Thousands celebrate Diwali across North West

A crowd of people stand around in a courtyard playing with sparklers and holding up their phones. Image source, Liverpool Ganesh Temple
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Around 250 people celebrated Diwali at Liverpool Ganesh Temple

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Thousands of people are preparing to enjoy food, dancing and fireworks later as Hindus across north-west England come together to celebrate Diwali.

About 1,500 Hindus are set to attend celebrations at Shree Swaminarayan Mandir temple in Oldham later, while about 100 people began their celebrations with prayers at Gujarat Hindu Society in Preston.

Anil Kara from Shree Swaminarayan Mandir Oldham said the temple had spent around a month preparing for its Diwali celebrations.

"We have a dedicated team of volunteers who love cooking and have been in the kitchen all week," Mr Kara said.

A man stands inside a colourful temple wearing a white button up shirt. He has a red mark painted on his forehead and is smiling. Image source, Richard Stead/BBC
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Anil Kara says the temple has been planning for a month

"We have a dedicated team of volunteers who love cooking and have been in the kitchen all week," Mr Kara said.

"This morning they started at [04:00 BST] to start cooking all the fresh and hot stuff."

The Shree Swaminarayan Mandir temple is celebrating Ankoot, or Annakut, which is when food is prepared as an offering to Hindu deities.

Diwali, or the Festival of Lights, is a five-day Hindu festival celebrated by Hindu people across the world, as well as by Sikhs and Jains.

It is known as the 'festival of lights' because houses, shops and public places are decorated with small oil lamps called 'diyas'.

Two men dressed in traditional Indian dress with white stripes painted on their arms hold plates of flowers as part of a Hindu pooja ceremony. Image source, Liverpool Ganesh Template
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The community made offerings of food and flowers

Mr Kara said the temple was raising money from its Diwali celebrations for the nearby Dr Kershaw's hospice.

"When we built this temple three years ago, we had this scheme that every year we will team up with a charity," he said.

Bowls full of cakes and bakes goods are placed along a tiered orange arrangement. A statue of a Hindu deity is place in the centre of the stand. Image source, Richard Stead/BBC
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Food is prepared to offer to Hindu deities for Annakut

On Monday, around 250 people came through the doors of Liverpool Ganesh Temple to mark the festival of lights.

One of the temple's leaders, Vijayarani Sureshkumar, said it was a day of "lots of treats, family and fireworks".

She continued: "We are from South India so we celebrate Diwali as good destroying evil.

"People come to prayers, meet their friends and family, have food and in the evening watch the fireworks."

A large pale brick temple with a decorative entrance and has towers at the back. Silver bollards are out the front. Image source, Richard Stead/BBC
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The Shree Swaminarayan Mandir teams up with a different local charity each year

At Preston's Gujarat Hindu Society, Vice President Ishwer Tailor said worshippers had laid out 108 different types of food as offerings to the Hindu gods.

An older man stands inside wearing a dark blue button-up vest with a long-sleeved shirt underneath. He has a red mark painted on his forehead. Image source, Ollie Samuels/BBC
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Ishwer Tailor is the Vice President of Gujarat Hindu Society

He said: "We pray to gods that in the coming new year we are blessed with all those varieties of food and also we have good health and a prosperous life, and pray for peace in the world."

A large crowd of people sit on the carpet inside a temple which is decorated with colourful flags which are hung from the ceiling. The ceiling is painted with Hindu gods. Image source, Ollie Samuels/BBC
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Around 100 people gathered for morning prayers during Diwali

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