Janmashtami, the festival celebrating the birth of Lord Shri Krishna, is observed with great devotion all over India. Temples and homes are beautifully decorated, bhajans are sung, and devotees keep fasts. The celebrations reach their peak exactly at midnight, the moment when Krishna was born.
According to Hindu belief, the stalk of a cucumber is considered similar to the umbilical cord of Lord Krishna. Just as a newborn is separated from the mother by cutting the umbilical cord, on Janmashtami, devotees cut the cucumber stalk in the same way.
This ritual is called Nal Chhedan (meaning “cutting the umbilical cord”). It symbolizes the divine birth of Krishna from his mother’s womb and the painful separation of Mata Devaki and baby Krishna, as he was immediately taken to Gokul to protect him from King Kansa.