Traditional fervour and gaiety mark the celebrations of Baisakhi, which stands for the dawn of a new year in north India.
For Sikhs, this seasonal festival also has great importance as the founding of the Akal Khalsa (Soldiers of the Timeless One) at Anandpur Sahib, the famous Golden Temple of Amritsar - India. The Akal Khalsa played an important role in resistance against Mugha rule. This act of total surrender of one's life to the service of the AKAL, the Timeless One, and at the feet of Guru Gobind Sahib created the Sikh religion. For many centuries after that, the first male child of all families of Hindus in Punjab was ordained as a Sikh.
To mark the celebrations, devotees, irrespective of their religion, throng gurdwaras _ the Sikh place of worship _ and temples in different parts of the area. The celebrations start early as devotees, with flowers and offerings in their hands, proceed towards the gurdwaras and temples before dawn.
Baisakhi, like Lohri, is again a festival of north India and is and a very prominent one for Punjab.
Baisakhi always falls on 13 April and marks the beginning of the solar year.
Every household teaches its children to give dhaan on Baisakhi day which is the first day of the solar calendar, so that throughout the year the feeling of charity remains in the heart.
Vaisakhi (Punjabi: ਵੈਸਾਖੀ, vaisākhī, also known as Baisakhi) marks the the PunjabiNew Year and the beginning of the harvest season in Punjab, India.
Vaisakhi falls in the Nanakshahi calendar (neither in the Amantha- nor in the Purnimantha-calendar) on the first day of Vaisakh month and marks the sun entering Mesha Rasi (this fact is called Mesha Sankranti).
BaisakhiFestival - Extensive site that covers the significance of Baisakhi as a harvest festival of Punjab and the foundation day of Khalsa Panth.