Monday, 24 December 2007

My Sabarimala Yatra

I just returned from a week long trip to Sabarimala. I returned fresh and spiritually rejuvenated after having darshan of Lord Ayyappan.

I took the decision to take the trip at the spur of the moment when my colleague asked me If I would be interested. After I said "Yes" things began to happen; I wore the mala on 4th November 07 and for 41 days had a serene spiritual existence by making slight adjustments to a life already disciplined during my growing years.

  • Started bathing in cold water instead of hot water and did this twice a day, once in the morning and once in the evening instead of just the mornings
  • I offered prayers twice a day with Naivedyam instead of just once in the morning
  • Earlier I used to drink Tea before my bath. But that was changed to taking Tea after offering my prayers in the morning
  • A visit to the temple, usually twice a day, but once definitely was a routine. Visiting Ayyappan temples is a priority but I managed to visit only the Ayyappan temple in Anna Nagar
  • Attended all but one Ayyappa bhajan conducted by the group
  • A life of celibacy is a must so I abstained
I don't smoke or eat non-vegetarian food but drink alcohol on social occasions so there weren't any cravings. But I did face some challenges in terms of food since I travelled a lot on official trips abroad during this period. I'd had to be carefull in restaurants while choosing dishes to ensure they don't contain even traces of egg. Most dishes will catch you unaware as they are passed of as Vegetarian.

And so 41 days just whizzed past. One week before the trip my soles had some swelling and I couldnt place my feet on the ground. I was limping. My family was anxious. I had a pus formation in the sole, apparently during this period I used to walk barefoot to the temple and it had rained one day and my soles had become soft. I remember that I had stepped on a stapler pin but then removed it immediately. But then here it was giving me trouble. So on the midnight of 10th Dec 07 I went to the nearby RIGID hospital and had the pus surgically removed, not everyone was happy at Home, Office or in the Sabarimala Group to see me with a big bandage around my ankle. The decision to go for surgery paid off and the pain slowly receded. My hopes of walking on Sabrimala slowly returned with each passing day.

On 14th December 07 we (about a 100 people!) had the "Coconut Rubbing" function and on 15th we had the Irumudi Pooja at 3pm and boarded the Trivandrum Mail at 8:00 pm at Madras Central Station. This is probably my lightest trip. I usually travel heavy - Laptop bag a mid sized ballistic Nylon suitcase heavy enough to get past the aircraft checkin counters but this time it was just my Irumudi bag and my Shoulder bag. The shoulder bag had few items of clothing - 2 sets of vests and briefs, 2 sets of Veshti and Shirt; a wollen shawl, a bedsheet, a small plate and tumbler, a torch and its batteries, Some Toiletries - Toothbrush, Tongue Cleaner, Paste, Small Soap, Talcum Powder; Some Medicines - Combitide and Asthalin inhalers ( I am a borderline asthmatic), Imol, Azithral, Norflox TZ, Electral, Plaster and Bandages.

The Eveready torch light was disappointing with 2 dry cells giving only 9 Lumens of illumination. I should have carried my Maglite it gives out about 14 Lumens. I thought I needed a bigger one and so picked up one at Ratna Stores in Pondy Bazaar. A costly mistake. I would have loved to take a SureFire Torch.

We reached Kottayam the next morning at about 8am and took the bus to Peermedu. The temperature at Peermedu was so low that the chill wind could be felt in our bones even mid-afternoon. After lunch we took rest followed by tea and a trip to a Krishna temple close by followed by a bhajan and then dinner. Guruswamy told us we'd leave for Pillmedu at 6am the next morning.

We woke up at about 3am and packed breakfast for the group and boarded our buses at 6am we then alighted at Kumily and Took the KSRTC bus and reached Pillmedu at 8:00am from where we began our 13 km trek with our Irumudi bag on our heads and our shoulder bags to the Sannidhanam. We briefly stopped someplace in middle of the forest and had breakfast and resumed the trek. At one particular place I smelt elephant dung and told my fellow swami's in the group who acknowledged that they smelt it too, so I guess these pachyderms must have been somewhere close by. This route is treacherous and difficult and elephant and tiger sightings are common I believe. We were lucky! After 4 hours at about quarter past 12 we reached the Sannidhanam and dropped our shoulder bags and went for darshan with our Irumudi bags, climbed the 18 steps and had darshan of Lord Ayyappan.

We stayed in Sabarimala for two nights, during this time I had several darshans of Lord Ayyappan including the Pushpa Alankaram where I had the good fortune of carrying a basket full of flowers for the Lord. I also had the last darshan the next day before the Nada is closed to the tune of Hariharasanam. I also visited the Panchamatha Devi temple and rolled the coconut (Rs. 7), kept blouse pieces (Rs 50 for the blouse piece, Rs 7 for the ticket and Rs. 10 for the Poojari) and had it blessed by the Lord, did the Vedi Vadipadu (bursting crackers in your name) for Rs 5 . I was lucky to get a bell, every swami who goes to Sabarimala for the third time ties a bell its a belief that the person who gets it is lucky.

I bought a Ayyappan diary (by Nightingale, Srinivasa Fine Arts) and asked my Guruswamis to sign it. I'd like to keep it as a memory of my first trip.

On the 19th December we began our descent to Pamba at 6am and enroute I performed the Saranguthi which every Kanniswami should perform when he visits Sabarimala. It is usually done before reaching Sabarimala and since we took the Pillmedu route I had to be content in doing it only during my return journey. At about 7:30 am we were at the Kannimoola Ganapthy Temple. After a quick breakfast (I skipped) we took the KSRTC bus to Erumeli switched to our chartered buses to reach Kottayam at 12:30 pm. We had lunch, rest and some tea and then reached the railway station. We took the Trivandrum - Chennai mail at 5:30 pm for Chennai. The next day we reached Chennai Central at 7:15 am went directly to Guruswamy's house and removed our Mala and then returned home spiritually content of having had a memorable darshan.


Sabarimala - Temple Timings

Ayappan Diary - By Nightingale

Srinivasa Fine Arts, Sivakasi has brought out a 2008 Ayyappan Diary under the Nightingale brand. At about 120 Rupees at Sabarimala for a medium sized one its slightly expensive and is probably available for less elesewhere. Nevertheless it contains acid free paper and excellent glossy pages of Ayappan photos.

Monday, 10 December 2007

Shri Pathala Pratyankara Devi Temple - Ashtami Yagnam Calendar

Shri Pathala Pratyankara Devi Temple, Morattandi, Puducherry (Pondicherry)

For quite sometime my wife has been telling me that she wanted to visit the Prathyankara Devi Temple near Pondicherry. So we finally made plans to visit it on Amavasya (New Moon) day on 9th December 2007. We were five of us and since my esteem could take only 4 plus my driver we decided to hire a Chevorlet Tavera. The Sumo was not a choice because of our rather rough experience when we took on the road to visit the Narasimha Kshetrams, I however would have preferred a Scorpio but the travel guy didnt have one.

So we started at 5am that day picked up the others at Vadapalani and headed towards Dindivanam by 5:45 am. We didnt use the ECR because we needed a vehicle permit to enter Pndy and to obtain a permit we needed to approach the Check Post at Pondy from Dindivanam side. The four laned GST Road took us about an hour and half (we did 120 kmph) to reach Dindivanam we took the left and headed towards Pondy.

About 15 minutes later we stopped by the Panchamukhi Anjenaya Temple to have Darshan. We saw the amazing floating stone used by the Vanara Sena while building the bridge to Lanka, kept in a brass vessel and is supposed to have been brought in from Rameshwaram. We had Prasadam (Chakkra Pongal) and then set out for Morattandi.

We asked for directions and nobody seemed to be aware of Pratyankara Devi Temple, Pathala Kali Temple evoked some responses. The Morattandi temple is about 3 kms from JIPMER so if you are take the ECR road reach JIPMER and ask for directions.

The Prathyankara Devi temple is located in middle of five graveyards, though I doubt even a single one exists today because I tried hard to spot any remains and didn't see any.

Friday, 9 November 2007

Gingee Fort


On the way to Thiruvannamalai we passed by Gingee. See the spectacular fort on the hilltop. Clicked these snaps on my return journey.

Arunachalam Temple - Thiruvanamalai - Panchamrutham

Don't forget to buy the panchamrutham when you visit the temple. The packing label is in the same traditional style. After seeing this I thought I should collect India's traditional / handmade items and their packing and post them on this blog. To start with I am posting the packing label from the Panchamrutham Bottle. Going forward I'll probably be posting a lot of labels from Sandanam (sandal) bottles, Agarbathi Packs, Temple Handouts etc. If you think you have something interesting to be displayed to the world please post them on the comments.

Arunachalam Temple - Thiruvanamalai

Shri Maha Pratyankara Devi Temple - Sholinganallur

This past Sunday (4th November 2007) we visited the Shri Maha Pratyankara Devi Temple at Sholinganallur on the Old Mahabalipuram Road (OMR). It was a spontaneous decision only the day before and told our driver that we'd be starting at 7:30 the next morning.

However it was an overcast Sunday, we managed to leave our house by 8am. The heavy drizzle limited driving visibility to a few yards. The stretch of road from Madhya Kailash till Perungudi has been asphalted with 3 lanes on either side with a generous amount of palm trees and other saplings lining the edges. For those of us who have known OMR in its earlier days its a pleasant surprise that we are catching up in infrastructure. We sailed through this stretch by taking in the new surroundings as though it was a dream. A few minutes the first pot hole brought us back to reality. Considering that a substantial stretch of the OMR is being laned and widened the driving stress on a rainy day is tremendous. Asking for directions only once at the bus-stand we took the road, that connects OMR to ECR, on our left. We reached the temple after about 30 minutes. We almost missed the temple when one amongst us spotted the kerala styled Gopuram just above a camouflage of trees and roof tops.

We picked a garland of lemon and the Archana Plate from the shops lining the approach to the temple. There are several deities to be worshiped in the temple complex
  1. Nagraja Nagyakshi
  2. Badrakaali
  3. Viraja Kal Bhairavar
  4. Dharmasaatha
  5. Subramanyar (Murugan)
  6. Uchista Ganapathy (Ganesha / Vinayaga)
  7. Panchamukha Anjeneyar (Hanuman)
  8. Shanaisvarar
  9. Neela Saraswathi
  10. Vaarahi
  11. Sarabeswarar
  12. Mahalakshmi
  13. Annapoorni
  14. Agni Devan
  15. Sivasakthi
  16. Shri Maha Pratyankara Devi
Shri Maha Pratyankara Devi is believed to remove the ill effects of black magic. On every Amavasai (New Moon) day, a Yagna is preformed at the temple using chillies. Inspite of the amount of chillies (bag fulls) being used the atmosphere is devoid of any pungent odour. To participate in this Yagna the temple charges Rs. 5000, you also have the option to pay Rs. 102 to have your Name, Gotram, Nakshatram and Raasi chanted during the Yagna.

After darshan, the hungry lot we were after skipping breakfast which we do when we visit a temple, had some Vada and tea at the nearby tea stall. Having hot Tea during a drizzle, when the cold wind caresses your face while you sip the steaming brew is something I cherish till today. We took the same route to return but this time the junta was out doing their Sunday shopping not caring for our driver's desperate honks and some of them missing the car by a whisker then swearing as we passed them by to reach home about an hour later.

Friday, 31 August 2007

Prep for the journey ahead

After my one-day whirlwind trip of the six Narasimha Kshetrams (will blog on this sometime) I decided to explore India and our spiritual heritage especially the divya desams. I plan to do it entirely by Rail or road and avoid the comfort of air travel. To start with I picked up the roadmaps of Tamilnadu, Kerala, Andhra and Karnataka from the Landmark bookstore at Spencers Plaza. My other arsenal include a Sony Cybershot DSC-P72, An Olympus Binoculours (to enjoy the view during long drives) and an Apple iPOD 80GB Video.

Sunday, 29 July 2007

Narsimha Kshetram Yatra - Six in a Single Day

My family decided to do a Yatra of six Narasimha Kshetrams in a Single day. A lofty ordeal considering that the kshetrams must be scattered around the length and breadth of the country. So or research began about two weeks in advance for an achievable itinerary. So I scoured the internet and cam up with the following list.

Tamilnadu
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  1. Parikal near Villupuram
  2. Singri near Pondicherry and Cuddalore
  3. Poovarasan Kuppam near Panrutti
  4. Anthili near Villupuram
  5. Singaperumal Kovil near Chengalpet
  6. Polur near Thiruvanamalai
  7. Sinthalavadi near Thiruchy
  8. Namakkal near Salem
  9. Singar Kovil near Vellore
  10. Narasingapuram near Kanchipuram
  11. Avaniyapuram near Kanchipuram
  12. Palaya Sevaram between Chengalpet and Kanchi
  13. Sholingar near Walajapet
Karnataka
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  1. Thirunarayanapuram at Melkote
  2. Kunjala near Sosale
Andhra Pradesh
----------------
  1. Simhachalam near Vishakapatnam
  2. Katri near Kurnool
  3. Ahobilam near Nandyal
  4. Mangalagiri near Vijayawada
  5. Yadagiri Gudda near Hyderabad

After delibrations we decided on Poovarasan Kuppam, Singri, Parikal, Anthili, Singaperumal Kovil and the Narasimha Shrine at Velacherry. So on 29th July a full moon day we left Chennai at 5am by a Sumo. The light drizzle and foggy roads made the journey very pleasant. We had plenty of tea during the drive to keep us warm. We took the Maduravoil route and joined GST the road and drove towards Villupuram. Close to Villupuram we took the bye-pass to Kumbakonnam and sought directions to reach Poovarsan Kuppam. The Lord here is in Soumya (graceful) form with his consort Lakshmi.

After having darshan at Poovarsam Kuppam we set out for Singri. Infact Singri should have been first on the itinerary because we could have taken the detour on the Pondy Bye-pass from Dindivanam and reached here. To reach Singri we took the road to Siruvanthadu then onward to Madhukarai and Kariamanickam village to reach the Pakkam Coot Road. We had to see directions to locate the temple. Lord Narasimha is in his Ugra (fierce) form. We had darshan and immediately left for Parikal.

We reached Panrutti took the byepass to Ulundurpet-Parikal to reach the Villupuram-Ulundurpet highway and after a few kilometers detoured off the highway to reach the shrine. We made it just before the shrine was being closed after the morning rituals. We had darshan and still didn't have any solid food to eat.

We then took the Thirukovilur road and reached Arkandanallur. This is actually the railway station for Thirukovilur. We took the small road next to the police station (opposite to the railway station) and drove along a small hillock sometimes wondering if we were on the right track. Infact Anthili is relatively less known even among the locals because of a Divya desam temple at Thirukovilur which happens to be more popular among pilgrims. So we drove along and the I sighted two small shrines near a dried up lake bed on the right. What seemd very modest was in fact the temple. Fortunately the temple was open and we had darshan and a long chat with the Archakar who explained the Sthala Puranam. The Madhava Seer Sri. Vyasaraja is said to have visited Anthili and had darshan of the LordNarasimha atop a hillock that seemed like Garuda to him. He consecrated a temple for Hanuman during the glorious rein of the Vijayanagar emperors. The Archakar comes here every morning cooks Prasadam and does the daily rituals and leaves in the evening. It seemed to me that very few people visit the place because of the lack of awareness.

From Anthili we reached the outskirts of Villupuram and for the famished lot we were had Lunch (Sic) at a wayside Dhaba. All that was available was Chapatti and Kurma. We drove along the GST road towards Chennai and reached Singaperumal Kovil had darshan of Trinethra Narasimha Swamy and drove towards Tambaram. We took the by-pass from Tambaram and reached Velachery at about 8:30pm and had darshan of Lord Narasimha. With this we completed six Narasimha shrines in a single day without proper driving directions. I hope this post encourages others to visit these shrines.