Diwali is a time for fun and frolic. Children have holidays and there is a mood of happiness, joy and change in the air! Everything gets exciting and this is the perfect time to involve kids in some festive activities that will not only keep them engaged but will also teach them a thing or two.

Fun with creativity

Creativity can be relaxing and fun. Diwali is a festival of lights, so rope your kids in to create some beautiful decorative diyas, figure out the best way to decorate your house with lights or come up with a creative Diwali lantern!

In Maharashtra there is a tradition of building mud forts during Diwali. Making ‘Killa’ as it is called in Marathi is a popular group activity among children. It is a great way to channel your creativity as children design a fort and come up with concepts like tunnels, gufha, water tank, fortification etc. Many a time’s children even create a small village scene at the foot of the ‘killa’. There are small mud figuring available in the market to decorate the fort.

How to involve kids during the festival season of Diwali
Photo Credit – DNA newspaper

Use the power of technology. There are dozens of videos and sites that offer creative ideas to decorate your home.

Fun activities you can do with your children

  • Draw rangoli
  • Paint Diyas
  • Build mud forts
  • Enact a play around the story of Diwali
  • Create a scrapbook on ‘ How we spent our Diwali vacation’

Shopping and Exhibition hopping

Festival times are exhibition times in Pune. We take our kids to various exhibitions for them to see the artisans behind the finished products, and appreciate and understand the creativity involved in it. Apart from this we do shop for clothes and splurge on street shopping!

Some exhibition ideas to scout for in your locality

  • Exhibition of forts created by various groups in Sambhaji Park, Pune
  • Exhibition of household products and other useful items
  • Exhibition of show items, self help group products and other gifting items
  • Exhibition and sale of Diwali special snacks and other items like ‘uptan’, mehendi, etc.
  • Donation drives of various organizations.

Making snacks

We make some snacks at home, just so that kids are involved in the process and understand the hard work that goes into it. I believe cooking is a science. Children see and understand things like measurements, what taste works well with which produce and how items react to heat or cold. We make a few traditional snacks and a few fusion ones which are easy and interesting for kids to make.

How to involve kids during the festival season of Diwali

Best out of waste

Diwali means cleaning time in many of the homes. We too choose Diwali vacations as a time to indulge in some cleaning. Instead of throwing off things we make different sections of the waste. Things that can be reused are kept aside for creating some best out of waste projects. Things that can be donated are labeled and donated to an NGO and things that need to be thrown are packed separately and added into relevant bins for recycling. This is a great activity as children– learn empathy, they learn to reuse and recycle; all while cleaning the house!

Music Festivals

Come Diwali and the music connoisseurs of Pune are in for a treat. ‘Diwali Pahat’ or Diwali morning music sessions as it can be translated into are a common fixture in the cultural calendar of Pune. Most of the popular lawns or cultural hubs host at least one ‘Diwali Pahat’ Till date my children were too young to understand and appreciate classical music, but I hope to take them this year for them to be exposed to a different aspect of the festival.

These are some fun and creative ways to involve kids during the festive season and have some fun! Do share your ideas on how you plan to engage your children during festival celebrations.

Apart from these, a few of us creative mom’s have come together to bring to you some interesting ideas. Do check this video out.

22 Replies to “How to involve kids during the festival season of Diwali”

  1. I involve my kids by asking them to decorate the house by making Rangolis and Torans and they love it .I also ask them to help in Diwali cleaning and shopping to involve them .

  2. I am for sure make them involved with me again this Diwali..they love to be a part of preparation for any festival and your tips are perfect

  3. Wow, great ideas for involving kids in the festivals, my nephew loves the stories so we tell him stories by making characters and interactive story telling. So it’s fun and he leans it too

  4. Kids are a great help if you can recognize and channelize their energy and potential. This is a great post with so many ideas and tips. Nice work. 🙂
    Cheers!!

    UK

  5. Good tips . My kids too enjoy in Diwali activities, be it cleaning the house, helping me in making rangoli, decorating, and even preparing sweets.

  6. That’s a great helpful post-Neha, Mine is so young and he still wants to help. Leaving me unsure on how to eep him engage. I often ask him to bring things of keeping anything back in box/packet which he happily does. once he grows up a little, I can try other ways around.

  7. These are some really interesting ideas to involve kids during the festivities, it’s important for them to understand why we celebrate certain festivals and what better way to involve them in such creative ways. Loved the video!

  8. This year Penguin helped me in making flower rangoli. I loved the ideas to involve kids in the festive season. Next year I would try to engage him more and these would really be handy then. Thanks for sharing.

  9. This is interesting Neha, involving kids into festive activities serve two purposes well. Firstly they get connected to the thought process secondly keep them occupied.
    Love the tips you shared here.

  10. This will definitely be some ideal ways to involve kids in festive preparations. By this not only they remain engaged abd enjoy but they also learn to value our traditional festivals

Leave a Reply to Milan Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.