Diwali is the time for festivities and fun! One of the biggest and most widely celebrated Hindu festival falls on October 30th this year. Annually, Indian communities across the USA celebrate Diwali in grand style with lights, flavor, and color.
Every possible event venue will be filled with Indian lamps & lights as people gather to celebrate the ‘Festival of Light’. Many schools with Indian kids, Indian ethnic community groups, Hindu associations, Indian welfare organizations and corporate businesses that are involved with Indian businesses or workforce celebrate this festival with fervor.
Indians in the US celebrate Diwali with a host of spectacular events with fabulous cultural and musical display! Explore Diwali events and buy your tickets now.

Indian clothing stores sell traditional jewelry, apparel, and outfits. New dresses are a mainstay of Diwali. As much as the clothing, Food is also at the center of every Indian Festival and Diwali is no exception. Indian sweets, snack and savories abound as Indians empty both the Indian savory stores as well as the grocery stores with the required ration to make their own sweets at home.
Various light works, candles, lamps, sparklers light the sky on Diwali – after all, it is the festival of light! Crackers are also widely used though North American communities restrict themselves from making too much of noise and concentrate more on the light.
This year’s Diwali will be even more special for Indians and Indian-American in North America with the launch of the new US postal stamp to honor the festival of Diwali and those celebrating the festival. This comes after a 15-year wait by those in the Indian community and this year marks the first year of the festival after the launch of the stamp and we can expect a lot more Americans to have more knowledge about the festival now that the stamp has been released and that too as a Forever Stamp!

Diwali – Gujarati style!
Gujaratis celebrate Diwali in their own unique style! From Dandiya to Gujarati Food and lighting of traditional oil lamps, Diwali is all about colors and fun. Rangoli is everywhere and so are Gujarati festive dishes with ‘namkeen’, ‘farsan’ and other exotic dishes that elude the taste of the region. Read all about the Gujarati way of celebrating Diwali on Sulekha online community.
