Dev Mogra (also Devmogra or Yaah Devmogi) is a figure in Adivasi mythology, a goddess for the Satpuda mountain people.
It is mainly Totem (kuldevi) to a tribals living for centuries in the surrounding areas specially in Gujarat and Maharashtra.
There is a temple to this goddess on a mountain near the city of Sagbara in the state of Gujarat, India.
[1][2] The temple was said to have been created seven generations back when the then high-priest saw a vision of Dev Mogra.
[2] There is an annual festival at the temple from February to March where an estimated 5 to 7 Lakh (500,000 to 700,000) people attend.
In the area with many shrubs, a circular stone or planted wooden trunk appears to symbolize God.
The village of Dab in Akkalkuwa taluka, located in the picturesque region of the Satpuda Mountains and the Sagbara Taluka (District Narmada), in the vicinity of the Bagla river in Gujarat, are the shrines of Yahamogi Devi.
Yahamogi, Devamogara and Yah Panduri are the names of many tribes whose mothers are revered.
Mother's journey takes place between February and April in the holy festival of Mahashivratri.
King Taramahal was the head of Aambudapari on the western side of the pressure circle.
Devamogramata was the daughter of Manas Devgondar, queen of Baghoria and the goddess of King Goria Kothar.
Due to the marriage of Devamogara mother to King Patha, both Raja Pantha and Vinathakore were good friends and relatives.
Devamogara mother was the fourth child of a rich tribal family in Mavasar Pati (navapur) area of Dab state.
Therefore, they were disturbed by hunger and lay dying under a tree in the forest in a flower vine.
Later, mothers started to live in small huts and due to the trouble and embarrassing treatment by other queens.
But for fear of foreign invasion, later generations of King sons hide the idol of the mother in the ground.
Eventually, the kings of Sagbara state went hunting, and found a mother idol in the forest.
The tribal people store the treasures in a box, so the idol has been established in the closet.
Devotees of mothers come in large numbers from all four states of Gujarat, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh.
During the visit to the mothers, the tribal people tied the basket made of bamboo with white cloth.
It contains rice, gourmet flower wine caps, bangles, sindoor, agarbatti, coconut, betel nut.
At Devamogara, Goad(गड ) is located about half a kilometer to the west of the Mother's Temple.