Durga Chalisa Lyrics in Hindi
Durga ChalisaFull Lyrics
This page keeps the opening verified verses from the source page in a clean devotional layout.
नमो नमो दुर्गे सुख करनी। नमो नमो दुर्गे दुःख हरनी॥१॥
निरंकार है ज्योति तुम्हारी। तिहूँ लोक फैली उजियारी॥२॥
शशि ललाट मुख महाविशाला। नेत्र लाल भृकुटि विकराला॥३॥
रूप मातु को अधिक सुहावे। दरश करत जन अति सुख पावे॥४॥
तुम संसार शक्ति लै कीना। पालन हेतु अन्न धन दीना॥५॥
अन्नपूर्णा हुई जग पाला। तुम ही आदि सुन्दरी बाला॥६॥
Meaning & Significance
Durga Chalisa is one of the most familiar Shakti prayers in Hindi devotional life because it balances protection and compassion. The opening verses immediately establish Maa Durga as the remover of sorrow and the giver of comfort. That combination matters. Devotees are not only asking for power; they are also asking for care, steadiness, and relief from fear.
The text is especially important during Navratri, but its use goes beyond one festival window. Many readers keep it in daily or weekly prayer because the verses are short, direct, and emotionally grounding. The hymn works well when someone wants a devotional text that feels strong without being complicated. It has enough structure for chanting and enough warmth to feel personally relevant.
Another reason the prayer endures is that it speaks in a very practical religious language. Durga is praised as the force behind nourishment, protection, and the order of the world. That makes the Chalisa feel expansive, but not abstract. Readers can connect the verse to real life: family concerns, exam stress, work pressure, travel, or the general need for courage.
For a lyrics page, that means the text should be easy to scan and return to. Users often arrive looking for a prayer they already know, not a long article about the tradition. The page therefore gives them the opening source text first, then a clear explanation of why the verses matter in devotional practice.
The source page contains English explanations after the Hindi verses, but this Lyricshala version keeps the core Hindi prayer text front and center. That makes the page more useful for chanting, reading aloud, and mobile search.
The mood of the hymn also matters. It is powerful without losing gentleness. That is why it works for both group worship and private reflection. Readers often return to it when they want a prayer that feels dependable, not decorative.
Pronunciation Notes
The opening lines should be read at a steady pace. The repeated invocation of Durga works best when the chant sounds measured and calm. If the reader rushes, the devotional shape becomes flatter and less memorable.
On mobile, line breaks help users keep their place and stay in a prayerful rhythm. That is especially useful for readers who are using the page during worship or while following along in a family setting.
About the Shakti Tradition
Shakti devotion centers on divine power as a living, protective presence. In that tradition, prayer texts are not just literature; they are devotional tools. Durga Chalisa fits that role well because it is concise enough for regular use while still carrying a wide spiritual frame.
This page uses the attribution given in the source context and keeps the focus on the devotional function of the text. Readers searching for Durga Chalisa usually want a stable, trustworthy version first and a little background second. That is exactly what this structure is designed to provide.
The page also helps with repeat use. Many readers do not arrive once and leave forever. They come back during festival cycles, weekly worship, and moments when they want the familiar strength of a known prayer. A reliable page format supports that return behavior.
That repeat use is one reason Shakti pages are so valuable in a lyrics site. They are not just searchable pages. They are recitation pages, and people come back to them when the need is real.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Durga Chalisa only for Navratri?
No. Navratri is a major time for recitation, but many devotees read it throughout the year as part of daily or weekly prayer.
Why do readers search for Durga Chalisa in Hindi?
Many readers prefer the Hindi script because it is easier to chant from and feels closer to home devotional practice than transliteration.
Can Durga Chalisa be recited for strength and protection?
Yes. That is one of the main reasons devotees return to it. The prayer is widely used when people want courage, stability, and a sense of divine support.