When Kids Don’t Participate in Puja | PujaZen #hindupuja #aiforgood
For families raising children outside India, one of the quieter challenges is that puja can feel unfamiliar to kids even when it happens regularly at home. The rituals are there, the altar is set up, but the cultural context that would make it feel natural — grandparents, extended family, the neighborhood temple, festivals woven into daily life — is often missing.
This video captures a funny and relatable everyday moment that many diaspora families will recognize instantly. The humor is the entry point, but the underlying question is real: how do you make a tradition feel like it belongs to your child, not just to you?
The answer is not replicating every detail of how you grew up. It is finding the parts that translate — the stories, the sensory experience, the shared moments — and building from there, in the home and the life you actually have.
Related Articles
- Puja for Kids Growing Up Abroad: How to Make Rituals Meaningful
Learn practical ways to help kids growing up abroad connect with puja through meaning, participation, language support, and family ritual habits.
- When Grandparents Aren't Around: Keeping Traditions Alive Across Distance
For diaspora families separated from their elders, the living memory of tradition can feel at risk. Practical ways to keep that thread alive — and what to preserve before it's gone.
- Creating a Family Puja Corner: Involving Kids in the Setup
A simple guide to setting up a family puja space at home — and how involving children in the process helps them feel a sense of ownership over the tradition.
- Small Daily Rituals for Busy Hindu Families
A practical guide for Hindu families who want to keep a daily puja practice without complicated setups — even on rushed mornings and packed schedules.




