The festival of nine nights or navarAtri culminates on the tenth day vijayadaSami. This is a day of victory and that is why it is called the tenth day of victory. There are three stories associated with this day. This is the day on which the paaMDavas, the sons of king pAMDu, finished their year of living incognito in the court of king virATa. arjuna, along with uttarakumAra, retrieves his weapons hidden in a Sami tree (vanni or banni) and fights the mighty kaurava army to recover the herds of cows of the king virATa stolen by them. In my opinion, the virATa parva in mahAbhArata is a "must read". This is also the day on which king rAma defeats rAvaNa to get back his beloved sItA imprisoned by the Lankan monarch. This is also the period when pArvati assails the demon mahishAsura (it is said that the name Mysore is a corrupt form of mahishUr). This is also the time when the kings in India used to raid each other for conquest. Of course, in south India, this is traditionally the time for the child to be initiated into studies. I still remember the days when we used to obtain the blessings from the elders with this SlOka -
शमी शमयते पापम् शमी शत्रुविनाशिनी । SamI SamayatE pApaM SamI SatruvinASinI
अर्जुनस्य धनुर्धारी रामस्य प्रियदर्शिनी ॥ arjunasya dhanurdhArI rAmasya priyadarSinI
The Sami leaves destroy the sins as well as the enemies as in the case of the archer arjuna and rAma to see his beloved. In fact, vijayadaSami is also split as vijayada Sami, the Sami that yields victory. Also, vijaya is another epithet for arjuna. daSarA is said to have been derived from the victory over daSyu, the evil demons.
Here is a rangOli with, what else, "V", standing for vijaya and victory. Enjoy!
Regards! - mOhana
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In reply to Some typos - ~m not ~M, by jkmrao