosophy that represents purity, clarity, and the highest form of consciousness. It is the colour of milk, of the full moon, of the clean page before the first word is written. It is the colour of potential — not empty potential, but the rich, full, ready-to-flower potential of a mother in the moment before she holds her child for the first time.

Wearing white today is an act of opening — of clearing space within yourself for something new to be born. Skandamata's white complexion is not the white of emptiness but the white of pure receptivity — the deepest, most complete form of love, which holds without grasping and nurtures without controlling.

💕 A practice for Day 5: Today, reach out to the mother figures in your life — your own mother, a grandmother, an aunt, a teacher who mothered you — and tell them what their love has meant to you. And if you are a mother yourself, take a moment today to sit quietly and feel the magnitude of the love you carry. That love is Skandamata. It lives in you.

✦ ✦ ✦

The Deeper Teaching: The Warrior Is Always the Child of a Mother

There is a detail in the Skandamata iconography that is easy to overlook but carries immense significance: even as she sits on the lion, even as she holds lotus flowers and raises the Abhaya mudra, she holds in her lap the infant Kartikeya — the baby who will grow up to be the most fearsome warrior-commander the cosmos has ever seen.

The warrior begins in the mother's lap. The courage that will eventually face down demons was first kindled by a mother's love. The strength that will command armies was first drawn from a mother's milk. The fearlessness that will stand between the cosmos and destruction was first learned from a mother who said, with her whole body and her whole heart: "You are safe. You are loved. You can do this."

Skandamata tells us that behind every great act of strength and courage, there is a mother's love. And that love — quiet, white, lotus-seated, unarmed and unarmoured and more powerful than any weapon — is the most fundamental force in the universe.

🙏 Jai Maa Skandamata! Wear white today. Offer bananas at your altar. Chant ॐ देवी स्कन्दमातायै नमः 108 times. Tag a mother today who is your greatest strength. And may the divine mother's love fill every corner of your life with the fearless peace of the lotus. 🪷

Maa SkandamataNavratri Day 5Chaitra Navratri 2026Divine MotherKartikeyaNavdurgaHindu FestivalsNavratri 2026Kanya Puja

You may also like

Search the website

Like us on Facebook

Get daily updates via Email

Enter your email address:

Recent Posts

Yogini Ekadashi 2026 — The Yaksha Who Missed the Morning Flowers, and the Ekadashi That Undid His Curse

On Friday, July 10, 2026, the rare Krishna Paksha Ekadashi of Nija Ashadha arrives. The Padma Purana tells the story of Hemamali — the Yaksha gardener of Bhagavan Kubera in Alaka, whose single morning of distraction with his wife Vishalakshi cost him his form, his wife, and his celestial city. Cursed to wander the earth of Bharata as a leper for a long time, he was at last shown the way back by Sage Markandeya — a single sincere keeping of Yogini Ekadashi.

Jamai Shashthi 2026 — The Story of Maa Shashthi, the Cat, and the Wife Who Was Forgiven

Jamai Shashthi 2026 — The Story of Maa Shashthi, the Cat, and the Wife Who Was Forgiven

On Saturday, June 20, 2026, Bengali households across Bharata will welcome their married daughters and sons-in-law home for the legendary jamai-aador feast and perform the Shashthi Vrata. But behind the warmth lies a story most Bengalis know by heart and most non-Bengalis have never heard — the wife who stole the hilsa, blamed the cat, lost six sons to Maa Shashthi’s wrath, and was finally forgiven. The Vrat Katha, the vidhi, the mantras, and the deeper teaching.

Vat Purnima 2026 — The Wife Who Argued Yama Into Returning Her Husband’s Life

On Monday, June 29, 2026, women across Maharashtra, Gujarat, and southern Bharata will tie red thread around banyan trees and hear the story of Savitri — the wife who walked behind Yamaraja Himself when He came for her husband, and out-argued the Lord of Dharma into returning Satyavan’s life. The Mahabharata’s Pativrata Mahatmya Parva, the vrat vidhi, and why the banyan witnessed everything.

Nija Jyeshtha 2026 — The Real Jyeshtha Begins, and the Calendar Resumes

Nija Jyeshtha 2026 — The Real Jyeshtha Begins, and the Calendar Resumes

With Adhik Maas now closed on the Somvati Amavasya of June 15, the long-postponed festivals of Jyeshtha return — Vat Purnima (June 29, the Savitri-Yamaraja katha), Jamai Shashthi (June 20, the Bengali festival of Maa Shashthi), Sankashti Chaturthi (June 28), Yogini Ekadashi (July 10), and Devshayani Ekadashi (July 16, opening the four-month Chaturmas of Bhagavan Vishnu’s yoga-nidra). A guide to what the next four weeks hold and what the household that kept Purushottam Maas now carries forward.

The Closing of Purushottam Maas 2026 — Adhik Amavasya and the Sealing of the Month-Long Vrat

On Monday, June 15, 2026 — a rare Somvati Amavasya — the intercalary month that bears Bhagavan Vishnu’s own name comes to its close. The Acharyas teach that a vrat is not measured by its duration but by its closing. Here are the Padma Purana’s instructions for sealing the month-long Purushottam Maas vrat: the morning snan, the closing puja with the Vishnu Sahasranama, the day of dana, the Somvati Amavasya gift, and the final sarva-arpana — the offering of all merit at the feet of the Lord.

css.php