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Nagpur Cemeteries Aglow with Candlelight Vigils on All Souls' Day

Summary

  • Families gather with flowers, incense, and candles to honor departed loved ones
  • 11-year-old Celesty visits her father's grave, feeling close to him
  • Shriya V Kumar pays tribute to her childhood sweetheart who passed away
Nagpur Cemeteries Aglow with Candlelight Vigils on All Souls' Day

On the evening of November 3rd, 2025, Nagpur's cemeteries were aglow with the flickering flames of candles as Christians from across the city congregated to remember their departed loved ones on All Souls' Day. As dusk deepened, families arrived carrying flowers, incense, and candles, the fragrance of marigolds mingling with the soft murmurs of prayers.

Among the many visitors was 11-year-old Celesty, who comes every year with her mother. Her father passed away when she was only two, but she feels close to him when she visits his grave, whispering, "I never got to grow up with him, but when I come here, I feel like he's still watching over me." A few rows away, Shriya V Kumar, a young woman from Civil Lines, held a bouquet of red roses as she paid tribute to her childhood sweetheart, whose sudden passing left a void she still carries.

Nearby, Annie, a grieving mother, placed two candles side by side, one for her husband and one for her son, a soldier who died in 2006. "Both of them rest here," she said, her eyes welling up. "I come every year to meet them. I've learned to live with the memories, they're all I have left."

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By nightfall, the cemeteries were aglow with hundreds of tiny flames, each one a symbol of faith, memory, and the belief that love, once shared, never dies.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.

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On All Souls' Day, Christians in Nagpur congregate in cemeteries to remember their departed loved ones, lighting candles, placing flowers, and praying to honor their memory.
Celesty, who lost her father when she was 2 years old, feels close to him when she visits his grave, saying "I never got to grow up with him, but when I come here, I feel like he's still watching over me."
Shriya, a young woman from Nagpur's Civil Lines, visits the cemetery every year to place a bouquet of red roses at the grave of her childhood sweetheart, who passed away suddenly, leaving a void she still carries.

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