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Mannargudi Rajagopalaswamy Panguni Garuda Sevai

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Rajagopalaswamy goes on a night long procession around the Mada Streets providing Garuda Sevai
It’s just after 7.30pm on Wednesday (March 22), the 12th day of the 18 day Panguni Brahmotsavam and a few rounds of fire crackers have gone up around the temple complex alerting the residents to the start of the much awaited Garuda Sevai procession at the Rajagopalaswamy temple in Raja Mannargudi, referred to as Dakshina Dwaraka. It is a temple where many  physically challenged Dikshithars have been performing service for decades (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2021/09/mannargudi-rajagopalaswamy-temple.html).

53 year old Nattaamai Murugaiyan arrives at the temple leading a team of 40 Sripatham members. He has been at the temple since the time he was 8 years old. His Grandfather, uncles and his appa had performed the Sripatham service and his family has performed the role of the leader of the Sripatham team for several generations. He himself has been carrying Rajagopalaswamy on his shoulders since the time he was 18 years old.

Garuda Vahana Alankaram
Earlier in the day, the set of hereditary priests, comprising of those in their 20s and a few in their 60s and 70s, worked for hours to get the Lord decorated atop the Garuda Vahana. It is an alankaram that each of them take great pride in. From the crown to the vastram, from the glittering kaasu maalai to the large flower garlands, they pay attention to minute aspects to beautify the already handsome perumal. At 6pm, when the screen opens for devotees to have their first look at Rajagopalaswamy atop the Garuda Vahana, one spots a certain delight in each of the priests having worked on this special presentation.

Huge Crowd inside the temple complex
It is a huge temple with 7 prakarams, 16 towers, 18 Vimaanams and 24 Sannidhis housed in 33 acre area with an equal area (33 acres) for the temple tank. A majestic looking moolavar Para Vasudevan seen with a conch, maze and discus and a beautiful and alluring utsavar Rajagopalaswamy with dangling Kundalam in one ear and an earring in the other ear keep the devotees devotionally glued.

The lights have gone up at the Rajagopuram and the entire place wears a grand festive look. A loud devotional cheer erupted when the Sripatham lifted the Lord for the night long procession. Devotees had lined up the entire long pathway to the Eastern Raja Gopuram, among the tallest in TN at 154 feet. The Deepaarathanai at the Raja Gopuram is an important moment at the start of the procession and the faces of devotees lit up as the Bhattar’s hands went up.
The biggest crowd of the evening was at the Theradi where devotees in several hundreds thronged for the darshan of the Twin Kudai being posted atop the Lord. Every year, this is a location where Rajagopalaswamy stops for close to an hour but with the makeshift bus stand that has come within 50 yards, he made a move quite quickly into the busy bazaar street.

Much to everyone’s surprise he was at Pandaladi at the East end of bazaar street by 9.30pm. It is the location where the Garuda Sevai devotee donors are provided a special darshan and mariyathai.

The big team of Sripatham personnel take a well earned rest after a 90 minute procession through the crowded bazaar street.  Nattaamai Murugaiyan is seen mingling with his team members. He is a Mason by profession but has been performing this as a Kainkaryam for almost five decades now. He looks back at the Garuda Sevai evening from almost five decades ago “People think that this is big and unmanageable crowd but when I was young, this day would attract devotees from all the surrounding villages. There would be no place to stand from the Sannidhi to end of the Bazaar street. This was the big day in the year for them as they all came here ahead of the procession to have darshan of the Moolavar Lord and then of Rajagopalaswamy on the Garuda Vahana. Now most of the original inhabitants have migrated to cities and the Garuda Sevai crowd is not like what it was in the past. People now watch the procession on social media (whats app videos and so on) and they don’t make the time to spend the night through the procession.”
“It was a nightmare for Sripatham back then as we had to wade through the huge crowds in those decades.”

Performing as a Kainkaryam
Each of the Sripatham members get paid Rs. 700 for a procession.  But Murugaiyan says that for him and his team members, this is service to Lord. "A lot of the members are farmers and masons and we do this as a Kainkaryam carrying on the service that our forefathers had performed and passed on to us.”

Murugaiyan’s sons too have shown interest in the Sripatham Service and they too are keen to carry on the kainkaryam into the future.

Garuda Sevai on the Chapparam
Past 10.30pm, the street lights in Mannargudi are switched off, an indication that that the tall Chapparam is ready to make its way from the Raja Gopuram to Pandaladi.  By 11pm, the Sripatham personnel mounted Rajagopalaswamy on to the Chapparam in the same way the personnel at Thiru Kannapuram Divya Desam did on the Garuda Sevai night in Maasi (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/03/thiru-kannapuram-maasi-garuda-sevai.html) and Perumal began his night long procession on the Chapparam via the Four Mada Streets. 

Back on those streets, where in the century gone by traditionalists lived in thousands, ladies are drawing devotional white kolams in front of their homes to welcome the Lord on this Garuda Sevai night. The entire South street is dotted with pulli kolams late into the night. The noise from the huge crowd at 8pm has transformed to silence with residents waiting quietly in front of their homes to present coconuts and fruits to Rajagopalaswamy and to have a peaceful darshan on this 'dark' night following the Ammavaasai.

Time is up for Nattaamai Murugaiyan and his team members for the night and they are back home for a well earned rest as the Chapparam turns on to the Mada Street. For the 40 members, the next service starts early next morning when the Lord makes his way on the Chapparam to the Theradi for them to carry Rajagopalaswamy back to his abode via the Raja Gopuram.

For Chief Murugaiyan, it is all about leadership and team work and he is seen motivating his members to perform this service to the best of their ability as he heads back for a well earned night’s rest. 

Mannargudi Prasanna Dikshithar

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The hereditary priest at Rajagopalaswamy Temple has created 40 Next Gen Agama specialists over the last decade
When he completed his schooling in the early 1990s, Prasanna Venkatesa Dikshithar, now 46, had no inkling to become an archaka. His forefathers belonged to the hereditary archaka clan at the Rajagopalaswamy temple in Mannargudi. His grandfather Krishnaswamy Dikshithar had served as an archaka for over five decades at the temple but like in most remote temples in TN, the scenario in the 1960s and 70s had turned sour. Original inhabitants moved away from the temple towns to cities. There was an oversupply of archakas at the temple and the number of days of service per year was minimal but devotees were few and Thattu Kaasu was pretty low. 

The scenario in his childhood days led him to focus on academics during the first 15years of his life. Prasanna Dikshithar recalls his childhood “My grandfather would come back home by 9am as there were no devotees. He would go back and wait in the huge temple complex but most often devotees were elusive. There was absolutely no income in terms of Thattu Kaasu.”

Transformational late teens - Academics to Agamas
Till he was into his mid teens, it was likely he would get away from the hereditary temple service for the future did not seem bright. But a dramatic turn of events led him into continuing the hereditary service “I had just joined B.Sc in the Poondi College when the revered Chempakesavan Dikshithar suddenly took me under his fold and initiated me into the agamas and pooja  kramams. It lasted a full three years and revitalized my interest in temple service.”

He then went to Tirupathi where he learned Sanskrit and Divya Prabhandham for two years. At the turn of the century, he learned Rig Veda for a couple of years in Kumbakonam from the current head of Ahobilam Mutt.

At 23, he got married (a pre requisite to perform archaka service there) and joined the Rajagopalaswamy temple to continue the hereditary service.

A surprise call to teach Agamas
In Thai of 1998, when he was 21, he had gone to Thiru Nangur for the 11 Garuda Sevai. Muralidhara Swami had seen him then and much to Prasanna Dikshithar’s surprise called on him over a dozen years later with an invitation to teach the students at the Nangur Patshala. “I was a young then in 1998 and surprised that he remembered me from that trip. I was hesitant to take this up as it was a big responsibility and not sure if I would be able to discharge this given my other engagements.”
By this time, he had also begun to perform consecration events and was a regular at utsavams at the Banaswadi Perumal temple, where his appa Sridhar Dikshithar had been the chief priest for over three decades. The consecration events - annually about 5 large ones - that he has anchored over the last decade has helped bring out his leadership qualities and he has been able to carry and build his agama team members.

Creating the Next Gen Agama Specialists
He wanted to give himself six months to see if he would fit into this role. A decade later, he is delighted that he had taken the call to continue “Soon after I began taking the agama classes, I found I connected well with the students and the engagement has now lasted a dozen years. Not only was I sharing my learnings, but also my knowledge has improved dramatically as I have often been challenged by the students with inquisitive questions.”

He has spent a week to 10 days at the Patshala every month over the last decade.  40 students who have undergone agama initiation have graduated from the Nangur Patshala and that is something that he is particularly pleased with and one that has given a special satisfaction.

It has been a dramatic transformation for Prasanna Dikshithar in every way. From the financially challenging times that his grandfather experienced in the 1960s and 70s when there were no devotees at the temple outside of the big utsavams, he has had a rewarding life and says that Rajagopalaswamy has been very kind to him and given him all that he could  have asked for from this life. In terms of devotional service, he has come to be well respected for his alankaram capabilities and in the way he manages the utsavams and the devotees. He has been sought after for consecrations from across geographies including outside Tamil Nadu. The biggest happiness for him though has come from the opportunity to teach young students and help them graduate. The creation of the next generation of agama specialists has been the most fulfilling experience for Prasanna Venkatesa Dikshithar. 

Mylapore DCP Rajat Chaturvedi

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Tech Grad and a Passionate Guitarist DCP aims to minimise crimes in Mylapore through Technology initiatives
'Make Marina a Safe Zone, Mylapore a No Crime Heartland of Madras'
Over the next ten days, he is hoping to experience and enjoy the Kapali Panguni Utsavam in the same way he managed the Chitrai Utsavam in Nanguneri Divya Desam
When the cool looking Lucknow born Rajat Chaturvedi was transferred to Mylapore to take charge as the Deputy Commissioner of Police a couple of months back just ahead of the big Panguni Utsavam at the Kapaleeswarar temple, one may have wondered if the short period was enough for him to understand the scale of the festival and challenges for the police force especially on the Chariot and Arubathumoovar days. 

It was a big surprise to find him all at peace during the two long discussions at the Thiru Kalyanam Mandapam over the last week in preparation for the Panguni Utsavam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/03/kapali-devotee-aparna-panguni-utsavam.html). Chain Snatching, Vehicular Thefts, food wastes, over-crowding and traffic management pose big challenges for the Mylapore Police every year during this utsavam. As he sat next to temple EO R Hariharan, DCP Rajat was simply unfazed and there is a reason to it. He told this writer that in his previous posting in the Tirunelveli region, he came to experience a festival just as large as this.
Nanguneri is the headquarters of the Vanamamamali Mutt and usually attracts big crowd during the Chitrai utsavam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/03/nanguneri-vanamamalai-divya-desam.html).

He proudly looks back at the festival management “I was in Nanguneri for the Brahmotsavam at the Thothadrinathan temple. Over 50000 people were there for the Chariot festival and I led the Police team at this utsavam. The devotion of the people was an eye opener. There was minimal chain snatching or drinking or thefts during the entire festival that attracted huge crowd. I saw devotion at its best there.”

Kapali Panguni Utsavam from Tuesday
With that experience behind him, he seems to be in complete control of the Panguni Utsavam and its arrangement. He understands the challenges and instinctively knows what the solutions are. For example, crowd management inside the temple complex is a high priority for him as he sits down with Inspector M Ravi to discuss the entrance and exit routes during the Chariot day and Arubathumoovar utsavam.

Tirunelveli to Mylapore - Caste based Crimes to Cyber Crimes
From a crime heavy Tirunelveli region to the traditional heartland of Mylapore, it might seem quite an extreme shift.  “Yes, I experienced Caste based crimes during my stint in Tirunelveli. To someone new to that region, it seemed illogical for people to be at caste war but that was the reality and I had to be on my toes every minute prepared for some caste led eventuality. Even small issues got escalated and the streets turned a battle field”, Rajat told this writer sitting in his office on Kutcheri Road on Saturday morning.

Call 1930 for Cybercrime intimation
Mylapore is completely different for Rajat and at the other end of the criminal spectrum. From hardcore physical brutality on the ground in Tirunelveli and around, he is experiencing high rate of cybercrimes in Mylapore. “There is very little awareness among people as to how they are being easily conned. There is a 1930 number to call and report immediately about such crimes but people are not using this service and hence there is a time lag between the crime and the complaint.”

High on his priority list is to bring down the rate of cybercrime in the Mylapore region but he strikes a note of caution ‘Cybercrime is still in its nascent stage and one should not be surprised if the rate shoots up in the coming years. I want to educate people on the preventive steps to safeguard themselves from being conned. Another key feature of cybercrime is that the perpetrator is usually in another city unlike a physical thief. But there are immediate solutions available to citizens and I will be taking initiatives to bring down the cybercrime in Mylapore.”

DCP Rajat plans to soon have a meeting with Banking officials and Nodal Officers on faster resolution of cybercrimes and to freeze accounts as quickly as possible after the incident.

Reduce Vehicle Thefts and Chain Snatching
Among his first initiatives is to increase the number of CCTV cameras in the Mylapore Zone. “By end of March, the plan is to install high end 8 MB CCTV cameras at 135 locations on the streets of Mylapore. This will act as a deterrent for the wrong doers and is a big step in crime prevention as well as detection. Also, the monitoring control of the CCTVs has been moved to our office on Kutcheri Road. This will lead to a faster resolution of crimes through instant actions” says Rajat.

A three year AMC has also been provided for these CCTVs to ensure that their shelf life is longer.

Tech Grad - Passionate about Technology
DCP Rajat, a Computer Engineer from Mathura, is high on tech implementation in the police force. He had a big programming interest while at college and undertook programming projects. He believes that Technology can play a big role in reducing crimes. His vision for the Mylapore zone is to strengthen the Cyber Police stations. He is keen to execute the LIVE Mobile tracking for lost phones to help faster recovery.

He is also pushing for his team members to increase the usage of the Smart Kaavalar Mobile App “When I am on my rounds every day, I stop by and personally showcase the value of this app to my colleagues with a practical on the ground display at the time of the offence. “I am confident that the entire Mylapore team will soon begin to use the Smart Kaavalar app in a much bigger way and through that I believe the speed of resolution will be higher.”

A Guitarist and a Footballer
Rajat is a guitarist and was part of the band while at college in Mathura. For a while over a decade ago, he also explored the possibility of becoming a professional guitarist but then the Police duty took over and he does not find much of a time these days to play the guitar. He is also a footballer and plays in the annual inter office tournaments. When he finds times, he can be seen at the Nehru stadium practicing with his colleagues.

His wife Shreya Gupta too is from the IPS and the couple are dedicating their lives to public service “In these three months, I have not had time to even enter a shop, let alone a holiday outing within the city. I love beaches but I find hard pressed in making time for a walk along the beach.”

Making Marina Safe
However, he is at the Marina beach every Sunday on professional patrolling duty to monitor and manage the huge crowd that visits the seashore. One of his big personal ambitions during his Mylapore stint is to make the Marina a completely safe place for people. He is confident he will be able to bring down the crime rates on the beach. He is now planning to secure an ‘All Terrain Vehicle’ for his team so they could drive on the sand while on their crowd management duty. "It is extremely physically sapping for our team members to be walking from one end of the beach to the other while on duty and hence the ATV will be a big value add for them in discharging their duties better. I have also deployed anti-theft teams to reduce crimes along the Marina and positive results are already being seen.”

FIR for Vehicular Thefts
Mylaporeans had in the past raised issues about the challenges relating to filing FIRs at police stations for vehicular thefts. Rajat is keen to fast track this process. FIRs for vehicular thefts will be accepted and loaded on to the Smart Kaavalar App.“I believe that such apps will be the biggest aid for police in tracing vehicles. Another tech feature is the use of FRS (Face Recognition System) and this too helps in fast tracking and identifying the criminals from the data base. ”

Rajat is quick to point out the assistance from his predecessor at the Mylapore office Disha Mittal “She is ever ready to provide insights on the peculiarities in Mylapore and has been of great support to me in these three months since I took charge here.”

He is also working closely with the Chief of Traffic Police with whom he had worked earlier in the Tirunelveli zone.

Be Considerate to Police Personnel
He also has a soft corner for his colleagues “They are over worked most of the time. There are no fixed time of duty for the police personnel. Mylapore is also an area that the CM passes through every day and hence there is extra deployment of personnel during that period."
                 Nanguneri Thothadri Nathan Divya Desam

Starting Tuesday (March 28), the young 32 year old DCP Rajat Chaturvedi, who arrived in Mylapore only this January, will experience and enjoy the Panguni Utsavam at the Kapaleeswarar temple in just the same way he enjoyed the Vananamalai Divya Desam utsavam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2010/04/vanamamalai-thothadri-nathan-nanguneri.html) in Chitrai last year. He is looking forward to this challenge and is confident that big crowd days at the utsavam will go off well for the entire team is well prepared. With the blessings of the Divine Couple, Kapaleeswarar and Karpagambal, it is likely that DCP Rajat Chaturvedi will transform Mylapore into a No Crime Zone.

Kapali Panguni Utsavam Photo Menace

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Mobile Hands go up in Unison as Photo Menace flares up again 
As early as June 2016, this section had featured a story on the mobile menace at the Parthasarathy Perumal temple during the Narasimha Brahmotsavam. Exactly a couple of years later, in 2018, this section had also welcomed the move to ban mobile phones inside the Meenakshi Amman temple in Madurai. It is now seven years since that photo menace story. Unfortunately, things have only worsened at temples in Tamil Nadu. 

After a couple of years of subdued Utsavam where people, especially senior citizens, were skeptical of venturing out in large numbers because of the Pandemic, this year at the Panguni Utsavam at Kapaleeswarar temple, the Adikaara Nandi and Rishabha Vahanam processions have attracted huge crowds with devotees lining up the entire Sannidhi street till the Chariot. While the devotional wave is back with renewed vigour, the issue of photo menace presented its ugly face once again this week at these popular processions.

With phones becoming ‘smarter’, holding a phone high over the head and clicking photo and video shots of Kapaleeswarar has become a new fad. The first activity at each of the processions on the first five days of the Panguni Utsavam this week has been for the mobile camera to raise high for that exclusive first click, mostly at the cost of darshan for many of the devotees at the back row. 

With the proliferation of camera phones, it has now become a common practice for devotees to take photographs at all places inside the temple including of the Deepaarathanai. Within a few minutes, these exclusive photo shots are circulated all over the world via social media platforms. The hands that rose to take such shots are now serving as a great hindrance to devotees especially at important sacred moments. 
This has become a sour point for many devotees at this festival, though increasingly they are becoming a minority. On Friday evening, at the start of the Naga Vahana procession in front of the Raja Gopuram, there were fervent shouts from senior citizens to get the devotees to down their phones below the head but it fell on deaf ears and it became difficult for these devotees to have a clear darshan of the Lord during the Voyali, a special performance by the Sripatham Personnel much to their disappointment.

S Aparna, a devotee at this festival for the last 15 years, is upset that the Naga Dance that devotees had become so used to on the fourth evening in front of the Raja Gopuram has been missing for a few years now more because of the 'devotee menace' (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/03/kapali-devotee-aparna-panguni-utsavam.html). In the past, it had been a performance by the Sripatham that devotees specifically came to watch.

Though there is a dramatic uptick in devotee numbers in temples across the big temples in TN, it just seems that worship is heading in the wrong direction. Not so long ago, the typical comment from a mother was to get the child to invoke the blessings of the Lord with folded hands. But now,  the message is completely different - Young children are being encouraged to take video shots that is then immediately posted on the social media.

Interestingly even the Shivachariar's own display photo is often of him performing the Deeparaathanai, such is the new trend!!!

Intense Photo contest
Better access now to sleeker phones with good cameras has led to intense competition among the devotees who are now vying with each other to showcase their photography and videography skills than enjoying Kapaleesawarar's beautiful alankaram and the presentation of the Voyali on the Sannidhi Street.

The instant drive to showcasing their presence at the festival is taking people away from the essence of  devotion. There is a new found eagerness to show that they belong to this new modern world of hi-tech phones. If the hands are always in possession of a camera phone, where is the possibility of the folded hands before the Lord? 

One of the service personnel at the temple who has been performing here for three decades said that the over enthusiasm with gadgets at this utsavam will lead towards frustration and hold people back from visiting the utsavam in the future. The utsavam is about devotion and not photography, he said. Even if they are using the mobile cameras, they will have to do so in restrained manner without disturbing the other devotees. And there lies the big challenge.

During the sacred Thevaram presentation of the Othuvars, some of whom had come in all the way from Vriddachalam, Sankaran Koil, Thoothukudi and Sirkazhi, as part of the Ekantha Sevai procession inside the temple early on Sunday morning, devotees who turned up in good numbers after the night long Rishabha Vahana procession that lasted 9hours, once again found it challenging to either have a darshan of Kapaleeswarar or take a look at the artistes who were singing praise of the Lord in special musical tones.

Maintaining a certain decoram at the Panguni Utsavam
Kapaleeswarar Temple and the four Mada streets are not mere public places that people have a complete right over. There is certain sanctity to it especially during the procession and even more so during this annual Panguni Utsavam when the Lord makes his way on the large vahanams. There is an unwritten devotional code of conduct that one needs to adhere to when one is near the Divine Couple but such codes are becoming a thing of the past much sooner than we can imagine.

It is unlikely this trend of capturing the first exclusive photo will be reversed. For those devotees, who experienced Kapali in a different way in the years gone by have to first come to terms with this new trend and accept this as the norm for the future and accordingly place their expectations at all the Utsavams in the future, more so during the Panguni Utsavam.

Of course, they can take some solace from the recent order of the Madurai High Court that directed a ban on the use of mobile phones inside TN temples. Like the implementation at the Meenakshi Amman temple in Madurai, a strict enforcement of the ban may be the sought after solution for the traditional devotees who are finding the photo menace a difficult norm to accept.

Until then, the YouTube and Facebook 'Likes' may rule the roost at Temple Utsavams.

Srirangam Ranganatha Prabhandham Ghosti

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Do not move your lips - Prabhandham Members to this Devotee on the East Uthira Street on the Eight Street Procession of Namperumal on Panguni Uthiram
In the several hundreds of Brahmotsavams attended by this devotee (writer), this is the first time he has been asked not to move the lips during a street procession. It saddened me for I was reciting within myself and could not be heard even by the person standing next to me.

Interestingly after almost three hours near the Vellai Gopuram, one of the Prabhandham members tried to monitor my lip movement (or at least that's when I noticed that they were monitoring my lips!!!) to confirm that I was indeed reciting the same sacred verses that they were reciting.

This section had featured the group clash at Pazhaya Seevaram between Thenkalai and Vadakalai during Varadar’s trip to Mukoodal in January 2019 (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/01/pazhaya-seevaram-battle-for-vaishnavite.html). But that was between two real large groups that evening. 

Here I was reciting all alone (as a devotee) all to myself for over three hours since the start of the procession on Wednesday morning and finally the movement of my lips and the synching with their recital was spotted well past 9am. And they took objection to a single devotee’s quiet recital.
The message is clear: No devotee can utter the sacred verses even quietly, even far behind the Ghosti or on the pavement of the Uthira and Chitra Streets of Srirangam.

Thankfully over the last decade, MAV led Prabhandham Ghosti (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/07/thiruvallikeni-prabhandham-ghosti.html) has not objected to me coming far behind or using the pavement of the Thiruvallikeni streets reciting quietly the sacred verses during the Parthasarathy or Narasimha Brahmotsavam (I take this opportunity to thank Shri. MAV Swamy (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/05/ma-venkatakrishnan-thiruvallikeni-divya_16.html) for not having objected over the last 10 years - there too my recitals are not 'heard'- Its his Prabhandham Ghosti that has been my greatest inspiration)
If this is all about Thenkalai vs Vadakalai fight in various Divya Desams in TN, then that is for the two sects to sort out may be with Mutt Chiefs. But what did sadden me on the morning of the Panguni Uthiram (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2008/03/panguni-uthiram-festival-2008-at.html) was for the Ghosti to pull up a single devotee’s silent recital and lock his lips!!! 

Even more saddening was for the prabhandham members to focus on my lips than on their own devotional recital. Keeping my lips tied was of paramount importance to them than their own recital. 

I wondered today as to where we are headed with devotion.
Surprisingly, the HR & CE (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/12/kapali-temple-eo-kaveri-passes-away.html) - late EO Kaveri specifically handed me permission to recite there - and the Kapali devotees have thus far allowed me to recite the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham loudly inside their temple complex over the last year and a half. Till they object, that’s where my future lies!!!

Kapali Panguni Utsavam 2023

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After the Pandemic years, crowds back in large numbers at the Utsavam
8 hour Adikaara Nandi, an all night long Rishabham, 5 1/2 hour Chariot Procession, Arubathumoovar till midnight and a Grand Thiru Kalyanam marks this year's Panguni Utsavam 
Kapaleewarar was one of the few temples that saw the annual Panguni Utsavam take place as per plan both in 2021 and 2022 but the seniors and the children had stayed back from the Utsavam in those two years. Over the last ten days, the crowd was back in large numbers and it took Arubathmoovar till midnight to return to the temple. As is the new trend, everything is mega and on a large scale at temples these days. A big and colourfully decorated stage for the Thiru Kalyanam and large screens across the temple complex symbolised the growing nature of annual utsavams.

March 1 
The first big event leading up to this year’s Panguni Utsavam at Kapaleeswarar temple came just after 8pm on the first of March. At the Moolavar Sannidhi, hereditary priest Balaji Gurukal read out the Lagna Patrikai and the timings for the eagerly awaited Rishabha Vahanam, the start of the Chariot procession and the Thiru Kalyanam. A few days after this event, the new EO R Hariharan ( he took over on temporary deputation following the death of Kaveri) directed the erection of the pandal across the temple complex. The entire temple wore a festive look leading up to the Panguni Utsavam.

The Prep Meetings
In the week leading up to the Utsavam, EO Hariharan anchors two meetings of various teams including the police, fire services, corporation, voluntary organisations and the EB to discuss threadbare the preparatory plans for the utsavam. The meetings set the agenda on the action points to be carried out by different teams during the festival.

Mooshiga Vahana Procession
At 9pm on March 27, on the eve of the Utsavam, Narthana Pillayar made his way around the Mada Streets on a Velli Mooshika Vahanam as a pre cursor to the festival. One could sense that there was excitement building up to the fest with devotees discussing amongst themselves on the important processions to mark/block in their calendar in the coming week.

Flag Hoisting
It was an early start the next morning (March 28) with several hundreds gathering around the Dwajasthambam for the flag hoisting event. By 8.30am the entire temple reverberated in devotion following the vedic recital. The flag had been hoisted and it was time for the Pancha Moorthy procession. The first morning procession is usually a quiet affair and with year end work and the board examinations still on, it turned out to be so that Thursday morning. 

The big crowd lands up for the procession in the night at 10pm. A devotional roar erupts even as Balaji Gurukal presents the Gopura Vaasal Deeparaathanai. Shortly after, the Sripatham personnel were up with their Voyali which has become popular in recent years. An unwelcome addition has been for the devotees’ hands going up over their heads with the phone both when the screen is lifted in front of the Thiru Kalyana Mandapam for the first glimpse as well as in the Sannidhi Street to shoot the dance. It takes three hours for the Lord to make his way around the Mada Streets on this first night of the Utsavam. That is a question this writer is asking in this story on temple processions going well past midnight each day of the Utsavam when most have gone to sleep. More on this later in the story.

Thiru Maahalam Bros’ Nagaswaram drowned out
The Thiru Maahaalam Brothers, TS Pandyan and TS Sethuraman (who has been overseas for a long time), come all the way from near Koothanur  to present Nagaswaram through the first night of the procession but for a large part of the early procession their devotional tunes are drowned out by the Periya Udal. 

An early alert to the EO of the temple, R Hariharan, at least a week ahead of the festival to direct the Udal members to move well ahead of the procession has no impact. Subsequent alerts too have no impact as the beating of the drums blanks out the Nagaswaram recital in almost every night procession during the first half of the fest leaving the outstation artistes sad (The EO did assign a team member but it did not have the necessary impact and nothing changed). These are important aspects to the festival and the authorities have to pay attention to these devotional details in addition to getting the mega things correct at the festival. These devotional aspects get sidelined and the artistes are left to themselves to find a solution when the temple authorities should be ensuring that deviations are corrected. Much later, in the 2nd half of the festival Asthana Vidwan Mohan Dass himself went ahead and repeatedly pleaded with the Udal artistes to get them to move forward in the procession.

Chairman sponsors outstation artistes but does not know their sadness
This has an even more interesting dimension to it. The outstation Nagaswaram roped in from different parts of TN by Mohan Dass is sponsored by the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Kapali temple and this is printed prominently on the Utsavam invitation every year!!! One wonders why the Chairman would not initiate corrective action on this (it is likely he does not know for he has almost never been through any part of a procession in the last many years!!!). Most of the outstation artistes return saddened as the pleas to the Udal artistes bear no fruits. Of course seen as a standalone presentation, the devotional play of the Udal artistes along with the Shiva Adiyars is remarkable and the devotees surrounded them all along enjoying the drums but they were insensitive to the fact that the Nagaswaram with its lesser output was being easily out-drummed by their presentation.

The FIRST Big Moment
On a hot Wednesday (March 29) afternoon on the Northern Prakara, a few minutes after Kapaleesawarar has returned from the first procession of the utsavam, P Murali, who runs a handicrafts shop in Mylapore, is busy providing the finishing polishing touches to the silver adikaara nandi vahanaa that his grandfather Thasai Kumaraswamy Bhaktha had built in 1917.

He tells this writer that his grandfather was a big devotee of Sri Kapaleeswarar and sold 3 houses ( including  the current locations where Raasi Silks and Giri Trading are housed) on Sannidhi Street opposite the temple to build the silver Adikaara Nandi vahana at a cost  of Rs. 40000. Chandru Bhaktha, another descendent, said that it turned out to be so auspicious that his appa was born on the day of the Adikaara Nandi procession in Panguni of 1917.

Every year on the eve of the procession, the family members jointly recite Thirvasagam inside the temple and then present prasadam to the devotees.

For 106 years it's this family that has been maintaining the Adikaara Nandi vahana. In recognition of their contribution the first deeparadhanai on the third morning of the utsavam is shown to them.
The first big moment of the Utsavam takes place on Thursday (March 30) morning with several hundreds of devotees gathering at the Eastern Raja Gopuram for the unveiling of Kapaleeswarar seated atop the tall Adikaara Nandi. The Deeparathanai at 5.45am receives a big devotional roar. For the next hour, the Lord provides darshan at the 16 pillar mandapam as the crowd remains unabated. It is past 8am when Kapaleeswarar is on to the South Mada Street. Late comers have darshan there. Residents of Mylapore and others present milk to devotees in memory of the Gnana Paal episode.  Thiru Gnana Sambandar joins the Pancha Moorthy at the South entrance of the tank for the enactment of this legendary episode.

Later in the afternoon, there is a longish stopover at East end of North Mada Street. On this hot day, it is well past 2pm when Kapaleeswarar is back at the temple – that’s an over 8 hour procession around the Mada Streets. 

Naga Vahana – Sripatham asks Nagaswaram to Stop
The Naga Vahana procession at the start on the 4th evening of the utsavam was disappointing. The oversized crowd meant that that Sripatham could not put up a full show of their dance. The volunteers from SVC did not plan in advance on what was going to be in store outside the Raja Gopuram. While the entire Sannidhi Street was clear just before 9pm, as the Swami made his way to the Raja Gopuram, it was packed in a matter of minutes. And thus clearing people till 8.55pm proved irrelevant. 

S Aparna, who has been at the utsavam for well over a decade and has watched the Voyali on the Sannidhi Street, says that the snake dance on the Naga Vahana evening has not taken place in the last few years and the devotees have had to make do with the standard voyali that one sees on other days of the utsavam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/03/kapali-devotee-aparna-panguni-utsavam.html).

Unfortunately none in the police department too have a clue of the next steps in the procession and are constantly pushing away the devotees. It would have helped for the police to post personnel with some background experience of different processions and what was likely to happen next.  In most cases, through the utsavam processions, the police personnel are asking devotees to get back to the Pillayar Sannidhi when the idols were at least 10 minutes away from starting from the 16 pillar mandapam. Their sincerity and commitment to the task cannot be questioned but for most part they are simply clueless on processions and the next steps of the Lord.

Stop the Nagaswaram, we want to play to the Bands' tunes
Another saddening new development at this utsavam has been the Sripatham asking the Nagaswaram to stop playing in front of the Raja Gopuram so they can present Voyali to the tunes of the band music. Are the temple authorities watching such developments and is it not their responsibility to prevent Sripatham from stopping the Aasthana Vidwan’s presentations at the start of the procession.

Rishabham - The Big Saturday night
When the lagna patrikai was read out on March 1, the biggest cheer amongst devotees was the timing of the Rishabham at 9pm on Saturday. One of the devotees from Thiruvallikeni immediately posted a comment that they could spend extra hours with Kapaleeswarar because of the early start (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/04/kapali-panguni-utsavam.html). And that’s how it turned. The Sannidhi Street and East Mada Street was packed with devotees. It was a gala atmosphere that late evening on Saturday. There was huge crowd till mid night. 
Its tradition (agama) for the Rishabham to return to the temple only after sunrise the next morning. When Rishabham typically started out in the past after midnight, it seemed a reasonable timeline of around 5 hours to reach the Raja Gopuram. But with an early start at 9pm, to be stationed on South Mada and West Mada streets with absolutely no additional devotees (except those residents who are waiting to present the thattu in front of their homes) is not devotionally invigorating. The police and service personnel outnumbered the devotees after 1am and it was only during the last phase of the procession the next morning when the Swami turned into the Sannidhi street did the devotees (who went back home) join back for the morning session.

Sunday Morning - The Othuvars with their Ekantha Sevai
Asthana Othuvar of Kapali temple Sathgurunathan roped in Othuvars from across TN including Sirkazhi, Vriddachalam, Sankaran Koil and Thoothukudi to present the sacred verses through the evening procession. A special highlight of the utsavam was the one hour Ekantha Sevai on Sunday morning as devotees in hundreds enjoyed the Thevaram presentation of the Othuvars led by Sathgurunathan. As Kapaleeswarar turned into the North Prakara, Aadu Mayil Aadu elicited humming from the devotees and the Sripatham presented a terrific dance in line with the song.
Every evening through the utsavam, they presented the Thevaram songs for two hours at the Navarathri Mandapam and then through the Mada Streets procession.

Simple Alankaram - 6th day morning
Later that morning, Kapaleeswarar goes out on a procession in the simplest of alankarams, in a simple white vastram. It is the day of the Yaanai Vahanam later in the evening and a day of 'simple whites' for all.

The Two Big Crowd Days
The Chariot and Arubathumoovar processions were very well managed by the authorities. It was broadly well thought out and the crowd was under control. The young 32 year old DCP Rajat Chaturvedi (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/03/mylapore-dcp-rajat-chaturvedi.html), who had experienced the big chariot festival at Nanguneri Divya Desam, later told this writer that he was surprised at the time it took on the turns at every street corner. 
Chariot took 5 ½ hours from start to return to Theradi, while the Arubathumoovar procession last almost 10 hours and reached around midnight. The announcements from SVC played a big role in devotee having a safe darshan. Specifically on both these days as well as on other evenings of the utsavam, the police enforced a strict implementation of restricting vehicles into Mada Streets. This initiative has to be commended for it brought the real Thiruvizha atmosphere into the Mada Streets with small businesses thriving through the festival. For the first time in many years, the Mada Street was shut out to four wheelers well ahead of the procession with police personnel manning the  West end of North and South Mada streets and ensuring that not too many exceptions were made. The Police personnel also handed out safety pins for the women to tie their jewelry to the saree. DCP Rajat told this writer that it was satisfying to have a crime free utsavam with no major reports of chain snatching or thefts at this high profile series of events.

A Devotionally Big Moment 
One of the devotionally big moments of the utsavam was the event at the West Tank on Tuesday (April 4) morning a few hours before the start of the Arubathumoovar procession. Saint Poet Thiru Gnana Sambandar came on a joint procession with Sivanesar, Poompaavai’s appa from the temple to the West side of the tank.

Though Sivanesar had not met Thiru Gnana Sambandar, so moved was he with the devotion of the Saint poet that he had made up his mind to give his daughter’s hand to him. However, in the meanwhile, his daughter died of a snake bite. When he heard that Thiru Gnana Sambandar was coming to Mylapore from Thiruvottiyur, he came here to meet him.
It was here in Mylapore that the Saint Poet presented 10 verses praising the utsavams of Kapaleeswarar asking if Poompavai did not want to enjoy each of these utsavams. When he rendered the verse of Panguni uthiram celebrations and asked her if she did not want to have darshan of the wedding of the Divine Couple, much to the joy of the devotees, Poompaavai came back to life. This entire episode was enacted at the West Tank with Othuvar Sathgurunathan presenting these devotional ten verses that had devotees in tears. It was the one event in the utsavam when devotees listened to the rendering in silence.

Temple Authorities unprepared
Unfortunately, on this day, there were two instances that showcased the temple authorities in poor light. Ahead of such an important event, the authorities did not ensure traffic management near the tank on RK Mutt Road and Thiru Gnana Sambandar was caught right in the middle of the road in peak traffic just after 11am on Tuesday with buses and several private vehicles lining up both sides of the road. The police too were caught off guard.
An hour later, inside the temple complex, with all the focus on the Arubathumoovar procession, the temple authorities were once again caught off guard with huge crowd lining up for Moolavar darshan. There were no temple staffers to take charge of the situation and the scene turned chaotic at the North Prakara. The police inspector as well as one of the trustees were helpless and shut their eyes to the situation and moved away. 

While Arubathumoovar was the big occasion on Tuesday, the authorities should have expected the big crowd at the Moolavar Sannidhi and taken appropriate steps to manage the crowd. 

Can the Othuvars sing Nambi Andaar Nambi songs at Arubathumoovar Procession
Temple Activist TR Ramesh has filed cases against the Kapali Temple authorities (HR & CE) over the last few years and has often been vocal about the issues he has against them. At the start of the Arubathumoovar procession, one saw a different side of Ramesh. High on devotion and quiet to himself in a sober pink shirt, he had a quiet darshan.
A Mylapore resident, Ramesh has been present at the temple on the Arubathumoovar day for the last 30 years. For a change he had some good words for the temple !!! "I am happy to see the 63 Nayanars being brought out in the order of Thiruthondathogai. Earlier it used to be mixed up. This orderly procession is good" he told this writer that evening.

He also had a suggestion to the temple authorities "Sri  Nambi Andaar Nambi has sung one song in praise of each Nayanar. It would have been wonderful for four or five Othuvars to have taken turns to sing those songs in front of the respective Nayanar at the start of the procession. I hope it happens next year on this day."

West Mada Street’s hour of Glory
West Mada Street had its hour of glory on Wednesday evening on the 9th day of the Utsavam. Kapaleeswarar in Bikshaandar Thiru Kolam made his way through the South Mada Street to North end of the West Mada Street just after 8pm. Karpagambal in a Mohini Alankaram presented a special dance show from the North end of West Mada Street that thrilled the devotees for over thirty minutes. It is one of the events at this utsavam that has caught the fancy of the modern day youth and has attracted big crowd outside the Mylapore bus stand.

The Mega Event inside the temple - The Thiru Kalyanam
The 10th and final evening was the most challenging for the temple authorities. While the Chariot and Arubathumoovar had to be managed on the public roads, the Thiru Kalyana Utsavam was the biggest event inside the temple complex during this utsavams and the thousands of devotees had to be accommodated inside for those crucial few hours after 5pm on Thursday.

EO Hariharan is busy monitoring the plans and instructing his teammates on the plan of action through the day on Thursday. He and Trustee Arumugham have been the busiest through the ten days of the utsavam. Another Trustee Thirunavukarasu, who works in a Tier 1 IT firm, told this writer late on Thursday evening that Trustee Arumugham had shut his shop for ten days to be full time at the utsavam in an effort to make this a success. Arumugham was visible everywhere from carrying the Lord on his shoulder to presenting the Thattu on behalf of the temple late in the night on each of the processions.

A commendable performance by the EO
There may soon be a permanent EO at the Kapaleeswarar temple but in the four months that Hariharan has been here he has done his credibility no harm at all. He has been in quite engaging conversations with his team members, even having tea with them (@ Tantea) and has wanted to ensure plan implementation ahead of time leaving nothing to the last minute. A most revealing and stand out feature that the service personnel at the temple have experienced during his short stint here has been his ability to hear out the views of others and to give them the confidence that action would be initiated if their views was on dharmic lines. That is quite commendable for an EO of such a large temple (unfortunately for this writer, he did not respond to any of the messages during the utsavam).
The Thiru Kalyana Utsavam went on well but by 10pm the entire temple complex had been littered with the remains of prasadams that devotees had distributed. On one side, devotees are coming to seek the Swami’s blessings for justice and a fair life but within minutes within the very same temple premises after they have had such a divine darshan they act adharmic throwing juice packets and food plates all around the prakara. The scene had been no different earlier in the week on the Arubathumoovar night when the Mada Streets were full of wastes (kudos to Urabesar for cleaning up the four mada streets well past midnight to get it back in shape the next morning). And many of the food plates contained food half eaten!!!

The Culmination -Kapaleeswarar on Kailaya Vahanam
It was also a surprise as to why the Sripatham personnel would bring out Ravaneswarar Vahana only after 10pm on Thursday when the Divine Couple had already been on the Oonjal for about half hour. By the time they had cleaned up the dust on the vahana and got it ready, it was close to 11pm. It was a silent procession with Kapaleeswarar atop the ten headed Ravana listening peacefully to the sole musical instrument on the night - Ravana's favourite Mukha Veena. When Kapaleeswarar returned to the Raja Gopuram after the final procession of the Panguni Utsavam, it was just past 2am. 
Into the future, the authorities have to sit and discuss on this practice of each of the processions going well past 1am. Centuries ago, the entire life in Mylapore centered around temples and utsavams. Today, people have to get back to schools and colleges the next morning and the seniors to their work place. Rishabham as an exception is probably given that the return into the temple has to be after sunrise. However, would every night procession has to go past 1am? While the Kodiyetram was a high profile event with several hundreds around the Dwajasthambam, the event to bring down the flag began well past 2am with tired looking eyes and withered bodies!!!!

Tail Piece – The Processional Torch Bearer
The one man who stood out throughout the festival with an outstanding Kainkaryam was the former World Bank Consultant V Ramkumar(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/07/kapali-v-ramkumar-world-bank-to-sanyasam.html). Previously he was known for handing out the Rudrakasham and devotional books to young devotees to direct them in the dharmic path. Since the last Vasantha Utsavam, he had begun to perform the Theevatti Kainkaryam.
At this Panguni Utsavam, he was probably one of the very few service personnel to have performed from start to finish at every procession over the last ten days having to come from his home in Kodambakkam through the first five days before resting out in Mylapore through the 2nd half of the utsavam. In addition to festival kainkaryam, the priest in charge of the Moolavar Sannidhi also used his services for some of the internal processions. Historically, this was how the devotees participated in utsavams taking a specific Kainkaryam and seeing it through the end. In a fast paced world, it has become a trend in recent years for most of the devotees to leave after the Swami has made his way to the end of the Sannidhi Street. Ramkumar, who is getting away from the Corporate World (in the not too distant past, he had four top cars at his household!!!), showcased as to how one could take up and perform selfless kainkaryam at temple utsavams.

Jolly Rovers SBI Palayampatti Shield Marina Thriller 1964

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Three Former Ranji Cricketers recount a 1964 First Division thriller at the Marina  
The Hindu Rangarajan's Jolly Rovers beat a start studded SBI by one run after three suicidal run outs at the end
End of October 1964, Jolly Rovers, run by The Hindu’s S Rangarajan, and a start studded SBI played out a thriller at the Marina Ground in front of thousands of spectators. There was a test match feel about the match as the two top ranked teams that fought each other many a time that decade vying for the prestigious Palayampatti crown came head to head yet another time on Sunday October 25.

84 year old SVS Mani (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/07/svs-mani-cricketer-selector-coach.html) was in the form of his life.  He had played for South Zone schools in the late 1950s alongside TVS’ S Ram(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/06/tvs-ram-s-cricketer.html), a new ball swing bowler. Earlier in the year, the then 24 year old had scored a Ranji hundred against Andhra and followed it up a couple of months later with another century this time in the Gopalan Trophy match against a top Ceylon bowling attack comprising of Fredricks and Chanmugham. He recounts to this writer the pains of losing a thriller at Marina “In that phase, this was the most eagerly fought battle. Unfortunately for us (SBI), the crowd always rooted for the opposition when we played and it was the same at Marina that day in 1964.”
Mani was the most outstanding TN fielder that decade and for the Pongal Test of that year, he was in the India Reserves as a substitute fielder when Engineer was fighting an injury. In the first division matches for SBI, he was the one manning the deep field and was always under pressure with the huge crowd just a few yards behind him. In another match against Jolly Rovers that decade, he picked up two brilliant catches to send back legendary Salim Durrani, who passed earlier this week and N Ram.

“VV Kumar was once again outstanding that day as he spun a web around the Jolly Rovers’ batting line up.”

VVK and Wilmot each picked up three wickets as Jolly Rovers was bundled for just 76 that stunned the huge crowd into silence.

K Balaji (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/09/a-blossoming-cricket-career-was-cut.html), who went on to play for TN in the 1970s, was not yet 10 then and went for the match along with his uncle Rangarajan. He recalls a rare occurrence from that match “My uncle was a most unlikely top scorer for JR batting at No.11!!”

SBI's Chase - The crowd back on its feet
 Within minutes of the start of SBI’ innings, the crowd was back on its feet as V Rajaram dealt a double blow in the very first over of the innings. The Hindu in its report, a copy of which is available with this writer, was all praise for new ball bowler Rajaram “After being bowled out for 76runs, Jolly Rovers struck two quick blows when Rajaram in the opening over captured the wickets of D Padmanabhan and Test Cricketer AG Milkha Singh with the scoreboard remaining blank.”

A solid partnership for the fourth wicket brought SBI right back into the match. Mani remembers his partnership with Habib Ahmed “We were on the back foot after the double blows in the first over. I was in confident form that year and with Habib striking it big, we believed we would beat our arch rivals. But the pressure was always on us as the crowd was against us and clearly they were waiting for a collapse.”

Habib's stroke-filled innings
The Hindu wrote in its Monday sports page report “The (early) reverse did not seem to perturb the tall and lithe Habib Ahmed, as he was in an aggressive mood as he hit a six and a four. He drove and pulled elegantly and it looked as though SBI would pull through.”

The Hindu also commended the role played by Habib’s batting partner “SVS Mani, who joined Habib after the fall of Shajahan, was unruffled by the position.”

Mani told this writer that he enjoyed batting in tense situations. It was his dogged innings that complimented Habib's stroke play and led SBI's fight back that afternoon. He says the anti SBI sentiment in the crowd made it even more challenging in the chase as they were battling both the opposition bowlers as well as the booing crowd.

He recalls another match when VV Kumar knocked down the stumps when the batsman strolled out for a walk (K Srikkanth did that in 1981 on his Test debut in Bombay!!! - https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/10/abhinav-mukund-bizarre-dismissal.html). The crowd was so upset that they ran on to the ground and uprooted the stumps in protest and the match had to be abandoned.

Habib and Mani took the score to 40 but the fall of Habib and the subsequent fall of three more wickets within 13 runs put Jolly Rovers back in the fight, wrote The Hindu.
Looking back, Balaji says he enjoyed watching the match as a young boy but it was quite a tense affair when Habib was batting “The situation did not look very good for JR when Habib Ahmed was batting. And then when the wickets fell (in a hurry) the pressure got to the SBI batsmen.”

VV Kumar - a surprise with the bat
It was VVK, not known much for his batting, with the bat, after his three wicket haul earlier, who led the late order recovery as SBI closed in on the chase.  The Hindu wrote that VV Kumar and Bhimraj took the score to 70 with SBI needing just seven to win with three wickets in hand.

Mani was sitting far away in the Pavilion almost biting his nails and just could not bear to watch the match that was heading for a thriller. He recounts those final moments of tragedy for SBI that day “The two brought us really close and with every run that was posted we thought we would scrape through. But like it so often happens in cricket, stupidity struck the cricketing minds. Three suicidal run outs and we lost by just one run. The entire team was distraught as at 40 for 3 everyone in our dressing room (Marina Pavilion) had fancied our chances.”

“It was one of the many thrillers that was played out that decade between SBI and Jolly Rovers. My long time team mate and one of my best cricketing friends the lanky off spinner Chandru (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/09/r-chandrasekaran-sbi-globe-trotter.html) - he passed away last year - who played a stellar role in many a SBI win that decade along with VV would have been thrilled to recall this match and he would be delighted to read this way up in the heaven”, said Mani.

Rajaram's bowling wins him a TN cap
While the three suicidal run outs at the end resulted in the one run win, it was V Rajaram’s extraordinary piece of bowling that was instrumental in Jolly Rovers’ triumph that day. VV Kumar recounts the impact of such a  performance and how it immediately won him a place in the TN Ranji team “The tall Rajaram impressed with his swing bowling. Balu Alaganan, who watched the match, had no hesitation in picking him for TN’s next Ranji match against Kerala at Tellichery. And he responded brilliantly with a seven wicket haul in the match including five in the first innings that helped us bowl out Kerala for just 69. Rajaram had a short but useful stint for TN in the National Tournament.”
It was gripping towards the end. . There were no more nails left for most in the crowd. They had enjoyed munching sundal and peanuts (and biting their finger nails) and had just watched one of the most enthralling first division matches. They disbursed some of them to the beach discussing the highlights of the match and how the result would have been different had it not been for those three run outs at the end. Most of them though, much to Mani's fury, were delighted with SBI’s loss. 

A couple of years later, Jolly Rovers was handed over to KS Narayanan (and later N Sankar) - https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/11/jolly-rovers-n-sankar-75.html- and the club has gone on to become one of the most successful private cricket clubs in the country. On this Sunday in October 1964, Marina had played host to yet another cricketing thriller.

Kapali Temple Balaji Gurukal

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Sleepless nights, Limited Food, Devotionally Alluring Alankarams and Timely Processions - ‘Captain Cool’ Balaji Gurukal anchors successful conduct of the Panguni Utsavam

Balaji Gurukal, the 52 year old hereditary priest at the Kapaleeswarar Temple, has just had an exhausting fortnight at the Panguni Utsavam. Almost every night of the utsavam he stayed back at the Thiru Kalyana Mandapam till the Lord returned, which on most nights was after 1am. The alankaram of the evening had to be undone and this was followed by an Ekantha Thirumanjam (no devotee darshan here) that took up to half hour. This was followed by an extensive alankaram for the next morning’s procession. By the time this was done, it was well past 3am. The only time he went  home was for the bath and he returned soon back to the Thiru Kalyana Mandapam for there was Thiru Abharanam on the Lord and that had to be taken care of. He had roped in around 20 additional archakas for support function during the Utsavam.

While devotees in several thousands enjoyed the Panguni Utsavam over the ten days, very few were aware of the sleepless nights Balaji Gurukal had over the period of the utsavam. In fact, late on Thursday, after the Thiru Kalyanam had been successfully performed, his face wore a tired look and his entire body seemed pleading for some rest.

25+ years as the Hereditary Priest
He has carried out the role of a hereditary priest for over 25 years and has been involved with the anchoring of the Panguni Utsavam for over a dozen years. 

It was he who had read out the Lagna Patrikai on March 1 at the Moolavar Sannidhi. He told this writer on Sunday evening on the biggest challenge for him during the Utsavam “Ahead of every single procession, the biggest task was to stick to the time announced as per the Lagnam for the Gopura Vaasal Deepaarathanai. It involved the co-operation of various service personnel at the temple including the Vedic members, the Othuvars, the Paricharakar and the Sripatham.”

Pillars of Strength - Wife and Daughter
It is just under 72 hours after the flag was brought down and he sits in front of the Thiru Kalyana Mandapam with a cheerful face happy that everything went as per plan. But it was not as straightforward as it seems. He credits his wife (Meenakshi) and daughter for their unflinching support during the utsavam “They were my biggest supporters and the pillars of strength without whom I may have crumbled under the weight of pressure. As the utsavam neared, I wore a tense look as I wondered if the Deeparathanai would take place as scheduled each day and if every alankaram would come out in the way devotees expected.”

Biggest Panguni Utsavam Lessons from his Acharyas
Balaji Gurukal’s first Acharya was his appa N Kumaraswamy Gurukal. He learned the entire pooja Kramams from his appa having started out his agama learning process when he was just eight years old. Later for a decade, he learned the Vedas and Agamas from the revered KA Sabharathna Shivachariar of Parrys Pookadai. He would leave by 21 (Number) bus early in the morning. He says those were the biggest learnings in his life that laid a strong foundation for the successful conduct of the big utsavams. “The Shivachariar and his wife took care of me as if I was their own son. The selfless love and care I received under them for 10 years is unforgettable.”

“The most important lesson I learned both from my appa and from Sabharathna Shivachariara was that we should stick to the Deeparathanai time as per the Lagna during the Panguni Utsavam.”

Be Captain Cool - Daughter to her appa on the eve of the Utsavam
His daughter is currently doing her MBA and it was her motivation that inspired him every day of the Utsavam. “She told me that people have great expectations and that the belief I had in the Divine Couple would help me sail through this Utsavam. When I went home, she would be waiting with an energy drink and food to get me back in shape. She would often tell me not to get tense and that Swami would take care of the proceedings and that everything would be on time.”

In tune with the current phase – IPL started a couple of days after the Panguni Utsavam flag was hoisted- his daughter provided a great piece of inspiration 'Appa, you should be like ‘Captain Cool’ (MS Dhoni of CSK) during this Utsavam.' 

"Her statement was a big stress reliever and at the most testing of times, I tried best to remain calm” said Balaji Gurukal sitting outside the Thiru Kalyana mandapam as he relived events of the last fortnight to this writer.

Arthaneeswarar Alankaram- The Biggest Satisfaction
Out of all the alankarams, the Arthanareeswarar Thiru Kolam on the fourth evening of the Utsavam gave him the biggest satisfaction. Thirupura Samhara alankaram on the Ther morning was another favourite of his. He says he liked watching the swami in one of the lesser known alankarams – Ekantha Sevai with just one flower garland on the 7th and 8th nights of the utsavam.

Will everything happen on time at the Thiru Kalyanam
After the first nine days went well, the tenth evening was another big challenge and easily the most tense day of the utsavam “I had to ensure that the Mangalya Dharanam takes place as per the announced Lagna but for this to happen all the events preceding it had to go as per schedule. It was a very pressure and highly tense evening but I remembered the ‘Captain Cool’ tag that my daughter wanted me to be. The Divine Couple’s blessings were with me and the celestial wedding went on well. It looked like everyone was happy that evening at the end of the event and that gave a lot of internal satisfaction.”

Son keen to continue hereditary service
This section has featured many stories on the Next Gen moving on to other fields away from the role of archaka across temples in Tamil Nadu (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/11/bhattars-gurukals-move-away-from-temples.html). On a positive development, his 17 year old son Karpagam Manoharan has expressed great interest in continuing the hereditary service. He is now into his second year at Sanskrit College doing Prak-Shiromani Over the last few years, he has also been learning the Koil related Vedas and Agamas from Kapaleeswarar temple’s hereditary priest and agama expert Kapali Gurukal. Balaji Gurukal is delighted that his son is fully involved in temple related activities and particularly his contribution in the recently concluded Panguni Utsavam. Balaji Gurukal’s nephew Baranidharan too has joined the temple service as an archaka and that augurs well for the future of the temple.

Balaji Gurukal is particularly appreciative of the new EO R Hariharan who took over in December “It has been a very cordial engagement with him and as the EO of the temple he has been supportive in every possible way during the Utsavam especially during the big days like the Chariot and Arubathumoovar processions and the Thiru Kalyanam event.”

He also acknowledges the big mentoring role played by his cousin Kapali Gurukal who was seen at most of the processions through the Utsavam. It was his guidance that helped the younger priests manage the procession in an orderly manner. 
                      Kapali and Baranidhara Gurukal

As those that have experienced his services would know, Balaji Gurukal is rarely heard. Most times during his Moolavar period of 15 days every month, outside of the six kaala pooja, he is seen performing japam outside the sannidhi. Never has he indulged himself in unnecessary conversations and has focused on discharging his duty as an archaka in the best way he could. 

Continuing the historical tradition, Balaji Gurukal and his family continue to live in the ancestral home on sannidhi Street opposite the Raja Gopuram where his forefathers had resided and performed service at the temple. For centuries, it has not seen a full-fledged renovation and hopefully sometime into the future, this historical house that has been home to several shivachariars will undergo restoration in line with the modern times. But for the moment, Balaji Gurukal is happy that the Panguni Utsavam has gone on well to the satisfaction of the temple authorities and the devotees. After a couple of years of the Pandemic, this year saw unprecedented crowds at the Utsavam and the overall feedback from the devotees about the smooth conduct and the alankarams has left him pleased that the Divine Couple have indeed showered their blessings on him and his team.

Kudos to Balaji Gurukal for enthralling the devotees with great darshan over the ten days of the Panguni Utsavam.

Mannar Koil Archaka wins Salary Case

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Narasimha Gopalan Archaka - From a salary of Rs. 250 in 2005 to finally one as per Minimum Wages Act
The Madurai High Court has this month directed the HR & CE to start paying, within 8 weeks, a salary to the Mannar Koil Archaka and the temple's service personnel as per the Minimum Wages Act 
Finally after a long drawn court battle, PS Narasimha Gopalan, the sole archaka at the Rajagopalaswamy temple in Mannar Koil, one where Kulasekara Azhvaar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2009/11/kulasekara-perumal-koil-in-mannar-koil.html) is believed to have spent his final years, has won a case in the Madurai High Court resulting in a monthly salary to the temple's service personnel as per the minimum wages act.

Almost 15years with a Three Digit Salary
He took over as the archaka after the demise of his appa Srinivasacharya just under a couple of decades ago at a salary of Rs. 250 per month. This section has featured many stories on how the next gen in most remote temples in TN have moved on into the corporate world seeing the struggles of the archakas in the previous decades(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/11/bhattars-gurukals-move-away-from-temples.html). Narasimha Gopalan chose otherwise. He wanted to continue the archaka service that his appa had rendered for several decades even though for over ten years, he was paid a monthly salary of only Rs. 250. But he decided very early on in his priesthood that he would fight for the cause of the archakas across the state.  

Fighting for a cause
Under a decade ago, he filed a case against the cine world on how the sacred Vaishnavite Thiruman was being abused in movies referring to the Thiruman as ‘Naamam Pottuttaan (Thiruman was used to indicate ‘cheating’) - https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2014/11/periya-nambi-acharya-fights-for.html.

And then he got even more serious when he found that there were no service personnel ready to get into temples. Similar to the hereditary archakas, there were Mei Kaavalars and Pala Velai workers who had carried on performing service in temples over the last hundred years. But with a three digit monthly income which too was not paid on time, these service personnel too began to move away from temples. 

It was against this backdrop that Narasimha Gopalan, who belongs to the revered Periya Nambi clan, decided to file a case in the Madurai High Court pleading for a salary that would at least satisfy the requirements under the Minimum Wages Act.
Being the Sole Archaka in Mannar Koil, Narasimha Gopalan has not moved out of the region in the last two decades as there are no substitute archakas available and even if they were ready there was no remuneration to pay them (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2017/03/periya-nambi-narasimha-gopalan-acharya.html).

He has often referred to the verses of Kulasekara Azhvaar in boosting his confidence and serving as inspiration for his selfless service.

பத்தியிலாத பாவிகள் உய்ந்திட
தீதில் நன்னெறி காட்டி
எங்கும் திரிந்து அரங்கனெம்மானுக்கே

காதல் செய் தொண்டர்க்கு
எப்பிறப்பிலும் காதல் செய்யும் என் நெஞ்சமே

After a prolonged four year battle in the court, earlier this month, the Madurai High Court directed the HR &CE to pay salary to the service personnel in line with the Minimum Wages Act. 

After he began filing cases in the high court over the last decade, the HR & CE increased the salary of Narasimha Gopalan initially to Rs. 750 from Rs. 250 and then to Rs. 2900. The service personnel such as Mei Kavalar, Pala Velai, Sweeper were still paid a salary of Rs.500 per month.

So what does this new order entail?
The Madurai High Court has directed the HR & CE to pay the revised salary along with dues from 2019 (from the time he filed this specific salary case) within 8 weeks. If implemented as per the order, it is likely that Narasimha Gopalan would get a salary of around Rs. 16000 per month (calculated at a minimum wages act figure of Rs.520 per day). As per the court order he is also entitled to this salary from 2019 which would mean the HR & CE would have to pay him dues of around Rs.6.50Lakhs (13000x50months).

The service personnel mentioned above who have been carrying out their duties for several years at this abysmally low salary of Rs. 500 would also be entitled to a salary of Rs. 16000 as per the court order.

Restoration of Tanks and Income from these tanks
The temple has under its fold multiple tanks in the Ambai region. These are let out under auction every couple of years for the villagers to breed fish. Only this week the HR&CE minister has announced restoration of temple tanks in TN and also directed breeding of fish at these tanks for additional income to the temple. The Mannar Koil Rajagopalaswamy temple receives an income just over a lakh from these tanks every year or so. There are several tracts of land belonging to the temple but as in most other cases in TN, there has been no income from these lands for the temple. The Hundi collection at this temple does not exceed Rs. 1L annually.

It has been the argument of the HR & CE for a long time that without income, they are not able to meet the salaries of the service personnel. These points have been fought out in the current petition of Narasimha Gopalan and it is after hearing both sides that the Madurai High Court has directed the payment of the salary as per the Minimum Wages Act. Hence it is unlikely that this argument of not having sufficient income from the individual temple would hold water anymore.

Temple Activist TR Ramesh(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/02/tr-ramesh-temple-activist.html), who himself has been fighting many a case against the HR & CE, lauded the determination of the Mannar Koil archaka saying that it was his persistence that has led to this victory for the archakas and the service personnel.

Revival of utsavams
Narasimha Gopalan has over the last decade single handedly revived historical utsavams such as the Theppotsavam and Pavitrotsavam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/09/mannar-koil-pavitrotsavam-revival.html). Also, during his time, he has already performed the Samprokshanam twice mostly with devotee contributions. He has built a huge Nandavanam and maintains it all on his own through the service personnel. He has also built rest houses for devotees visiting these utsavams.

Renewed hope for other temple archakas across TN
Narasimha Gopalan has filed the salary case pleading for salaries as per minimum wages act for archakas and service personnel across TN temples. The current order directs the salary revision only for the Rajagopalaswamy temple in Mannar Koil. Nonetheless, based on this landmark judgment, archakas in other HR & CE temples in TN who have been serving for decades but receiving only three digit salaries, can now reach out to their respective courts seeking a salary as per the minimum wages act. And there is now a precedence set with this court order and the archakas need not go farther than this judgment.  It is also likely that this judgment will lead to an influx of more service personnel into remote temples in TN. At the moment, a majority of the historical temples in the Ambasamudram region are without Mei Kavalar and Pala Velai personnel. And it is also no surprise that a single archaka manages multiple temples in this region.

Hearing about his selfless services, devotees are also now coming forward to support his services at the temple. And that's a big positive for remote temples in TN.

What is the HR & CE likely to do
If we are to go by historical evidence, it is likely that the HR&CE will file an appeal against this judgment and seek more time. But in this case, as the judgment has come after several rounds of hearing and counter arguments from the HR & CE over a four year period, the good news for the archakas and the service personnel may be here to stay and it is unlikely that this order will see a reversal.
                                     Amma and Appa

Mannar Koil, near Ambasamudram, is as remote as it gets. After what his appa had gone through financially in the 1980s and 90s and in line with the trend of the time, one would not have been surprised if Narasimha Gopalan made his way to a larger city seeking greener pastures in a life away from temples. But he was reminded of this verse of Kulasekara Azhvaar, stood his ground, continued the hereditary service and has showcased that even from as remote a temple town as Mannar Koil, it is still possible to fight for the sacred cause. 

வாழ்த்தி மால்கொள் சிந்தையராய்
ஆட்ட மேவியலந்தழைத்து அயர் வெய்தும் மெய்யடியார்கள்
தம் ஈட்டம் கண்டிடக் கூடுமேல் 
அது காணும் பயனாவதே

His amma, who had meant everything to him, passed away last year, but that too has not slowed down his determination to fight for the temple cause. In the not so distant past, very few would have given any chance to a Rs. 250 earning priest to fight out against the powers that be but this priest has turned it all around. With single minded devotion and a spirit that wants to get the service personnel back into remote temples, Narasimha Gopalan Bhattar has gone on to show that if one fights for a fair cause, with the Lord's blessings, justice will always prevail in the end even if may  have been delayed for a while. And he has served as a great real life inspiration to those who want to take up just causes (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2017/03/periya-nambi-narasimha-gopalan-acharya.html) and given them the belief and confidence that truth will prevail some day.

Sanjay Parthasarathy South Zone U19 Cricketer Microsoft VP

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The nephew of TVS’ Suresh Krishna was very passionate about cricket in his teens and had it in him to make it big in cricket but quit early and went on to become a top notch IT Professional at Microsoft - In his comeback innings in Cricket, he is all excited about the MLC in the US 
Sanjay was a rare 'Complete’ Package as a teenager – WV Raman, former India Cricketer and U15 and U19 SZ team mate

In the mid 1950s, S Ram, the Grandson of TVS Iyengar was developing into as a top swing bowler and had played for South Zone as a teenager but with an auto business to manage he quit cricket for his family business (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/06/tvs-ram-s-cricketer.html). Three decades later, a nephew of his, Sanjay Parthasarathy (Sundram Fasteners Suresh Krishna’s sister’s son) was making a strong case for himself on the cricket field as an opening batsman. He played for MCC in the first division and had represented South Zone at the U15 and U19 level playing alongside future India cricketers such as WV Raman and L Sivaramakrishnan. He had also played in the Rohinton Baria inter Universities tourney.  But just out of his teens, he decided to hang up his cricketing shoes and moved overseas into a non-cricketing nation (then) to pursue his Masters. And soon after, he became a top notch Tech Professional at Microsoft and anchored Bill Gates’ visit to India in the late 1990s that brought IT investment into the country. Though he quit cricket early, his passion did not die. In his second innings in cricket, he has invested big dollars in cricket and will be Mentoring the Seattle team in the Major League Cricket in the US that is set to start in the next three months.  Here’s the story.

A Top Ranker at School, But Great Cricketing Interest
Sanjay Parthasarathy was a top ranker at school with special interest in Physics, Chemistry and Maths. While he was studious throughout his school life, he was also very passionate about cricket, though not very ambitious and rose to great heights as a teenager. His appa Parthasarathy had played in the Rohinton Baria for Jadhavpur University and had earlier been coached by the revered KS Kannan, the much liked cricket coach at Don Bosco. Sanjay too blossomed under the watchful eyes of Kannan and was an integral part of the DB team that won many tournaments in  the late 1970s and early 80s before the cricketing power shifted to Santhome.

Sanjay is just back from a trip to the historical Adhi Jagannathan Perumal Divya Desam in Thiru Pullani (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2017/11/thiru-pullani-divya-desam.html). Interestingly, he has already done two temple trips this summer!!! He told this writer at his palacious home (much like VBC later, Sanjay too  had earmarked a pitch to practice at home as a school boy) in Boat Club about the influential role of his first cricket coach “Kannan was big on practice. We underwent rigorous training under him. In the net session every evening, he stressed on the importance of hard work. Fielding sessions were not in vogue those days at the school level, but he was particularly keen that in addition to batting and bowling, one had to sharpen the fielding skills as well and fielding practice was integral to our day at the nets. All these helped me a great deal in getting the basics right.”

A Well Balanced Personality
Akbar Ibrahim, who played Ranji cricket for TN in the mid 1980s, was Sanjay’s classmate at DB for a dozen years. They both batted at the top of the order and strung together several partnerships including a tournament winning one that Akku distinctly remembers “We were playing the final of the TNCA schools tourney at RKM ground against a very strong Adarsh team comprising of U19 stars. We won the finals through a big partnership that the two of us put on. He scored a half century and anchored the victory.”

“For a large part, he was a quiet guy but had great communication ability and when he got chatting, he made a lot of sense in everything he spoke. He could talk on a wide variety of topics. He was very well balanced person even as a school boy.”

Former India Bowling coach B Arun (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/01/b-arun-ipl-son-adithya-coaching-academy.html), whose cricket academy Sanjay visited this week on the outskirts of Chennai, remembers that match "Akku had told me about this stylish batsman at the top of the order and to watch out for him in the future. It was my first encounter and he definitely turned out to be a fine talent and very promising at that early stage."

His First Century
Opening with VV Sankapani, Sanjay scored a century for TN against Andhra in the interstate U15 match at Marina. It was his first big moment in cricket and he cherishes the knock of 129 to this day“It was that century that gave me the early confidence and instilled the belief that I belonged at this level. It laid the foundation for my cricket in the coming years.”

Sankapani (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/01/sankapani-vv_21.html) was a dashing opener and set the city grounds alight with his stroke play from ball one. He says that opening together for the state brought them close and he had many a memorable moment with Sanjay “In those days, both of us would write our name on the gloves as SP (Sanka Pani and Sanjay Parthasarathy). Throughout our cricket association, he would always pull my leg that he had the ‘copyright’ over SP. It was great fun being with him on so many tours. While I was the flashy batsman, he showed great temperament and patience to build an innings. He was really matured for his age and mentored me a lot in terms of not asking me to give away my wicket to impetuous shots but I did not have the ability to grasp those finer points in my early teens and often threw away my wicket much to his frustration.”

Glimpses of Zaheer in his batting
Pak Legend Zaheer Abbas was in peak form when India toured in 1978 and many would remember the bashing he handed out to the Indian spinners. Business Editor of The Hindu Suresh Seshadri saw Sanjay bat from close quarters during the late 1970s and early 80s at Don Bosco and saw a lot of the  Zaheer in him “He was truly gifted with ability and timing as a batsman and reminded me of Zaheer for his languid grace and placement with his offside strokes."
Suresh Seshadri

M Sanjay was one year junior at Don Bosco and has known him closely right from his childhood. He too recalls the similarities with the Pak great “Sanjay was a stylish player and all elegance and grace. He was bespectacled, wore a sweat band like Zaheer and was very similar to him in style.”

"As a personality, he was quiet but very intense on the field. Sometimes he was misunderstood as being laidback especially since he hailed from a very high profile (TVS) family. He was just one within himself and not too outgoing. He had a small circle of friends and moved extremely well with them. He was silently tough and quietly aggressive."

Makes the Bombay cricket trip, picks up a State Rank in Class X
He enjoyed a great time for TN at the U15 level and also contributed for South Zone that included 6 players from TN (WVR, LS, Vijay Rajamani, Ashok Kaushik, Sankapani and Sanjay). In early 1980, Sanjay was to travel to Bombay for the U15 match. With the Board exam just around the corner, DB’s Principal called on his amma (Radha Parthasarathy), who was a big source of inspiration, to enquire about the possible conflict of interest and the cricket trip impacting his academics.

Sanjay says that his parents encouraged him and his two sisters (State TT players) in their sporting endeavours. “My amma gave the green signal. I made the trip, came back and ended up with a State rank in Class X.”
Patti’s big cricket support
In 1980, he won the TN Junior Cricketer of the Year (LS had won it the year before and the one after) award.  He says that the family appreciated his cricketing achievements but there was not ‘much fuss’ about it at home. The biggest cricketing support came from his patti, Ambujam Krishna, who was a great fan of his. It was she who collected and put together all his paper scores in a scrap book.

Sanjay's most prized cricketing scalp
In 1980-81, Don Bosco beat a strong Hindu HSS in the final of the TNCA tournament, one that Sanjay counts amongst his best matches and a tourney victory that he dedicates to his favourite coach Kannan. He was also coached subsequently by PK Dharmalingam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2015/06/pk-dharmalingam.html), who he refers to as a 'professional' but the real cricketing joy came from being coached by Kannan. 

He himself picked up four wickets and scored a half century in that final. While WV Raman did the star turn picking up 13 wickets in the match, it  Sanjay had the last laugh and particularly remembers picking up Raman’s wicket with a ball that he says 'went the other way'. It is the wicket that he considers the most prized in his cricket career. 

TN keeper from the 1980s and his namesake M Sanjay, who now volunteers at Isha Foundation Coimbatore, also recalls the way he foxed many a batsman with his non – off spin “He was a useful off spinner. He used to try his best to turn the ball. Seeing the twisting of the wrist, many a batsman expected big turn and were often foxed by the one that went straight. And sometimes he bowled the other one. He was quite an unpredictable bowler.”

Almost the same bunch of cricketers graduated to U19 and Sanjay made useful contributions in the Cooch Behar tournament including in the final at the Wankhade in 1982 against North Zone. 
                                 
Raman played together with Sanjay for a number of years in many different tournaments and the two have remained good friends ever since. Raman says that even as a young teenager, Sanjay was very committed in whatever he did. “He was diligent and a keen student of the game. Despite his high profile background, he was always humble and polite. Standout features of his helpful and kind nature came to the fore on our long trips in age group cricket when we went North and West. He would bring an assortment of food from his home for the entire team.”
"His clarity at that young age stood out amongst the TN players. While he was passionate about the game, he was clear that academics was just as important. He would read the portions thrice before the exams and even studied during our train trips."

But the thing I hate about him the most is that he has never ceased to remind me of getting my wicket with his off spin in the final of the TNCA schools tournament, Raman told this writer bursting into laughter.

M.  Sanjay, who has been the head of cricket operations at the academy at Ramachandra College (where Dave Whatmore was the Chief Coach) for six years, says that when his namesake moved up from the middle order to open the batting, some felt that he did not have it in him. But he did not flinch and was a revelation as an opener. 

"At that time, in the way he approached cricket, I felt he was a sure shot for Ranji."

Collegiate Cricket - Rohinton Baria..... but lost a bit of sting
In his cricketing phase at Anna University, he lost a bit of the bite as the academic intensity took over.  He says the college extended up to 5pm and there were no daily net sessions like the one at DB and that made a big difference. Nonetheless he did make big runs in that phase for the college. Sanjay’s captain at Anna University, PC Prakash (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/04/pc-prakash-tn-ranji-1980s.html), now Chief of TNCA Academy, remembers him as a stylish bat and a run machine. "He was a wholesome cricketer at that time- was a good fielder and bowled decent off spin. As a batsman, he was technically correct and compact and could have easily played higher levels for TN but he chose to pursue his Masters in the US. He made big runs for Anna University in the year we qualified for the all India Rohinton Baria tournament. He was consistent through that season."
"Particularly striking and strong in my memory even now after four decades is the fact that he had no airs about himself though he came from a top industrialist family and moved well with all of us and was very friendly." 

Thorough Professional 
Sanjay wanted to remain entirely professional in the way he conducted himself both on the cricketing field as well as on the corporate front later on.

"I have labored my whole life, not to distance myself from the family, but to stand on my own two feet and hope that anything that I do can be credited to my effort. This is what I learned from my father" he told this writer.

"It is ironic that growing up in Chennai, I had to work 10x harder so I wouldn’t be seen to take advantage of the family name. And in the US where I had no privilege I had to work 10x harder as an immigrant to prove that I was good enough."

Former TN wicket keeper and PCP's Ranji team mate from the late 1980s, D Girish is now Chairman of Cricket Advisory Committee. He was Sanjay’s batch mate at Anna University. Talking to this writer from Sikkim, where he is on a summer holiday after picking the new TN Selection committee for the coming season, Girish pointed to Sanjay being a highly focused and determined cricketer. “He was a deeply intense character and gave his 100% on the field. Though he was from a very affluent family, he was able to adjust himself to the travails of cricketing tours (many of the train trips were extremely tiring) with the poor facilities in those days. Sanjay was all cool and mingled with us as equals. He never missed a practice session and we had a lot of fun playing together over those years at College.”

Best Cricketing year at YMA under B Arun
He played for YMA under B Arun and considers that as his most enjoyable year in cricket and that's no surprise. Both are high on communication and clarity of thought “It was fabulous entertainment and we just enjoyed playing. And it was no wonder I  ended up scoring a lot of runs.”

He would have taken to Cricket as a career had he been playing now
Arun told this writer just a few hours ahead of his team's (KKR) IPL match against Gujarat that he practiced a lot with Sanjay at the BS Nets where they were part of the Schools Camp. He was very promising but he just looked Studious. He was always good to interact with. He was clear that his first priority was Education. Beyond a point, he knew he was not going to pursue cricket as a career. If he had been playing like that now, it is very likely he would have continued with cricket but in the 1980s, it was logical for a top ranker in academics to go the education route. And it took him places!!!

A Good Season at MCC
In 1985, he signed up for MCC in the first division. Long time MCC offie VV Giri who has continued to play inter club cricket till very recently recalls his memories of Sanjay from that season. "He used to be thin, trim and was a smart student of the game and very intelligent. He was a graceful right hander and a wonderful fielder. He was soft spoken and a gentleman to the core. I was very happy to play with him but unfortunately for us (at MCC), he moved to USA after one year. He could have gone higher up in cricket had he continued to play senior division league here"

Former BCCI President S Sriraman sent a letter home wherein he wrote that he was happy to see Sanjay knocking on the doors of Ranji with his consistent performances and a long and successful cricketing career beckoned.

The MIT experience - Mind Blowing
But it was not to be. In 1986, he moved to MIT and got into Artificial Intelligence, an experience that he says was phenomenal “The difference between education here (then) and the years at MIT was one of a night and 1000 brilliant suns. It was a mind boggling experience. The freedom and intellectual thinking blew my mind. You would have been finished here (in India) for such thinking” says Sanjay.

“It was just as big a gift to be at MIT as it had been for me to have played such enjoyable cricket for a decade earlier.”

No real cricketing ambition- The Safety Net in Life
Sanjay agrees that he could have been more ambitious but all along at the back of his mind he knew that academics was the way forward for him ‘I just enjoyed the rigour of practice and the challenge of battling it out on the field. I knew it was never going to be my career. I played for fun and in a way that helped me really enjoy that phase in cricket.”

But he is quick to point out the benefits of safety net in life “Most cricketers of that gen depended on cricket for a career and a job. “I had a safety net in that phase. I have always remembered that it is very easy to underestimate the ‘Power of Privilege’.” 

Sunil Gavaskar was his all time favourite batsman. Though many from his generation idolized GRV, Sanjay liked Sunny, who he finally met four years ago, for his grit, determination and the process he followed. Gavaskar was not the most fashionable of batsmen but he definitely worked a methodology to fight it out against the best of the bowlers.

Sanjay counts his first century, the two finals against North Zone and the win against Raman’s Hindu HSS as his best moments in cricket. 

While batting with Sanku during the schooling phase, he was a lot more responsible in the way he batted. At college, with Girish and PCP in the middle order, he took on a Sanku role and played with a lot more freedom and aggressively.

Two Decades of a high profile life at Microsoft
After another couple of years of Masters at MIT, he joined Microsoft in 1990 and was there for close to two decades. In 1996, when he launched the India ops, it was he who foresaw India becoming a Super Power in IT. He was the cynosure of all eyes in that phase as an Indian making it to the top of the IT World in the US. In 2010, he founded a tech startup that he ran for six years before selling it off at a high valuation.

He missed out completely on the SRT era in cricket with Microsoft not offering a minute of free time in those two decades. But as soon as he came out, he began watching CSK’s matches in the IPL just over a dozen years ago.

The Cricketing Come Back- 2023
And now in the phase after the Pandemic, Sanjay is to make a comeback in cricket after nearly four decades. He has co-founded a team in the US Major league. He says it has been bubbling for a while and he is now in the process of getting it off the ground in Seattle. Like his previous corporate start up, the cricketing venture too is a startup. He has been joined in this endeavor by his old college mate Somasegar.  With just 80 days to go for the kick off, he says the next two months will be hectic. Going forward he will play the role of Mentor at Seattle club. He says he particularly enjoys the confluence of Sport, Business and Creativity. Sanjay has already starting dishing out his creative juice for the next season!!! He recently made a trip to Delhi to meet the partners (stake holders) at Delhi Capital, which part owns the Seattle Franchise. 

He always liked challenges, was self driven and self motivated. His passion can be seen in the way he has invested in a team in the US cricket league  says Girish.

Sanjay was a Rare Package -WVR
While most people have big plans and ambitions, Sanjay executed it with finesse. And it was no surprise that he achieved what he did in the corporate world. It is also no surprise to me that he is coming back into cricket now.  One simply cannot take the man out of cricket. He was so passionate about the game in his teenage days. There was no helmets in those days and he wore a glass but he did not flinch one bit even while facing a real quick Chetan Sharma in the Zonal match, says Raman.

"Sanjay was a rare kind of Package. He was well mannered, came from an affluent family but absolutely had no airs about himself, displayed great inter personal skills, always lent a helping hand to others, his head was firmly on his shoulders, has kept in touch with his old teammates even after over three decades. And on the field, he was a very dependable batsman and scored runs almost every time he went out to bat."

High on Generosity
M Sanjay says that his namesake was full of generosity "When I went for the India U15 schools camp, he handed me his high priced bat for the entire tour."

Sankapani too has high words of praise for Sanjay’s generosity and going out of the way to help his team mates. “Almost four decades after we played together for TN, he went out of the way to help my son with his education in the US. That’s Sanjay for you. He is ever willing to help his teammates and has never forgotten the joys of the cricketing days from the 1970s and early 80s.”

Arun says that Sanjay's love for the game has resurfaced with his involvement in the Major League Cricket and it is likely he will enjoy this stint in exactly the same way he enjoyed playing cricket as a youngster.

The Second Innings in Cricket
In the 1970s and 80s, we (TN) won almost everything on sight at the age group level in cricket. We knew deep inside that we were good enough to win and the only way that we would not was when we did not play to our potential. But a most important lesson in life is that you are not guaranteed to win everything. Hence the process, intent and value system is more important than the win itself. Both in cricket and at the work place over the last three decades, I have used this phrase ‘Trust the Process’ a lot, says Sanjay.
Cricket, he says, has taught him two big lessons that he put to great use in the Corporate World “Never give up till the end and Practice as hard as you can” have been life lessons that have stood with me during the most testing times. Cricket gave me a positive boost and it brought together a lot of threads in my life. It is interesting, complex and satisfying. The prospects of what might happen in the cricket league is already giving me goose bumps. Even just thinking about cricket gets my ‘non-existent’ hair to stand up. There are so many possibilities of what can be done.

Though there are a million kids playing cricket, he says there is no downside to playing the sport. The key though is that you don’t want unqualified people coaching susceptible kids. He has some interesting ideas though it is still only ‘lumps of clay’. Only a handful can be wildly successful in cricket. What about the rest, he asks.  How can they benefit from those skills that they have learnt over the previous ten years? He says there is a lot anxiety among kids about the future and dealing with the uncertainty. One has to build a resilience while playing and that will help later on in facing any of the challenges that life throws at you.  Sometime in the near future, Sanjay could come up with a solution to these challenges and make it a real enjoyable experience for the cricketing kids from the new generation. 

For the moment, his focus is on the 'processes' leading up to the launch of the Major League Cricket  even as he heads back to the US early next week to get the action going on the ground.

Best Wishes to Sanjay Parthasarathy in his new cricketing venture.

HR & CE Minister Sekar Babu on a roll

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Mannar Koil Archaka case: Will not revise salary upwards, will appeal to the High Court
Will fight every activism boldly and without fear, says P Sekar Babu
Dramatic increase in renovation exercises in TN temples in the last two years, cites all caste Archakas, Lady Othuvars and Tamil Archanai as significant milestones

Over the last two years, there has been a refreshing change at the HR & CE, something that one had not seen in the last two decades. A vibrant and a highly devotional minister who is seen at some temple or the other every day of the year. No HR & CE minister has been as active as P Sekar Babu. A distinguishing feature of his engagement since the time he took charge exactly two years ago is his feet on the ground. Clearly he has established himself as someone who is not an armchair minister sitting in the comforts of the AC room and dishing out orders from the HR & CE headquarters.

At Sri Kapaleeswarar temple in Mylapore, his visits for darshan in the last year or so would have overtaken the combined number of trips made by all the HR & CE ministers over the last two decades. When there was an allegation against the Board of Trustees at the Adhi Kesava Perumal temple in August 2021, he was physically present at the temple (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/09/kesava-perumal-temple-mylapore-nc.html?m=1). Last week he was in Madurai ahead of the Chitrai Utsavam to ensure that the preparations were in order. 

After an hour long video call with his team members, he sat down for an exclusive chat with this writer at the HR & CE headquarters late on Wednesday evening ready to take up any kind of questions and as he has always been with this writer over the last two years providing straight in the face answers to hard hitting questions.

Mannar Koil Archaka Salary Case
This section had featured a story last month on the Madurai High Court’s order directing the HR & CE to fix up a pay scale for PS Narasimha Gopalan, the archaka at the Rajagopalaswamy temple in Mannar Koil near Ambasamudram and the service personnel at the temple meeting at least the requirements as per the minimum wages act and this within 8 weeks of the order. A month has passed and the archaka had told this writer earlier this week that there had been no update on the revision in salary (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/04/mannar-koil-archakar-wins-salary-case.html). 
When queried on this, Sekar Babu clarified the HR & CE’s stance on this issue. Every temple is independent and the salaries of the staff would have to come from the income of the temple. When queried further on using financial resources from the ‘Contribution fund’, he said that the fund could not be used to provide salary to each and every archaka in temples across TN and the salary will clearly have to come from each of these temple’s income. He confirmed to this writer that the HR & CE would not be revising upwards the salary of the archaka and that they would soon go on appeal against the order of the High Court.

Unfazed by Temple Activists
Temple Activists have been aggressive over the last few years and those like TR Ramesh (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/02/tr-ramesh-temple-activist.html) have been moving with clear intent to get the HR & CE out of temples. The most recent development has been of Ramesh working with Subramaniam Swamy to move the Supreme Court on issues relating to the Madurai Meenakshi Amman temple. Sekar Babu is simply unfazed with such activism “We are ready to face the toughest of challenges as we are clear that we are working towards the development of temples. We will face the cases boldly without any fear.”

'Own Your Temple' Campaign sees a Silent Death
When the temple activists called for a mega launch of their ‘Own Your Temple’ Campaign on the Vinayaka Chathurthi day last year at the Kapaleeswarar temple, they probably underestimated the strength of Sekar Babu (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/08/kapali-temple-own-your-temple-launch.html). While the event attracted a sizeable crowd and went on for about an hour with the organisers announcing that they would hold similar events at the Parthasarathy temple, Madhava Perumal temple, Mundakanni Amman and Muppaathamman temple in the near future, Sekar Babu and the HR & CE responded with FIRs. Soon the organisers were asked to report at the Kutcheri Road Police Station. This section featured two long stories on the campaign but six months have since passed and not a word has been heard since, on the campaign.
Grand Allocation for Renovation in TN Temples
He points to  developmental initiatives  undertaken by him in the last two years. There has been a significant recovery of temple lands under his reign. The number of listings for consecrations has shot up dramatically to over 650. 

In fact this section had featured a story in February 2019 (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/02/renovation-issues-in-tn-temples.html) as to how renovation exercises had dropped dramatically after the High Court order restraining repairs work. Sekar Babu rolls out numbers endorsing the surge in Kumbhabisekams and Samprokshanams in the last two years. 
He is proud on the huge allocation of over Rs. 100crores that had been made for the renovation and consecration of 1000+year old temples. Over a 100 such temples had seen consecration in 2022-23 and close to another 100 is on the anvil this year, he said. 

He said that over 700 other temples have now been listed for renovation exercises and consecration and those will take place over a period of time. 

Multi Crore Budget for Remote Temples
He said that since the time he took charge two years ago, he went around remote temples in Tamil Nadu and provided a multi crore allocation for temples without oil and where archakas had no salary. He specifically pointed out that over a 100 temples in the Kanyakumari district had received an allocation of Rs. 15lakhs each for renovation and that another 100 temples in that region will receive a similar amount this year. 

He said that the Pudukottai Devasthanam had received an increased outlay from the HR & CE.

His ministry has made a first of its kind move in history relating to the temples under the Thanjavur Palace. “A majority of the close to 90 temples in Thanjavur were struggling for funds and even daily pooja. For the first time in history, we have allocated over Rs. 3crores for the running of these temples.”

Kanchi Varadar - Thenkalai vs Vadakalai
In January 2019, this section had featured a story on the ugly battle between the Vadakalai and Thenkalai sects of Vaishnavites at Pazhaya Seevaram (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/01/pazhaya-seevaram-battle-for-vaishnavite.html). It is now just under a month to go for the start of this year's Vaikasi Brahmotsavam at Varadaraja Perumal temple in Kanchipuram.
The ongoing battle between Thenkalai and Vadakalai sects has taken an even uglier turn in recent years leading to the suspension of the Ghosti. This writer put the question to Sekar Babu if he could moderate the issues and find a solution to the raging issue and if the Prabhandham Ghosti could be revived at the Brahmotsavam later this month. He comes back hissing like a snake narrating what he experienced at the meeting he personally anchored "I anchored a three hour meeting at the Secretariat between the two sects personally trying to solve the differences. But I was shocked to find that it was like a street fight. What more can I do? The court has asked them to sort out the differences amongst themselves. If they do that over the next fortnight or so, it will be good to have the Prabhandham Ghosti and the Vedic Recital."

Thiruvalluvar Temple in Mylapore
In Mylapore, he said that the Thiruvalluvar temple will see a Rs. 15crore renovation that will start within the next three months “It was Kalaignar Karunanidhi who initiated the previous renovation of this ancient temple. It was also under his leadership that Valluvar Kottam and the stature of Thiruvalluvar was built in Kanniyakumari. The temple in Mylapore will receive a never before seen facelift and the technicians and engineers have already begun the background work.”

New Long Term JC at Kapali Temple
Temple Activist TR Ramesh has often been vocal on the Kapaleeswarar Temple and how he is keen to get the EOs out of such temples. Sekar Babu remains defiant on such calls and said that a new permanent Joint Commissioner will be appointed for the Kapali temple before the end of this month. Following the demise of D Kaveri, R Hariharan, Verification-DC, had taken temporary charge as the EO in December last.

A Highly Devoted Minister
Sekar Babu has no qualms about moving around with the common man especially devotees inside temple. Two years ago, when a Sripatham person at Kapaleeswarar temple tried to stop a devotee from approaching the minister, Sekar Babu issued a stern warning asking him to refrain from such moves in the future. He listens to the issues of people, is simple as a person and very high on devotion. A couple of weeks ago during the Ramanuja Utsavam, he was at the Parthasarathy temple in Thiruvallikeni (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/07/thiruvallikeni-prabhandham-ghosti.html) and moved around sannidhis almost unnoticed. After darshan at the Sannidhis, he sat in front of the Dwajasthambam and went into a silent prayer for almost 10 minutes with his eyes closed invoking the blessings of Lord Parthasarathy. 

He counts decisions on all caste archakas, lady othuvars and archanai in Tamil as significant milestones under his leadership over the last couple of years.

Time will tell on the outcome of temple activism in Tamil Nadu but for now HR & CE minister is on a roll moving each day from one temple to another personally monitoring the action on the ground. Many bouncers may come his way in the future but Sekar Babu is a determined man and a gritty fighter. More than anything else he is devotionally inclined and offers his prayers at temples all the time he as a simple devotee.

Kanchi Varadar Brahmotsavam MAV Compromise Offer

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I am okay to two credible Vadakalai and Thenkalai leaders discussing this issue threadbare and arriving at a fair solution - MA Venkatakrishnan
If there is no solution within the next fortnight or so, devotees will not be able to enjoy the Prabhandham Ghosti and Vedic Recital at Kanchi Varadar Brahmotsavam
Last week this section had featured a story on HR & CE minister PK Sekar Babu where he expressed anguish at the open fight between the Thenkalai and Vadakalai Sects at the Varadaraja Perumal  temple in Kanchipuram (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/05/hr-ce-minister-sekar-babu-on-roll.html). He told this writer that he had tried to mediate between the two at the Secretariat but to no avail.

Thenkalai Prabhandham Ghosti leader MA Venkatakrishnan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/05/ma-venkatakrishnan-thiruvallikeni-divya_16.html) told this writer just ahead of the Chariot procession on Wednesday morning in Thiruvallikeni that since this section has earlier referred to him as a Fanatic Thenkalai, which he says he is neither ashamed of nor embarrassed and is infact proud to protect the fair rights of his Sect, he is even willing and open for an independent and credible Thenkalai (in case the Vadakalai leaders are not okay to him being part of the discussion) and Vadakalai personality to sit and discuss this issue over the next fortnight and arrive at a compromise solution that is fully fair to both sides.

This way, he says, the Prabhandham Ghosti and the Veda Parayanam can take place at the forthcoming Vaikasi Brahmotsavam that starts on May 31.

Thenkalai lead Prabhandham, Vadakalai the Vedic Recital
MAV says that the earlier tradition was for the Thenkalayars to lead the Prabhandham Ghosti and for the Vadakalayars to lead the Veda Parayanam. Each of these will have to be led as per the respective Sampradaya. The Vadakalayars are allowed to follow the Thenkalai Prabhandham members after the first couple of rows and similarly the Thenkalayars are allowed to participate in the Vedic Recital after the first few rows.

After Pon Jayaraman, the former EO of Ranganathaswamy temple Srirangam(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2017/06/srirangam-ranganathaswamy-renovation.html), took over as the EO of Kanchi Varadar temple, he told this writer that he too tried a resolution to this dispute but his sincere attempts to bring the two sects together failed at that time. He has since moved to head the Thiruppani committee at the HR & CE.

The High Court then directed the two sects to sort out the differences amongst themselves and get back with the solution for the court to then direct the final order.

Ready for a Credible Compromise
With 20 days to go for the start of the Brahmotsavam, MAV pointed to the fact that most of the Paadal Petra Sthalams (Saivite Saint Poets praised temples) don’t present the Thevaram verses as a Ghosti anymore and it is only in Vaishnavite Divya Desams that this tradition (Prabhandham Ghosti) still continues. He told this writer that both sides should go all out to find an amicable solution so the Prabhandham and Veda Parayanam tradition can take place during this Brahmotsavam at the Varadaraja Perumal temple “There will be compromises that will have to be made on both sides. If it is a fair compromise that offers fair rights to both sects, the Thengalayars will be open to following it" MAV told this writer on Wednesday right in front of Parthasarathy Perumal on the Chariot.

There are many credible leaders in both sects and they can sit and sort out the differences as Prabhandham and Vedic recital are integral part of the processions, he said.

On the seventh morning of the Brahmotsavam at Thiruvallikeni, the mada streets reverberated with the loud recital of the sacred verses with around a fifty Prabhandham members led by MAV presenting the first canto of Thiru Mangai Azhvaar’s Periya Thirumozhi even as Parthasarathy Perumal made his way around the four streets on the 90 minute chariot procession.
                           
Over the last many decades, MAV has anchored and led the Prabhandham Ghosti at Thiruvallikeni and ensured that the team stays strong and united in the recital(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/07/thiruvallikeni-prabhandham-ghosti.html). An example of his leadership quality was seen at the recently concluded Ramanujam Utsavam when in a fraction of a few seconds he silenced two fighting members of his team at the end of a procession. 

This morning on the auspicious occasion of the Chariot Procession he has openly declared that he is up for a compromise solution between the Thengalayars and the Vadakalayars of Kanchipuram that is fair to both sides. 
Will the Vadakalayars including the Mutt Heads be open to a discussion within the next fortnight to find an amicable solution so the devotees at Kanchipuram can enjoy both the Prabhandham as well as the Vedic Recital over the ten days of the festival.  Will someone like a Venu Srinivasan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/07/venu-srinivasan-historical-temples.html) who has seen many a Union issue in his four decades at the TVS Group, take the lead on this and come forward to the discussion table to find a workable solution that both sides are happy with.

It is not an impossible task and with willingness from both sides, it is an issue that can easily find a solution. Thenkalai Prabhandham leader MAV has expressed intent  from his sect to seek a fair solution and to make both Prabhandham and Vedic Recital a reality at the forthcoming Brahmotsavam. It is hoped that Vadakalayars will reach out and make yet another serious attempt to find a solution to this longstanding issue between the two Vaishnavite Sects.

If ego gets the better of the Vaishnavites at this point of time, it will be a matter of time before others enter this domain. And that will not be pleasing to the Vaishnavite ears!!!

Kanchipuram Brahmotsavam Prabhandham Ghosti Thathachar

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The 'Brahmotsavam' Prabhandham dispute over the 'Dhaniyan' Rights
We are okay to Prabhandham Ghosti at the Brahmotsavam with or without both the Thenkalai and Vadakalai Dhaniyans – Sampath Kumar Thathachar 
Following the story that featured last week wherein Thenkalai Prabhandham leader MA Venkatakrishnan of Thiruvallikeni (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/05/kanchi-varadar-brahmotsavam-mav.html) had suggested for a compromise solution led by two independent credible leaders (he was okay to not being part of that compromise discussion) from the two Sects, this writer had a long conversation with TK Sampath Kumar, a descendant of the Thathachariar clan at the Varadaraja Perumal temple in Kanchipuram. His appa Kannan Thathachariar (in the photo below) has been part of the Veda Parayanam for several decades.

Sampath told this writer that the Vadakalayars of Kanchipuram are okay to being in the Prabhandham Ghosti from the third or fourth row as per the court order of May 17, 2022, a copy of which (7 page order) is available with this writer. Following the appeal by the Thenkalayars, this order has been kept in abeyance.

He said that as per that court direction, the Vadakalayars are okay to reciting the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham with the dhaniyans of both the Sects with Thenkalayars leading the Ghosti from the front two or three rows and reciting first the Thenkalai Dhaniyan. 

As an alternate option and as a compromise solution, the Vadakalayars, he said, are also okay to recite the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham without the dhaniyans of both the sects and to try this out during the Brahmotsavam. The court had pointed out that a majority of the Saint Poets did not belong to either of the ‘Kalais’ and that it was important to go ahead with the presentation of the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham during the Brahmotsavam.

But Sampath is clear that with both the Sects in the Ghosti, the Dhaniyan cannot be just the Thenkalai Thaniyan.

He said that the Prabhandham Ghosti during the Brahmotsavam could take place only if both the Dhaniyans are recited or if both the Dhaniyans are done away with as part of a compromise solution and just the Prabhandham verses are recited.

On the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham, it seems that both sides are okay to Thenkalai leading the Ghosti from the front row and Vadakalai being from the third or fourth row, but the issue relates to the Dhaniyan with Thenkalayars claiming sole right to the presentation of the Dhaniyan and Vadakalayars wanting to recite their acharya’s Dhaniyan or doing away with both the Dhaniyans.
                               Kannan Thathachariar

Veda Parayanam
As regards the Veda Parayanam, he said that the Thathachars are the sole right holders of the Vedic Recital and the question does not arise of the Thenkalayars being part of that. He said that even as part of the compromise solution, the Thenkalayars cannot be part of the Veda Parayanam as it is the sole rights of a family and not even one of the (Vadakalai) Sect.

Desikar Prabhandham
On the issue relating to the recital of Desikar Prabhandham, he said at least during the birthday celebrations of Vedantha Desikar in Puratasi, the Desikar Prabhandham will have to be recited, especially if Upadesa Ratna Maalai is recited by the Thenkalayars during the Manavala Maamani Utsavam.

He said that this (Kanchipuram) is the birth place of Vedantha Desikar and he has presented verses in praise of Varadaraja Perumal and hence his Prabhandham will have to be recited here on the occasion of Desikar Utsavam.

It is now exactly a fortnight to go for the commencement of this year’s Vaikasi Brahmotsavam with the Grand Garuda Sevai on the morning of Friday June 2. 

Last year, following the court order referred above, the Prabhandham Ghosti compromising of both Thenkalayars and Vadakalayars, presented for a few days before the dispute led to the suspension even before the conclusion of the Vaikasi Brahmotsavam. And has not taken place since.

It is hoped that the ‘Dhaniyan’ dispute can be sorted out among the two sects this fortnight so the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham Ghosti can take  place during this Brahmotsavam.

D Girish TN Wicket Keeper Entrepreneur@ 58

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TN Wicket Keeper from the 1988 Ranji and Irani Trophy winning team has turned an Entrepreneur and is targeting sportspeople worldwide with a mental resilience app
D Girish, the TN wicket keeper who was part of the Ranji Trophy and Irani Trophy winning team in 1988, has turned an Entrepreneur at 58 and has launched a ‘mental health’ app for sportspersons. The app will go live next month with 200 players from the TNCA.  Girish, who is currently the Chairman of the Cricket Advisory Committee (he replaced S Suresh), that appointed the new TN coach and the state selectors, is all excited at the prospects of this first of its kind offering in the cricket space. His team mate from the University days and later VP at Microsoft, Sanjay Partharasathy and former India cricketer K Srikkanth’s brother and childhood friend Srinath have invested in this startup venture.

He is so pepped up that he forgets his Sunday lunch as he gets talking passionately to this writer about this new initiative that seeks to take care of the mental challenges of cricketers helping them  understand and evaluate their mental side better.

The First Big Cricketing Moment with Coach Audi Chetty 
Girish’s drew his first inspiration in cricket from his two uncles in Bangalore who played Junior State cricket in Karnataka. When he was not yet 10, he began playing cork ball cricket at the then famous Corporation ground in Nungambakkam. He recounts the first big moment in his cricketing life when the revered Audi Chetty who later went on to coach Udumalpet's SVPB into a successful club “Audi Chetty was PSBB’s coach in the mid 1970s and he turned up at the corporation ground where the school team practiced. I was tense when I saw an old man looking at me closely and wondered as to what he would say of my batting.”
“Much to my delight, he asked me to come to the school nets the next day. When I said I had to ask my parents, he came home and did the ‘convincing’ talk for me and that landed me at the school nets. It was a great gesture from one of the most well respected coaches in city cricket. There was no looking back since and I had a great cricketing phase at PSBB with the school doing exceptionally well in cricket.”

Girish has the highest words of praise for Audi Chetty in shaping his cricketing career “Audi Chetty always kept in simple. He taught me all the basics that I still remember almost five decades later.  He was instrumental in spotting and nurturing me and gave me all the confidence that I needed in cricket in the starting phase.”

Accidental Keeper -Audi Chetty again!!!
Girish started off as a batting all-rounder who bowled a bit of off spin. He recalls the moment that led to him becoming a keeper “I would do everything at the school nets. That day I was keeping wickets. It so happened that the regular keeper turned sick and Audi Chetty seeing me keep asked me to do the same in the match. From that moment I became a keeper.”

Girish counts that as an important moment in his life “As a keeper I had to watch every ball closely including the bowler’s grip and release. This helped me watched the ball closely as a batsman as well and I began to  concentrate better while batting. And it helped me played the long innings.”

While he began to do well in cricket, academics was always top priority. Once when he got a lower rank, Mrs. YGP, who would personally hand out the report card, remarked “Not You Girish”.

A Great Cricketing year followed by Disillusionment
As a 14year old, he played for TN U16  under CS Suresh Kumar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/07/cs-suresh-kumar-india-schools-tn-opener.html). His performances there earned him a place in the South Zone team as the first wicket keeper ahead of Sadanand Viswanath. After a standout knock in the Zone match in Lucknow, he was chosen for the National camp in Bombay with the team going on a trip to Pakistan in 1979-80. It was in that phase that he had his first disillusionment with cricket something that in some ways almost four decades later has led him to develop a mental health app for cricketers.

Some age related issues led to a re-selection and another camp was held at the Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bangalore. Much to his dismay, he was not offered the batting opportunity at the camp and Sadanand Viswanath, who later went on to play for India and emerged a star in the WCC 1985, was chosen ahead of him. Girish had scored lots of runs in junior cricket that year both for the state and zone and had also kept wickets well. It had been his best year in cricket “If I had been picked for that tour, my cricket may have taken a completely different turn”, he says looking back at the series of events in 1979-80.

This had a lasting impact on him as a teenager on the unexpected twists life has in store. Four Decades later he is keen that every young cricketer is taken care and given a fair deal.

Fully Engaged with Cricket but still high marks in XII Board
Into his mid teens, he was already in the U19, U 22 and U25 state teams and his constant absence during the year led the Principal at St Bedes (he had moved to state board in Class XI) to withhold his hall ticket and it required his appa’s intervention to secure permission to sit for the exams. And when the results were out, everyone in the school management were in for a big surprise “It was my PD who went in to check my marks and he came back in a shocked state asking  how I had achieved this for I had not attended the regular classes at all that year and yet secured 92%.”

Lets go a big Cricketing opportunity
He was selected for the Indian U19 trip to West Indies close to the Boards but he chose academics over cricket and skipped that tour. He justifies that decision saying that 'cricket is always uncertain' and 'you do not know when you will fall from the cliff.'

The Best years in Cricket under Venkat
He played six years of league cricket (MCC and India Pistons) in the 1980s under legendary S Venkataraghavan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/04/venkataraghavan75.html), who recently hosted a birthday party at the MCC for some of his old teammates from the 1970s and 80s, and considers it the best learning years in cricket “Venkat had gone through severe challenges at zonal and national levels but always remained tough and strong. He initiated in me ways of facing life and its twists and turns. He wanted me to succeed in the toughest of circumstances and prepared me for that."

"Once when a ball from him bounced high and hit my face (my cheek swelled beyond recognition), he came up to me and said this is nothing just continuing keeping. I could not even place ice on the swollen area. It strengthened my mental space and I became tougher and more resolute on the field. It also laid the foundation to face all the challenges that life threw at you and to face it with  a sense of confidence.”

He recalls the glorious years playing under Venkataraghavan “It was my biggest exposure in cricket and life and I am grateful for that. Keeping to Venkat for six years was a great learning experience, not just in cricket but for the life that was ahead of me. He helped me raise the bar and taught me toughness. It was from him that I learned never to get bogged down by failures.”

The University Days
Girish says that Venkat was kind enough to hand out a personally written recommendation letter to the Anna University on his cricketing and academic credentials and his personality. He joined Anna University where he TVS' Sanjay Parthasarathy was a batchmate and cricket teammate. He played non stop cricket in that phase, one when he was also part of the Ranji camp. But  like at School, here too it was a big challenge “I had begun playing first division cricket and after the matches over the weekend, I had to be at the class at 8.30am when the body was tired and the mind was still recounting incidents from the weekend’s match. The problem with cricket is that it suddenly makes you a hero and it was easy for a teenager to fall prey to the praises from your friends and college mates. Success in cricket led to youngsters getting carried away easily.”

Great Time batting with TE
At India Pistons, TE Srinivasan shaped his batting technique with some simple tips “When I was struggling against off spin, he asked me to move my guard from leg stump to middle stump. And suddenly I began middling the ball. On another occasion, when I refused a leg bye after the ball hit my thigh pad, he came up to me and said ‘always a single off the thigh pad’. It was great batting lesson playing with TE as I imbibed the finer aspects from him.”

In his first year at college, he shared a big record breaking double century stand in the Vizzy Trophy against East Zone with PC Prakash (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/04/pc-prakash-tn-ranji-1980s.html), whose sister he was to marry later that decade when she was just 19!!!! 'It's all in the game' says a chuckling Girish. That phase also turned out to be Girish's two best years in Ranji cricket.
Even after a great batting season for MCC, he did not make it into the playing XI in Ranji that once again left him a bit disappointed and it was only veteran Bharath Reddy’s injury that led to his Ranji debut.
 
Vasudevan - A Shrewd Captain
After six years under Venkat, Girish moved to SPIC where he played under the Ranji Trophy winning captain S Vasudevan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/06/vasudevan-tn-ranji-trophy-retirement.html). He played two full seasons of Ranji Cricket before a severe back injury brought about a premature end to his playing career. While Venkat was a toughie, he calls Vasudevan as a soft spoken but shrewd captain “Vasu was very different from Venkat. While he was soft spoken, he was a very shrewd captain. He understood the match situations well and knew exactly the right field settings for every batsman. He was fair to everyone and every player in the team trusted him for that. Under him, there was no politics or groupism. He brought unity among the players and everyone enjoyed their cricket that season. He brought the best out of everyone”

Girish in the role of CAC Chairman
It was that great respect for his ‘captain’ that led him to have an open conversation with him earlier this year when Girish had to take the big call to sack the TN Selection committee and appoint a new one in another effort to win the coveted Ranji Trophy (Vasudevan led Selection committee has made way for a new committee led by UR Radhakrishnan). As he has always been throughout his career, Girish had a straight talk with Vasudevan reasoning out the thought process for the change.

On the Selection committee, he says he has had a word with the new committee asking them to be fair to the boys. “No cricketer should feel that he was deprived of a fair opportunity.” He has known UR Radhakrishnan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/03/ur-radhakrishnan.html) for over three decades and is confident that he will be a ‘straight talker’.

Give Kulkarni time to turnaround the TN fortunes
He is also of the view that the new TN coach Sulakshan Kulkarni will need to be given 2-3 years as nothing can turnaround just like that. But he is happy in the way Kulkarni has shaped up in the first few months “His contract starts only from June but he has been here from March watching the first division league matches and the camps that we have held. He has been able to spot players who previously were nowhere in the picture.”

Premature End to his playing days
Back injury dealt a serious blow to Girish's cricket and instead of taking to a surgery, he decided to end his cricket early, probably soon than one would have expected. He counts winning the Ranji and the Irani Trophy in the same year as his big cricketing moments. He particularly remembers the belting that VBC (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/01/vb-chandrasekar.html) handed out to Hirwani and Gopal Sharma as one of the most memorable innings he had seen during his playing days. 

A Mental Resilience app for cricketers
Despite the performances on the cricket field- he played 16 matches for TN, the incident in Bangalore remained at the back of his mind and he understood early on that a cricketer’s life was always unsteady and that they could fall any moment. Just over four decades later, he is now launching an app to test the mental health of cricketers and help them keep their anxiety under control. 

"The pandemic phase got me thinking at home. I found that the players were lost in their own thoughts. There was very little communication with them. There is always an anxiety within players and most are at wits end in expressing their mental challenges and sorting those out."

Girish says he spoke to a number of sports psychologists on this and most of them suggested counselling sessions as a solution. But he was not convinced. He interviewed several cricketers and found that there was a stigma attached to sharing the psychological challenges. In many of them, they were not even aware of the role of the mind in a success or failure. And that feedback led him to launch a mental health self help app- Equilii- and he convinced the RCB psychologist Sanjana Kiran to be part of this exercise.

Equilii, he says, is a digitized mental resilience enhancement app, that makes sportspeople self-reliant, through self-awareness and mind skills training and facilitates peak performance. Through the app, he is looking to provide a comprehensive model of mental care for cricketers and players in other sports as well.

"During my playing days, there was not much focus on physical training and fitness. While the physical fitness aspects has caught on in the last couple of decades, the importance of the mental aspects in sport has not been given its due importance. Mental well being is an aspect that should get just as much importance as physical training and from the early years of a sports person," says Girish.

He has listed a number of parameters on which the players will be tested and analysed. The app offers psycho education and has an emotion tracker. 
Girish is delighted two of his old teammates have placed their trust on him in this venture by investing. He says that Krishnamachari Srinath was a great childhood friend and a genuine guy. The two of them played together at the U19 level and for MCC in the first division.

There has been positive feedback from Sanjay Parthasarathy (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/04/sanjay-parthasarathy-south-zone-u19.html) and he is likely to invest further in the venture. It is also likely that Girish will go for first round external funding in the near future as he looks to expand his presence into overseas markets like the Middle East and the US. He says that he sees US as a big market for his app in the future.

Signs up the first deal with the TNCA
The TNCA has just signed up with him for 200 players and he is in talks with the Super Kings Academy to install the app among the students there. Head Coach of SKA Sriram Krishnamurthy who for a long time has been a strong believer on the importance of shaping the mental side of young players and who has been a High Performance Coach for a decade in Australia, England and New Zealand told this writer last month that he found the app interesting and believed that it could play a critical role in helping youngsters understand themselves better.

Girish is also in talks with other cricket associations to take the mental resilience app to its players there. Interestingly the app has found interest in the athletic space with Meghanatha Reddy of SDAT keen to implement this with the athletes there. He is also in talks with Gopichand Academy to take this app into the Badminton players.

Entrepreneurial Excitement at 59
Even as a youngster he had wanted to become an entrepreneur but hailing from a typical middle class family and having married early (at 23!!!), he had to have a secure salary and thus worked at SPIC and HCL for close to two decades. It is not an age when one would expect a typical Madhwa to venture into a sports startup but D Girish, now 59, has always been passionate about cricket and believes that not much attention has been placed on the mental aspect of young cricketers. With this app, he is hoping to fill that gap. 

While one part of Girish will focus on doing everything as the Chairman of CAC to help TN lift the Ranji Trophy, this passionate entrepreneurial side will see him spend just as much time on helping aspiring cricketers take care of their mental health. He is looking to play this entrepreneurial role with just the same intensity as he did when he was a player.

This section will track the progress he makes on this front.

Karpagambal Mess Mylapore 70 years

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Popular for its Badam Halwa and Cashew Nut Cake, Karpagambal Mess on East Mada Street has rolled out Venthaya Dosai and Mudakkathan Keerai Dosai in recent years as part of its endeavor to provide traditional and health food
Third Gen Customers continue to stream into the restaurant that has seen a full scale renovation 
                                         
This year the popular Karpagambal Mess on East Mada Street, Mylapore is completing 70 years. Despite a number of restaurants that have come up over the last decade on the Mada Streets, Karpagambal Mess, started in 1953, has been able to hold its own and expand both the size of the facility as well as the variety of its offering.

Third Generation owner Prabhu Das is now 45 and has already been managing the business and serving the customer for three decades having taking over from his appa, Soundararajan, when he was just 15. He recounts to this writer sitting on the North Prakara of the Kapaleeswarar temple that phase when he had to make a big call regarding his future “I had completed Class X and my appa asked me about my academics. Even as a young boy studying for the exams, my ears were always ringing of the ‘nei dosai’ call and I could smell the badam halwa being served. There were no thoughts and I quit academics at 15 to join my appa in the early 1990s and my entire life has ever since revolved around serving customers.”

Prabhu Das’s grandfather Ramadas Iyer hailed from near Vaitheeswaran Koil and had moved to Madras as part of the freedom movement. In Mylapore, he found that there was a need for traditional food served in a traditional way and launched Karpagambal Mess in 1953 under a thatched roof “Eight families lived here and there was just space enough for people to stand and eat. My patti Pattamal doubled up as the cook at the Mess while my thatha took care of the customer service on the plantain leaf.”
                                          Ramadas Iyer

Founder's Devotional attachment to Karpagambal
While the family’s kula deivam was Vaitheeswaran swamy, Ramadas Iyer had become very devotionally attached to Karpagambal in the early years of his stay in Mylapore and this devotion remained so till the final moments of his life. And he hence he named the mess after the Ambal of Mylapore. He had great respect for the priests of Kapaleeswarar temple and he felt it a great blessing to be serving them.

In his final days, Ramadas Iyer passed on an important message to his son “I have named the Mess after Karpagambal and any unhappiness to customers would make Ambal unhappy. Hence, that every single customer has a happy experience. That is the only way we can go to be bed every night in peace.”

That has remained at the core of the business since its launch seven decades ago, says Prabhu Das.

The 1980s - From Standing to 18Seats 
For two decades, Ramadas Iyer managed all by himself before Soundararajan took over in the early 1970s. A decade later he bought out the building. From ‘standing’ customers, he provided for 18seats much to the delight of the customers. When he took over, the founder told him that the customers that day could comprise of a pregnant lady or a patient who was returning from the hospital after a fortnight wanting to taste the Badam Halwa or it could be a child’s first idly. ‘We need to provide each of them with an everlasting experience” was appa’s message to me.
                                                 Soundar Rajan

The 1990s - The First AC Mess in Mylapore
Prabhu Das is proud to be the first Mess to launch an AC hall as early as 1994. It was also he who went in for a massive renovation of the restaurant bringing down the old building and expanding the Mess by more than doubling its size to 1700sq. ft with the seating capacity increasing to 60. While his grandfather and patti managed it all by themselves, his appa engaged just under 10 staffers. During his time, this has increased to 20.

Into his late teens, Prabhu Das began riding TVS Champ to Parrys at 4am every morning to purchase the vegetables for the day and this was been a daily routine he followed for years. It was a great early experience for him to learn the art of buying the ingredients each day of the year and to negotiating with the suppliers.

The Food Favourites - Halwa and Cashew Cake to Venthaya Dosai
At the turn of the century, there was a shift in lifestyle and eating habits. The traditional food was becoming history. Prabhu Das wanted to revive this and over the last decade he has been slowly bringing back traditional food on his menu. While the tiffen items (Ghee Pongal, Idly, Dosai) in the morning and evening (Bonda/ Bhajji) and variety rice offerings are part of the daily menu, Thengai Boli, Sojji Appam, Venthaya Dosai, Mudakkathan Keerai Dosai (good for knee bone issues) are turning big hits and there is now a fan club for these. He is now exploring offering Milagu Jeeragam Rasam as part of the health food package. 

A BIG HIT 

Thengai Boli
Venthaya Dosai
Badam Halwa
Cashew Nut Cake
Mudakkathan Keerai Dosai

Badam Halwa and Cashew nut cake continue to be a hot favourite with the customers while Podi Onion Oothappam is youngsters’ favourite pick these days.

Tech Upgrade - Accounting Processes
While for several decades, the customer bills were written on the slate, Prabhu Das’s two daughters, Aishwarya and Soundarya, are bringing in the technology changes into the accounting process. Computerised billing has been introduced in recent years.

Prabhu Das says that the handing over of the baton to the next gen happened on its own and was not thrust on anyone. He is delighted with the fact that his two daughters have been actively involved in some of the processes at the Mess. He cites the example of this year’s Panguni Utsavam when the two of them were in complete charge through the ten days including managing the kitchen and the cash counter. He is hoping that someday in the near future they would take over from him and carry on this tradition of serving high quality traditional food to the Mylaporeans.
                                          Prabhu Das

Ever since his childhood he has been an ardent devotee of the Divine Couple. Soon after his wedding, his wife, Malathi, began the process of presenting flowers to Kapaleeswarar and Karpagambal on street processions during the Panguni Utsavam. Almost quite unexpectedly this process led to him being devotionally involved with the presentation of the flower garlands during the Panguni Utsavam, something that he has carried out over the last 25 years. 

The Third Gen Customer
On the Rishabha Vahanam night this year, just after the shop had closed for the night, a young man came to Prabhu Das with a special request at 11pm. Prabhu recounts one of the most memorable moments of his life “He told me that he was born after his appa had got a badam halwa from here and presented to his amma while she was getting into labour. It is a very sentimental occasion for me and I too want to present a Badam Halwa to my wife as she heads to the hospital tonight. I went up immediately and handed the halwa. A couple of days later he came back to inform that they had been blessed with a boy child.”

The Covid Impact and the bounce back
The two years of the Pandemic was a big setback. He took bank loans to pay salaries to his staff. With the temple shut, 90% of the business had gone away in that phase. But what surprised him was the way his 20 employees supported him. “I was taken aback by the way they stood with me in the tough times and how they were back sharp every morning once we opened after the initial phase of Wave 1. They have been a great source of strength to me."

It has been a swift bounce back for Karpagambal Mess over the last one year with the loyal customers coming back and the restaurant serving to a packed audience during this Panguni Utsavam. The Mess now is also beginning to attract the younger generation in large numbers. 

Even as Karpagambal Mess completes seven decades and moves into the next phase of growth, lucrative offers are continuing to come his way to open branches outside of Mylapore. Prabhu Das has resisted the temptation for he just one thing in mind. He says that he owes his entire business to the devotees of the Kapali temple as he sees a big spike in customers at his Mess on the big processional days and during the utsavams “I have to continue to safeguard the brand name of Karpagambal. A brand has been built over 70 years and we have come to be known for our quality offering. Those two are our biggest success factors and all my focus would be on ensuring that the brand name is protected by continuing to provide quality food and seeing the happy faces amongst our customers.”

Someday in the future, one or both his daughters could take over the reigns from Prabhu Das. For now, he is clear that there is no ‘going away’ from Karpagambal and the joy for him will continue to come from serving the devotee customers with quality food after their darshan at Kapaleeswarar temple. 

This section wishes Karpagambal Mess on the occasion of completing Seven Decades.

PS Moses TN Ranji batsman 1970s 80s

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After a blazing start in March 1977 against Bombay as a 19year old, he was in the form of his cricketing life in 1982 when his father’s heart attack followed by a ‘Spiritual Experience’ transformed him. A 2nd tragedy in the early 90s led him into Social Entrepreneurship and deeper into ‘FAITH’
Paul Satish Moses shot into prominence as a 19 year old with a stunning knock in the Ranji Trophy Semi Final against Bombay in March 1977. A big knock against Bombay was always seen in special light in those days and created a big impression on the powers that be. It was an innings that drew immediate praise from batting legend and his cricketing icon Sunil Gavaskar from whom he received an international brand gloves. It was a magical moment in his life and he was on a high. In 1982, he was in the form of his life with a century and a 90 against a strong Hyderabad attack in successive seasons. Just then his father suffered a heart attack and the 25 year old had to run from pillar to post seeking life support. The doctors threw their hands up and asked him to reach out to the 'Superior Powers' above. The youngster, who was all alone that night, was shocked at the response. Soon after he had a great ‘Spiritual Experience’ (enlightenment) that transformed his thought process and he was never the same again.  The experience reformed him as a person and led him to give up serious cricket. At the turn of the next decade, the death of his 18 day daughter led him even deeper into this transformational journey. Over the last couple of decades, he has immersed himself fully into ‘FAITH’ and has turned into a Social Entrepreneur supporting 75 girl children. Here is the story.

The first Gift- Bill Ponsford Bat from Moore Market!!!
Like all young boys from that generation, PS Moses was crazy about cricket and spent a lot of time at the Nehru Park playing cork ball cricket. Like the Somasundaram ground in T. Nagar, this ground too in Chetput served as a launch platform for budding cricketers.

His father Dr RV Moses was the early inspiration for young Paul. Though he himself was not a cricketer, the Senior Moses would roll his arm over every day at home shaping his son’s batting technique. While his father was impressed with the way he played in the inter colony matches in Purasawakkam, there was disappointment in store for Paul soon after he joined MCC School in Chetput. 

PS Moses, now 66, recounts the struggle he encountered to get into the school team in the late 1960s “MCC School had a strong cricket team and was dominated by seniors. My father felt that I was talented and wanted them to take a look at me but despite his request to the PD, I was not allowed into the nets. It took quite an effort for me to have my first knock at the school nets.”

However, the moment coach Audi Chetty had one look at the 11 year old, he was impressed and 'my cricketing prowess began to grow under his watchful eyes', says Moses looking back at how he overcame the early rejection“I scored 35 in my first knock for the school against the Railways team and cemented my place in the team. I was totally thrilled when my father took me to Moore Market and surprised me by handing me a ‘Bill Ponsford’ bat. It was my first big moment in cricket.”

Into the TNCA League - God has his ways!!!
His induction into the TNCA League came out of nowhere. The owner of Milky Way CC, Devarajan, was a medical representative. Moses recalls as to how his father sprung another surprise on him that evening in the early 70s“The two got talking about medicines at my father’s clinic in Padi and when the conversation turned to cricket, my induction into the fifth division league team was sealed.”

Deceptive medium pacer during his school days
Moses had two terrific seasons with Milky Way picking up over 50wickets including 7 and 8 wicket hauls.  These along with his performances for the school got him into the city schools and state schools side. Former TN off spinner M Santosh Kumar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/06/m-santosh-kumar-iob-tn-ica.html) played alongside Moses right from the City Schools days right up to Ranji Trophy and was his deputy at the TN state schools tourney as well. Along with current BCCI President Roger Binny, Santosh was also part of the South Zone schools team that Moses captained against North Zone comprising Kapil Dev and Rajinder Amarnath. He recalls Moses from those early years "Moses was a terrific batsman and a very good medium pace bowler with a deceptive bouncer. He was unplayable on matting wickets. He was a gritty cricketer and a classical all-rounder."
While he performed well on the field as an all-rounder in that phase in his mid-teens, what stood out distinctively was his conduct both on and off the field.

“Pasmore (a name given by his close mate Bharath Reddy) was a great Gentleman of the game. He was a very soft spoken person and a nice character to move with on and off the field” says Santosh.

Big Cricketing years at Pachaiappas -Academics takes a back seat
Along with his school mate Bharath Reddy, with whom he was to forge a five decades long friendship, he joined the Pachaiappas College, a team that also had TA Sekar and Santosh. It was a glorious cricket phase for him and he enjoyed the fun atmosphere at the college. 
By this time, Moses’s entire focus was on cricket and academics had taken a back seat. “My father was a doctor and my brother and sister both went on to do medicine. I was the odd one out in the family on the academics front. But my father encouraged me a lot and believed that I could go a long way with the talent I possessed. This helped me play with a free mind in my teenage phase without any parental pressure.”

Along with his college mates, he signed up with Gandhi Nagar club (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/02/gandhi-nagar-sports-club-cricket-ground.html) in the first division. His two hundreds for the city colleges in the Buchi Babu tournament grabbed attention and into his late teens, he seemed to be moving in the right direction in cricket.

India fast bowler from the 1980s and the architect of the MRF Pace Foundation TA Sekar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2013/08/ta-sekar-architect-behind-worlds-best.html) played with Moses through the college phase and at the U22 level and later for TN in the Ranji Trophy. He looks back at Moses as one of the most lovable characters in TN cricket in that period.

Naturally gifted stroke maker
Head of TNCA Academy, PC Prakash was part of the TN team through the 1980s. He found Moses to be a naturally gifted player. “There was a certain style about him in the way he batted. He was excellent in stroke play and timed the ball well. He never seemed to hit too hard but always got the desired results. I fondly remember his double hundred for City Colleges vs Districts at Udumalpet, an innings that stood out for patience and shot selection, bringing out his other side." 
The two of them also played together at the University level and there too 'Paul played some eye catching innings truly memorable ones'. As a team mate, Paul was fun loving and a jolly guy who was always loved by his teammates, says PCP.

A cricketer liked by everyone
Off Spinner and top order bat NS Ramesh played for the Coimbatore districts in his late teens and later went on to play for RBI in the TNCA first division. He was touched by Moses’ personality and the way he moved around with his teammates "While he was a compact and fine batsman, it was the warmth that he exuded that stood out in him. Moses was a very friendly and unassuming guy. He was the kind of person who was liked by all those who knew him."

A dream debut season- Biggest Cricketing Moment
He had made his Ranji debut in December 1976 when TE Srinivasan pulled out at the last moment against Hyderabad “I batted well against Ramnarayan and Abid Ali and scored 30 but with TE back for the next match against Karnataka, I was left out and did not figure in the QF against Railways as well.”

He was picked for the big semifinal clash against Bombay (replacing Michael Dalvi). He was just 19 then and got a taste of what top notch Ranji cricket was all about. On the first morning, TN slumped to 31 for 4 and Moses was up against a fiery Karsan Ghavri and Ismail. “It was a tense entry with my batting idol Gavaskar standing at first slip. I gathered all my determination to see through the initial pace battering and ended up with a satisfying knock of 87.”
Legendary leggie VV Kumar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2007/07/cricket-tales-exclusive-with-vv-kumar.html) was in his final phase as a cricketer when Moses played that great knock against Bombay and ‘saved TN from the blushes’. He remembers Moses as a chistle cut bat who never deviated from ground realities. "He was an excellent member on tours and his dry sense of humour ‘kept us in good spirits’.  Those who needed solace and comfort could always lean on his shoulders." 

TN Ranji Trophy winning captain S Vasudevan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/06/vasudevan-tn-ranji-trophy-retirement.html) was team mates with Moses right from the college days and saw many of his stupendous innings. During that entire decade of playing together, he found Moses to be a very sweet person. "And that innings in Bombay  was a memorable one."

When Moses arrived at the dressing room the next morning, he was in for a big surprise. He saw Sunil Gavaskar walking towards him and what happened in the next few moments left him dazed “My cricketing idol handed me an international pair of batting gloves and said ‘I hope to see you in the Indian team soon.’ His words left me numb and I simply could not believe what had happened. It remains my biggest cricketing moment.”

Grateful to VVK and Kalli
As recounted to this writer over the last many years by many of the Ranji stars from the 1970s and 80s, the TN dressing room was not the most cheerful in that phase. It was overwhelming for a teenager to be part of that dressing room. Moses is grateful to VV Kumar and B Kalyanasundaram for their inspirational role in that debut season ‘VV and Kalli kept motivating and cheering me up with positive words that was so important for a youngster. It helped in taking away that fear of underperformance and being shouted at. It was their contribution off the field that had a calming influence on me in that early phase in my Ranji career.”

High Expectations, Gets a Golden Duck
As expected, that knock against Bombay sent expectations soaring and he was on top of the world. Soon his name was doing the rounds for the national camp ahead of the tour to Australia (he did not make it into the camp). But as is so often the case, he was brought down to earth in the first match next season when on a damp wicket, he was out first ball to Chandrasekara Rao against Andhra. 

Another Master Class on a soggy wicket against Haryana Hurricane
It was on another damp wicket in Jammu that Moses showcased his class in the Vizzy Trophy against North Zone in early 1978. NP Madhavan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/05/np-madhavan.html), who has spent the last four decades at SVPB in Udumalpet, was Moses' roommate during that tourney and remembers the way he fought it out against a rampant Kapil “When we entered Jammu, all talks were on the ‘Haryana Hurricane’. A certain wave of expectations had been built around Kapil. It was a soggy wicket and we were made to play on that though heavy rain had lashed the city. Kapil had 8 fielders around the bat and was almost unplayable. Moses batted with grit and great determination to counter Kapil. Though Kapil took 8 wickets, Moses with his half century helped us reach 161 (Madhavan himself made 30). And then on the final day our captain L Vasan ran through North Zone in 30 odd overs.”
“It was clear to all those that watched the stylish Moses that day that he was a special talent, one that had to be nurtured.”

“As a person, he was soft spoken. Even when he was in the opposition (Madhavan played for IOB in the late 1970s and then for SVPB), he was a very friendly person and it was always good to be talking to him.”

Joins Chemplast, Jolly Rovers cricket was his most enjoyable phase
After his strong debut season, Moses’ fortunes for TN fluctuated in the coming years and he was in and out of the team. He joined Chemplast in 1979 and contrasted with his TN days, he says playing for Jolly Rovers gave him the greatest joy“N Sankar was just unbelievable. He provided all the freedom that we needed as players and there was great camaraderie within the team. It was a real joy to play alongside Sriram and Balaji and later under Bharath Reddy after he took charge in 82 along with Jabbar, Jillu Ramesh and V Prasad. I could fully express myself there without the fear of being shouted at.”

The Hindu’s K Balaji (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/09/a-blossoming-cricket-career-was-cut.html) played for Jolly Rovers for a few years in that phase and saw Moses from close quarters.“He was a talented all round cricketer and a solid team player”, says Balaji.

Best years in Ranji Cricket
He had his two best years in Ranji Trophy in 81-82 and 82-83. For the first time, he got to play almost the entire Ranji season in these two years. In January 1982, he scored a brilliant 90 at the Forest College ground in Coimbatore against Hyderabad helping TN take the first innings lead, a knock that this writer watched in full seated under the tent on the Southern side. In December that year, Moses scored his first and only century in Ranji Trophy against Hyderabad. He was involved in a partnership of over 150 with debutant R Madhavan who missed his century by four runs. 

Moses gave me my batting confidence
Madhavan, whose Ranji career began with that partnership with Moses at Secunderabad and peaked in the 1984-85 when he was on the verge of India Selection, says that right from his school days he was a great admirer of Moses and particularly remembers his fierce square cuts and punches. "He also had this ability to score under pressure." 
Madhavan also credits Moses for giving him the confidence during his college and early Ranji days “Along with Tony Adams, Moses was the one who gave me tremendous confidence during my college days as he had big faith in my abilities . In my early days of first class cricket, the presence of Moses and Jabbar was comforting. They gave me a lot of guidance and I was able to bat without curtailing my aggression and stroke play” 

“Moses was a very affable and friendly person and his ready smile was contagious! I think TN didn't nurture that great talent."

A Complete Team Man
Jolly Rovers and TN teammate for close to a decade, Abdul Jabbar says he was fortunate to watch all of Moses' delightful innings in the RT matches including his brilliant knock against Bombay and later his twin delight against a strong Hyderabad team. The two spent a lot of happy time together on and off the field. He told this writer from Hyderabad where he now resides that Paul Moses was an attractive, elegant as well as a destructive middle order batsman with a wide range of strokes "He was a complete team man. His special knocks in Ranji Trophy revealed that he had immense talent & potential to play higher level but it was not to be."

Father's heart attack 
Dr Moses was all excited about the cricketing prospects of his son in this phase but then tragedy struck. "My father suffered a heart attack late in the night. I was just 25 with a younger brother and sister.  I ran from pillar to post seeking life support for my father. I had a sinking feeling and asked the doctor if he would survive and was shocked at the response. The doctor just threw up his hands  and told me that it was now left to the superior power above."

The youngster, who was all alone that night, did not know what it meant. It was a very difficult thing for him to take that night (his father survived and lived another two decades) and opened him up to a lot of questions about life, at a time when he was in the form of his life on the cricket field. 
The Spiritual Experience
Soon after he had a great ‘Spiritual Experience’ (enlightenment) that transformed his thought process and he was never the same again. He began questioning the purpose of life. The experience reformed him as a person and led him to give up serious cricket when he was 27. It took him on an entirely new path. He wanted to make life a lot more meaningful. After his spiritual experience in 1983, his habits changed overnight. It was the most releasing thing of his life and he found a new freedom that he had hitherto not experienced. For a time during that Ranji phase, he felt he had been in a ‘prison of agony’ and it occurred to him that one should not be spending an important phase in life that way. 

He was at crossroads in life in the mid 1980s caught between cricket on one side and a corporate career on the other. While he decided to give up serious cricket, he worked hard at Chemplast for another 15years in the Personnel department. 

Did not work hard enough to succeed in cricket
Looking back on his Ranji career, he agrees that he did not work as hard as he should have, given the great potential he had and the early success that came his way. He says fitness was not in big focus those days and 'a lot of us played for fun and for job security'. 

"I did not cherish fierce ambitions of climbing high on the cricketing ladder. Also, opportunities at the state level was limited and we played a lot on square turners. Venkat (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/04/venkataraghavan75.html) was an exception and wanted everyone to be like him but I simply did not match up to his expectations. I played under pressure through most of my Ranji days and with a feeling that I was always one innings away from being dropped.”

Names his son after his batting idol
Like the former  MD of Sundaram Finance TT Srinivasaraghavan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2021/08/tt-srinivasaraghavan-tts-sundaram.html) who named his son after the legendary off spinner (Venkataraghavan) and Gavaskar himself who named his son after the West Indian batting great (Rohan), Paul Moses too named his son after his batting idol as Sunil Moses. His son went on to play U19 cricket for TN and for Alwarpet in the first division.

Tragedy Strikes
A few years after the birth of his first son, tragedy struck in the family. In 1991, he lost his daughter just 18 days after her birth. His closest mate in cricket Bharath Reddy (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/11/bharath-reddy-players-man.html), who had been a team mate right from their school  days, recounts that tragic year "I went and visited him at the Kalyani Hospital. He was completely down and out for a year. The tragedy drove him faster towards his spiritual endeavours."
Moses went into further introspection after this event and began asking probing questions on what life was about. He was doing well at Chemplast in the 1990s but quit the firm in 1998 rather prematurely when a strong professional career beckoned. 

76 year old B Kalyanasundaram (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2011/08/kalli-b-kalyanasundaram.html) is now travelling across the state on a talent hunt scouting for the next generation of fast bowlers. He himself was a star bowler in the late 1960s and 70s and was on the verge of being selected for the Indian tour to the West Indies. He has always been referred to by Gavaskar as the 'hat-trick man'. Kalli and Moses worked together at Chemplast for a decade.

Kalli believes that Moses could have scaled better heights had he continued there “Moses was an excellent guy. He was not only good at Cricket but made a mark in his professional career in the Personnel department at Chemplast.  He was always well regarded by his friends, fellow cricketers and colleagues in the office. He was very trustworthy and would have scaled better heights had he chosen to continue his professional life."

Into Social Entrepreneurship
Moses moved into Social Entrepreneurship and launched a home near Kanchipuram for 75 girl children and has been running it for the last 25years. He also looked back at his cricketing days and did not like a lot of what he experienced in Ranji cricket. This led him to foraying into ‘Sports Ethics’ directing the next gen on how sports should be played. He finds every opportunity to talk to young sportspeople on how they should look at sports. ‘While they should stay competitive and chase their sporting dream, they should also remember all the time that they should play ‘fair and clean’.”

Into FAITH
As part of his transformation into the ‘FAITH’ space, he continues to preach at Churches based on scriptures on the way to live, on the importance of even loving your enemies and on making the world a better place to live. He says that the real test of a human being is when he or she is under a crisis. ‘That’s when your real character comes out.’
He feels blessed to have made life time friends through cricket and cherishes the great camaraderie to this day. “The cricketing memories will never fade away for it helped forged ever lasting friendships. I am very proud to have played the game for as long as I did.”

For the moment, Moses’s focus is on taking care of the 75 girl children in Kanchipuram, directing the next generation of sportspeople on ‘Sports Ethics’, Motivating people through his speaker sessions on the ‘Dharmic’ way to live life while staying competitive  and propagating ‘FAITH’ that has been close to his heart for four decades now since his first Spiritual Experience in 1983.

The Final Word
His team mate from the late 1960s Bharath Reddy  (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/03/jolly-rovers-bharath-reddy-40-years.html) has known him long and the best. He credits Moses for having a positive influence on his life."He taught me the importance of loyalty. On many aspects in life, I have followed his way of life. He has remained a great human being all through his life, a God Fearing Man, humble and straight forward and one who has always believed in mutually enduring long term relationships. His communication skills and the ability to articulate his thoughts has helped him in his motivational speaking sessions and with his 'Sports Ethics' training. He was a gritty fighter during his cricketing days and it is commendable that he has overcome really challenging times in his life to support the 75 odd girl children in the home near Kanchi for as long a period as he has done."

Sundara Perumal Koil New Young Archaka Revival

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The arrival of 33 year old Aravamudhan as an archaka could see a revival in the fortunes of Sundara Perumal Koil and help the temple regain its lost glory
The Oil Lamps are back at the temple, the handsome Sundara Perumal is seen in new vastrams and even the Utsava Idol was back for a month last Margazhi from the Icon Center

In October 2009, this section had featured a story on the handsome lord at Sundara Perumal Koil, about 10kms from Kumbakonam on the Thanjavur Highway (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2009/10/sundara-perumal-koil-near-papanasam.html). After the passing away of Sundara Raja Bhattar, the temple had been without a priest for a decade. This section featured another story in February 2020 just a month before the arrival of the Pandemic as to how the temple had been in a dilapidated state and without devotees and a priest (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/02/sundara-perumal-koil-papanasam.html).

Sundara Raja Bhattar had served at the temple as the priest for 50 years from the early 1960s. For decades, he was paid a salary of just Rs. 300 which at the time of his death in 2014 had gone up to Rs. 1200 per month. That salary too remained unpaid for several months on the grounds of lack of income from the temple. Sundararaja Bhattar served at the temple with great devotional commitment even in the decades when there was no power connection in his house and when Rs. 200 was deducted from his salary as house rent.

In the decade that Sundararaja Bhattar joined the temple, the agraharam was vibrant. Festivals were a regular feature including Garuda Sevai on Tamil New Year’s day. 

There were also processions on the occasion of Krishna Jayanthi and on the Kanu day in Thai. 10 day Navarathri Festival too was celebrated in a grand way with Horse Vahana Procession on Vijayadasami. There was a four kalam pooja every day with sacred food presentations to the Lord that included Curd rice, Sundal and Sweet Pongal. In the outer prakara was a huge Nandavanam that was filled with different varieties of Jasmine trees. The Lord and Thayar were draped with beautiful garlands especially on festive occasions.
The Handsome Sundara Raja Perumal sports a grand vastram,
 the Oil Lamps are back at the Sannidhi

An unexpected arrival and a Revival
But since the passing away of the Bhattar just under a decade ago, the temple saw a rapid deterioration. There was no oil to light the lamp. The utsava idols (this writer had captured a photo in 2009) were moved away to the icon center. And the utsavams became a thing of the past. 

While the temple thus lay in  a state of despair without a consecration for close to a century,  the temple saw an unexpected revival in its fortunes with the arrival of Aravamudhan, a disciple of Periya Nambi Acharya of Srirangam. With a Masters degree in IT, he had joined the corporate world, but took a bold call and quit his job to get into full time archaka kainkaryam.

He had lost his appa when he was not yet two in the early 1990s and it was his amma who fought out all of life’s challenges to help him see through his academics. Through the college years when he travelled from Kumbakonam to his college, he was always curious about the location ‘Sundara Perumal Koil’ and wondered if there was a perumal temple here as the place was named so.

Devotionally attached to Sundara Perumal
Finally he landed up here as a devotee to find that there was not even oil to light the lamp. The entire temple complex was in a dilapidated state. He became devotionally attached to Sundara Perumal, moved by the quiet ambience at the temple. There was neither a priest nor a devotee at the temple and he was sitting there all alone wondering as to what could be done to improve the temple. It was then that he decided to quit the corporate job and take up service as an archaka. He was newly married and when he took this thought to his wife, she readily agreed. 

Aravamudhan told this writer sitting in front of the newly constructed madapalli at the temple on Monday morning that he also sought the approval of Srirangam Periya Nambi Acharya and he blessed him to take up archaka service as there had been no priest at this temple for many years and the temple was in bad shape.

Villagers welcome Aravamudhan
The villagers at the temple welcomed this development. Senthil Kumar, a several decades resident of Sundara Perumal Koil and one who has been integral to the recent renovation activities at the temple, told this writer that he along with other villagers organised a house for Aravamudhan on the street opposite the temple and also arranged for the rent to be paid through a devotee donor.

Senthil Kumar, who has bagged a 15 year NH maintenance contract for the new Sethiya Thope -Thanjavur route,  says that the devotee crowd had started increasing especially on Saturdays since the time Aravamudhan took over. He along with the residents of the temple town have also organised renovation of the temple with a new tiled flooring for the sannidhis. The huge nandavanam wears a fresh green look. Aravamudhan says that he picks up the daily requirement for pooja and thaligai from the sacred garden. He also proudly says that the Theertham for the Lord is taken from the sacred well and he is trying to revive all the traditional forms of Thiru Aradhanam at the temple.

Traditional attire
Aravamudhan wears a bright traditional look with 12 Thiruman and a tuft. He himself doubles up as the cook at the madapalli which has also been renovated over the last year or so. Ghee Pongal is now presented to the Lord every morning and distributed to the local devotees. He has also been teaching Slokams and Divya Prabhandham to the village kids to initiate them early into the path of devotion. Vishnu Sahasranamam is played out twice a day on the temple loudspeaker as the temple town regains some of its historical glory.
The 33 year old Aravamudhan has tears rolling down his cheeks when he talks about the 15+ utsava idols that have been at the icon center for a long time now. The utsavams have long been stopped. There is a horse vahana that is still seen at the temple an indication that there was vahana procession in the century gone by but not anymore. 

He is hoping that a Brahmotsavam can be started sometime in the future.

Senthil Kumar says that they were able to convince the HR & CE to hand over the utsava idol for a month during Margazhi last year and that he says was a significant  first step towards revival of utsavams. 

Taking care of the Priest
Senthil Kumar says that along with the residents, he spoke to the HR & CE and secured a daily wages of Rs.100 for his archaka service. He also says that the villagers have been ready to take care of other requirements of the priest as long as he is here full time. He confirmed to this writer that as long as he performs the Thiru Aradhanam every day and takes care of the devotional aspects of the devotees, the villagers will take care of his financial requirement. The provisions for the madapalli too have been taken care of through devotees. 

Full Fledged Renovation Exercise
The Raja Gopuram continues to wear the same faded look that this writer had seen and photo captured 15years ago. The HR & CE has allocated a sum of over Rs. 20 Lakhs for the renovation. On the village devotees’ part, Senthil Kumar says that the residents have collected close to a dozen lakhs from devotee donors and transferred to the HR & CE account for the renovation project. Once the tenders are floated and finalized, he says that the renovation work including of the Raja Gopuram can start.
                                     SP Koil Tower in 2009

The temple had been without a priest for almost a decade and remained in a dilapidated state. But there is great news for now with the arrival of the young priest. It is hoped with the presence of the 33 year old Aravamudhan, the temple can see a revival with the devotees coming back to the temple for a darshan of the handsome looking Sundara Perumal and the restoration of the physical infrastructure at the temple.

Patteeswaram Gopinathaswamy Temple New Raja Gopuram

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HR & CE on an aggressive Renovation spree in TN Temples, Chozha Period Gopinatha Swamy temple at Patteeswaram to see Thiruppani at a cost of Rs. 2.5crores
After a lull in the second half of the previous decade, the HR & CE department is on a temple renovation spree. The department has been making aggressive allocation for renovation exercises across temples in TN. Close to a 1000 temples are expected to see consecration in the near future. 

Earlier this week, this section featured a story on Sundara Perumal Koil for which the HR & CE has estimated a renovation at a cost of just over Rs. 30Lakhs (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/06/sundara-perumal-koil-new-young-archaka.html). This story is about a whopping Rs. 2.5crores allocation for the Chozha Period Gopinatha Swamy Perumal temple in Patteeswaram. In centuries gone by, the Perumal temple east of Patteeswaram was  the Jagannathan Perumal Divya Desam at Nandipura Vinnagaram while the Perumal temple west of Patteeswaram was the Gopinatha Swamy temple. 

Dilapidated State for over a decade
This writer had captured photographs of the temple over 10 years ago. This week, the temple remains in the same dilapidated state that one had seen back then. Huge bushes are seen around the temple complex. Similar to the Mottai Gopuram in Thiru Vellarai Divya Desam(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/08/thiru-vellarai-7-tier-raja-gopuram.html), the Raja Gopuram here too was half complete. And now is seen in a dilapidated state.

Utsavams a thing of the past
Long ago, Akshaya Trithiya, procession on Rohini Star day, Ekadasi and Dakshinayina and Utharayina Punya Kaalams were celebrated at this temple. The beating of the drums and the Mela Vadhyams were once heard at this temple. But the utsavams have become a thing of the past and like with the idols at Sundara Perumal Koil, the processional idols of Gopinathan along with Rukmini and Satyabhama have been sent to the icon center long ago. The priest at the Ramar temple in Patteeswaram performs a one kaala Thiru Aradhanam in the morning at this temple. 

Not unexpectedly, the temple lands around the temple have been taken over by residents and that’s the first thing HR & CE will have secure back as part of this renovation exercise. Some of the private buildings have come to the prakara walls on the Northern side. There is a big tank behind the temple and that has remained unattended for decades. That too will require a complete refurbishing. The outer walls will have to be built from scratch.

Like with Thiru Vellarai, the base of the Raja Gopuram will have to be strengthened before the five tier Raja Gopuram can be constructed (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2017/05/thiru-vellarai-raja-gopuram.html). 

Patteeswaram temple’s experienced Pulavar Selva Sekar, who will oversee the renovation exercise on the ground, told this writer  on Monday that as the first step in this exercise, the temple authorities are in the process of preparing a complete documentation of the entire temple complex and its current state including the Raja Gopuram. Soil tests will have to be undertaken later before the construction of the Raja Gopuram can be finalized. 
He said that the presence of a Ther Mandapam pointed to a Chariot festival in centuries gone by.  He also showed the original moolavar sannidhi which lie dilapidated behind the current sannidhi. The original sannidhi was like the big one at Sarangapani Koil (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2017/06/sarangapani-koil-thiru-kudanthai.html) built of Karungal structure. Historically this place was referred to as Kathali Vanam/ Shenbagaranyam indicating the presence of a large number of flower bearing trees.

Structural Engineers have had a look at the temple last week. The ASI officials are expected to make a trip some time in the coming months. Some of the preliminary work could start this second fortnight of June at the Gopinathaswamy Perumal temple soon after the completion of Thiru Gnana Sambandar’s Muthu Pandal Utsavam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2017/07/patteeswaram-thiru-gnana-sambanthar.html) that is currently taking place this week at the Patteeswaram temple.
                                  
                    Current complex 

The revival of the utsavams may still be a long way off but hopefully within the next 12 months full fledged construction should begin at the Gopinatha Perumal temple especially as the allocation of the renovation amount has been announced in the TN assembly. 

Sometime in the coming years, this temple should see devotees coming back in good numbers like it once was in the previous century.  And if all goes well, may be the devotees will also get a darshan of the Utsava Moorthies and the processions around the four streets that is a dream of the Pulavar could become a reality again.

Vaduvur Govindan Veda Ganapadigal

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Sticking to his ancestral roots
His amma directed him to take to Vedic Education in 1976 and close to five decades later, he counts being initiated into the Vedas by Vaduvur Srinivasa Desikachariar and being under his tutelage as the greatest blessing of his life
50 of Govindan’s Vedic students are now performing service in temples across the world
The 1970s had been a terrible time for those associated with temple and associated service. It was the phase when traditionalists began to move away from their ancestral locations into cities looking for corporate opportunities(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/10/therazhundur-divya-desam.html). Mannargudi and Vaduvur had been abound with Prabhandham and Vedic scholars and there was a certain positive vibrancy inside the temple during the festive days of the year. But when financial challenges began to mount, the traditionalists foresaw a life for the next gen away from temple service. When Upanayanam took place in Thiruvallikeni for this young boy at a time when his parents had already moved to Madras, it was time for a call to be made about his future. His amma stood firm in wanting him to go the traditional way while everyone else in the family opposed her suggestion to him taking to Vedic studies. Amma won over the rest of the family and he went on to spend a glorious four decades under the guidance of the revered Vaduvur Srinivasa Desikacharya. Here’s the story.

Take Vedas into the Next Gen, says Amma
In 1976, 10 year old Govindan was in a dilemma. His appa had moved away from the Mannargudi region to Madras in pursuit of a job. When his thread ceremony was held in Thiruvallikeni, his amma expressed the view that the young Govindan should shoulder the family responsibility of taking forward the Vedic teachings into the next gen (her appa Raghava Vadhyar and her elder brother Pichai Vathyar were vedic scholars in Mannargudi). The family was already financially challenged and they lived a hand to mouth existence. Her view was not well received by the family members and everyone without exception opposed the move to him quitting academics and taking to Vedic studies. 

It was then that she made a bold statement to her other two sons. Sitting on the Thinnai of his Acharya Veeravalli Salakshana Ganapadi Srinivasa Desikacharyar’s home in Vaduvur, 57 year old Govindan told this writer on Monday as how that moment transformed his life “If Govindan failed in his traditional way of life, the two of you should take care of him”, my amma told my brothers and they were left with no answer and just nodded.

His appa, ST Narayanan, immediately sent a postal letter to Periyava seeking his guidance and blessings.
       Parents and Uncle Pichai

"Soon a person from Kanchi Mutt reached our home and picked me up. Periyava directed me to join the Patshala founded by Anna Swamy Iyengar in Mannargudi. He had great regard for both Srinivasa Iyengar (founder's son) and Desikacharya and he believed that I would be taken care of well by both of them."

Moves to Anna Swamy Patshala- His Greatest Experience
In 1976, Govindan academics and on November 1 that year joined the patshala. He looks back at the decade that he says provided him with the greatest experience in life. “Srinivasa Iyengar who ran the Patshala gave us all the facilities. He was a great disciplinarian and inculcated 'values' that have stood with me all through my life. The Vedic initiation under the tutelage of Desikacharya, I consider, as my life's greatest blessing“My acharya’s love for me was unbelievable. He poured everything he had into his teachings and wanted me to be better than him. He always said that he wanted to see me atop the Raja Gopuram while he watched from below. That was how he motivated me through that decade. He taught me every aspect of life including contentment.”
Govindan completed Yajur Veda course in 1985 and then went on to learn Krishna Yajur Veda. He took the tough exams at all the leading centers including the Mannargudi Patshala, Sankara Mutt, TTD and Melkote.

Refuses Lucrative offers
Govindan's family was financially challenged through the 1970s and 80s and him getting into larger cities after the completion of his Vedic Education would have served them them well financially for they were even struggling for food but Govindan withstood the temptation for financial glory instead choosing to be with his Guru till Desikachariar's death a decade ago. Even as the years went by, over the last three decades or so, there have been repeated calls for him to head to Madras and to other larger cities to take up lucrative opportunities but he has remained committed to Vaduvur where he has been since the late1980s.

Veda Parayanam  at three Consecrations at Vaduvur
His Acharya initiated him into Thiru Aradhanam service at the Hayagriva Desikar Sannidhi at the Kothandarama temple in Vaduvur. When the consecration took place at the temple in 1996, after 25years, Desikachariar presented him with an opportunity to be an integral part of that sacred event. He has since anchored the Veda Parayanam at the 2007 and 2020 consecrations as well.

Not Monetised the Vedic Knowledge
Govindan has spent almost five decades in Mannargudi and Vaduvur when most of his contemporaries have gone away seeking greener pastures. He often hears comments from them that ‘he has missed the bus’ referring to him not monetizing his Vedic Knowledge in the way he could have. But he is nonplussed. He has heard it so often but right from the beginning he was clear about his way of life. 

“My Acharya wanted me to lead a simple dharmic life and help others in every way possible. It was his inspiration that helped keep me away from the lures of a city life and gave me clarity about not chasing money. You cannot see Vedas as a mere financial instrument that helps you earn a lot of money. The fact that I am known as Desikachariar’s student is the greatest blessing I have in this life.”

At the turn of the century, he began initiating the Vedas to the next generation of students. Around 50 of them have graduated from the Andavan Ashramam Patshala in Vaduvur. He is keen for the next gen of vedic students to go deep into the subject. While the number of Vedic students is on the rise, he is saddened that many of them go very soon into monetizing their learnings. The current gen is seeing this as a 'professional' activity "Veda Adyayanam should be seen as a penance and they should be ready to face all the hurdles and overcome through Veda Parayanam".

Wants his sishyas to be in temple service
He is keen for his sishyas to be into temple service. One of his students, the 31 year old Yathulan, makes him feel proud. Just like his Guru, Yathulan too received lucrative offers from temples and mutts in larger cities and overseas but he resisted the temptation and placed importance on staying close to his ancestral home. As directed by his acharya Govindan, Yethulan has been performing archaka service at the Varadaraja Perumal temple in Rayanallur (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/03/rayanallur-varadaraja-perumal-yathulan.html). He is an integral part of the Veda Parayanam at the big utsavams both in Mannargudi and Vaduvur. 

Govindan is also delighted that all his students have agreed to pool in the Sambhavanai received during Veda Parayanam at the Ramar temple to the development of the Desikar Sannidhi. ‘Not a single sishya takes a rupee from the Veda Parayanam and we have been using that money to present abaranam and kavacham to Hayagrivar and Desikar.”

He feels blessed to have been by the side of Desikarachariar for almost four decades. He says he acted as per the directions of his Guru. At 57, Govindan has found great peace of mind in the life at Vaduvur (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/05/vaduvur-rama-navami-utsavam.html) keeping the tradition of Veda Parayanam going in Vaduvur. In addition, he is also  keen to continue the developmental works in this temple town in the areas of temple development, health and education through the Chakravathi Thirumagan Dharma Paripalana Trust. 

If the vedic recital is still heard in Vaduvur, its thanks to that decision of Govindan to stay back at his ancestral location when most other traditionlists turned towards more lucrative options. Sometime into  the future, he is hoping that his two sons too would get into this traditional way of life by taking that bold call in the same way he did way back in 1976.

Punnai Nallur Kothandaramar temple Venkatesa Bhattar

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This Archaka Family has served devotionally for well over a 100  years and have remained committed to the temple overcoming several challenging phases
Venkatesa Bhattar is now anchoring a revival of the Utsavams and bringing the temple back to its glory days

This section had featured a story in 2020 as to how the Thanjavur Palace had found it financially challenging till the mid-1980s to manage the temples under its administration. The consecration of the Big Temple in Thanjavur had not taken place for over 150years. It was only after the current leader Prince Babaji Rajah Bhonsle took charge did the situation turn around for the better (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/06/thanjavur-palace-babaji-rajah-bhonsle.html). One of the temples managed by the Palace is the Saligrama Kothandarama temple in Punnai Nallur, a few kms east of Thanjavur and near the now popular Mariamman temple (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2012/03/punnai-nallur-mariamman-temple.html).

57 year old Venkatesa Bhattar, who has now been the priest for over two decades, was a young boy in the 1970s when he saw the temple take a turn for the worse. His appa Vijayaraghava Bhattar performed archaka service at the temple for close to five decades before his death at the turn of the century. His grandfather had served through the first half of the 20th century at this temple.

Exodus of Original Inhabitants
Venkatesa Bhattar recounts as to how from a vibrant temple once upon a time, the temple saw a slowdown as a result of the mass exodus of original inhabitants “Not so long ago, there were around 25 service personnel, including Paricharakas, Adyapakas and Vedic Scholors at the temple but when the overall situation turned bad in the 70s, most of them left Punnai Nallur seeking greener pastures elsewhere leaving my appa as the only long standing person serving at the temple. Though it was a financially challenging time for the family, my appa took upon the Kainkaryam for Ramar as his sole focus in life. He lived all his life with Ramar and had the fullest faith that in the long run the Lord would take care of him and his family.”
                                   
Living in a Thatched Hut - Poverty Stricken
He looks back at his life from his school days in the 1970s “My appa received one bag of Paddy every month and 8 Pattai Rice every day. For the first 15days, we survived on this and then every second fortnight of the month, it was a big struggle to manage the large household. There was minimal thattu kaasu with the original inhabitants having all gone away.

Where's the next devotee
There was not enough oil to light the lamp.  There were very few devotees at the temple. Vijayaraghava Bhattar would eagerly wait for the next devotee to arrive but it almost always proved elusive in that phase. Rama Navami was the only utsavam of the year that attracted some crowd. It was a lonely sortfeeling for him but he always told his family members that with Kothandaramar for company, one should not ask for

Babaji Rajah Bhonsle had told this writer in an earlier conversation a few years ago that soon after he took over in the mid 1980s, he found that the next gen of most of the archakas in his 88 temples had chosen a life outside of the temples and that there was always a shortage of service personnel.

Refuses lucrative offers
Venkatesa Bhattar now proudly looks back at his appa’s devotional commitment that stood the test of time “Like many others in that phase, my appa too received lucrative offers from temples including from Singapore but he had great devotional strength and was attached to Saligrama Kothandaramar. It was a time when the financial situation in the family was terrible and there was no money even for the next meal at home. Taking such an offer would have easily turned around our fortunes at that time but he simply refused it and stuck with Ramar all through his life.”
                                        Vijayaraghava Bhattar

Even as Venkatesa Bhattar watched his appa take this decision, it taught him a big lesson - that of continuing the hereditary service at the feet of Ramar irrespective of the challenges that comes his way.

The large family lived for decades in a thatched hut. Stricken by poverty, Venkatesa Bhattar quit school early and went to work in Thanjavur in the 1980s. During the off days, Venkatesa Bhattar supported his appa in temple kainkaryam. 

Venkatesa Bhattar takes over, Appa's Message
At the turn of the century, Vijayaraghava Bhattar’s health deteriorated. Kainkaryam at the feet of Rama was a service that the family had committed to. Venkatesa Bhattar was then in his 30s and had a family to take care of including a young son and a daughter but he had no second thoughts on quitting his job. His wife backed him fully in this endeavor to serve Lord Rama and he joined the temple at a salary of Rs. 900.  

When Venkatesa Bhattar took charge, Vijayaraghava Bhattar told his son that performing daily Thiru Aradhanam with sincerity and feeding the Lord every day was his utmost duty and he had to do it with the greatest devotion unmindful of the financial returns. 

Soon after, his appa passed away, in 2002. 

The first decade at the temple continued to be a struggle like it had been for his appa. Venkatesa Bhattar, who had learned the Vaikanasa agama from Seshadri Bhattar of Thadalan Divya Desam in Sirkazhi (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2008/05/kaazhicheeraama-vinnagaram.html), was the sole priest at the temple. 

Consecration and the Big Turnaround
This writer had featured a story in The Hindu Friday Review just over a decade ago on the renovation works (https://www.thehindu.com/features/friday-review/history-and-culture/ancient-temple-gets-a-face-lift/article2012090.ece) at the temple. Following the consecration that took place after three decades, the temple wore a fresh look and saw a positive transformation. Vahana processions were revived. Devotee crowd has increased dramatically to over 500 people on Saturdays from around 20 in the pre consecration phase. Devotees now look forward eagerly to the special alankaram for Anjaneya for whom the Bhattar has also sourced a glittering Kavacham. The devotees are thronging the temple in big numbers on Puratasi Saturdays. 

Over the last decade or so, Venkatesa Bhattar has revived a lot of the historical traditions. He performs a Thirumanjanam every Punarvasu for Ramar. On special occasions, Devotees have been able to enjoy the Garuda and Sesha Vahana processions during the Panguni Utsavam. He is hoping that by next year there will be a vahana procession on all days of the Rama Navami Utsavam.
Great Satisfaction 
He has found great peace within himself over the last two decades serving at this temple “Performing Kainkaryam at Rama’s feet is a special feeling and it’s quite unmatched in terms of the satisfaction.” Venkatesa Bhattar is grateful to the Prince for the solid increase in the salary for the archakas under his administration that has now gone up to Rs. 14000 from Rs. 450 that his appa earned at the time of his retirement. In recent times, Babaji Rajah Bhonsle has also launched medical schemes for archakas serving at his temples. Overall they are now well taken care of and as foreseen by Vijayaraghava Bhattar, Saligrama Kothandaramar has kept this family under his watchful eyes and blessed them with a life that each of the members is happy  with.

Venkatesa Bhattar's son in law (Ashwin Bhattar) is at the Shiva Vishnu temple in T. Nagar, Madras and his brothers too are archakas in temples under the Palace’s administration. He is hoping that one day in the near future his son would take over the Kainkaryam from him and continue the hereditary service that this family has been performing for over a hundred years.

Venkatesa Bhattar has showcased both to the archaka world as well as to the devotees that if you are devotionally committed to the Lord and have the fullest faith in him, it is likely that you will be well taken care of in life. 
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