Pumsavana (Sanskrit: पुंसवन) is a composite word of
Pums +
savana.
Pums mean "to grind, move", and "a human being, a soul or spirit", while
savana means "ceremony, rite, oblation, festival". Pumsavana thus literally means "quickening a being, soul", and it is usually translated as "quickening a male or female fetus, bringing forth a male or female baby". Pumsavana is a rite of passage observed when the pregnancy begins to show, typically in or after the third month of pregnancy and usually before the fetus starts moving in the womb. The ceremony celebrates the rite of passage of the developing fetus, marking the stage where the baby begins to kick as a milestone in a baby's development.
Literature The roots of the
pumsavana ritual are found in section 4.3.23 and 4.6.2 of the
Atharva Veda, wherein charms are recited for a baby boy. The Atharva Veda also contains charms to be recited for the birth of a child of either gender and the prevention of miscarriages, such as in section 4.6.17. Texts, such as the
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, in the last chapter detailing the education of a student, include lessons for his
Grihastha stage of life. There, the student is taught, that as a husband, he should cook rice for the wife, and they together eat the food in certain way depending on whether they wish for the birth of a daughter or a son, as follows, ==Ceremony==