While Deepavali is celebrated across India on Amavasya (new moon night), in Telugu tradition, Naraka Chaturdashi — the fourteenth day of the waning moon one day before Amavasya — is the principal celebration day. The reason is the mythology: it was on this Chaturdashi that Lord Krishna (accompanied by his wife Satyabhama) slew the demon Narakasura, who had imprisoned 16,000 women from across the heavens and earth. The victory was achieved before dawn, and to celebrate it, families perform the famous Abhyanga Snanam ritual before sunrise.
The Abhyanga Snanam Ritual
Abhyanga Snanam (oil bath before sunrise) is the defining ritual of Naraka Chaturdashi in Telugu households. Every family member — from elders to children — wakes up well before sunrise, applies sesame oil (gingelly oil) or coconut oil mixed with turmeric all over the body, and then bathes. The oil is believed to purify the body of sins and negative energies, just as Krishna's victory purified the world of Narakasura's evil. Bathing before sunrise on this specific day is considered equivalent to bathing in the Ganga.
Crackers at Dawn
Immediately after the Abhyanga Snanam, families burst firecrackers — traditionally at 4 AM or before dawn. This is unique to Telugu Deepavali. The crackers symbolise the sound of celebration that went up when Narakasura was defeated. Children are dressed in new clothes after the bath, and the family gathers for the first time that Deepavali season for prayers and sweets. Homes are lit with diyas in the evening for Lakshmi Puja, but the morning is the emotional heart of the celebration.
Sweetmeats and Gifts
Naraka Chaturdashi is also the primary day for exchanging sweets and gifts. Traditional Telugu sweets prepared for this day include: Chegodilu (fried rings of rice flour), Gavvalu (shell-shaped rice flour snacks), Ariselu (jaggery and rice cakes), Bobbatlu (sweet flatbread with chana dal and jaggery filling), and Murukulu (savoury rice flour snacks). Families exchange these sweet packages with neighbours, relatives, and friends — the exchange of homemade sweets is considered more auspicious than store-bought ones.