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Srirangam Namperumal Maasi Garuda Sevai 2024

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Close to 30 stopovers mark the five-hour morning procession from the Ranganatha Swamy temple to the Thathachariar Thoppu West of Srirangam
Namperumal provides darshan atop Garuda in the evening as he makes his way around the Uthira Veethis
It is just after 11.30am on Thursday (Feb 15) morning and Thathachariar Nandakumar (husband of renowned writer Prema Nandakumar), a long-time resident of South Chitrai Street, is delighted with the presence of Namperumal at his huge Thoppu west of Srirangam.  

The entire area beyond Thiruvadi street was full of mango and coconut trees running into several hundreds. Till the end of the previous century, there were just a few donors for this procession from the Ranganathaswamy temple to the Thathachariar Thoppu. Namperumal, the utsava deity, made his way on a morning procession on this fourth day of the Maasi Theppotsavam in two hours with very minimal stops.
Nandakumar told this writer on Thursday that it was his grandfather, MS Raghunath, who  gave  a piece of this huge grove to the Municipality a century ago for them to create a path for Namperumal to make his way through the coconut and mango trees to the Kasukkadai Chettiar Asthana Mandapam inside the Thathachariar Thoppu. Hence when Namperumal makes his way to this location on the fourth day of the Theppotsavam in Maasi, it is a moment for Nandakumar’s family to reminisce about the glorious days from the past. 
Till four decades ago, there were hardly any mandagapadis on this morning trip on a palanquin but with the development of huge apartments west of Srirangam, the stopovers of Namperumal have increased manifold.

Starting at 6.30am on Thursday, as has been the historical practice during the Thai and Maasi utsavams, Namperumal made his way around the four Uthira Streets before heading towards the Thathachariar Thoppu via the towering Raja Gopuram in the South.

Donors in Large Numbers
Till the 1980s, there were neither apartments on this stretch nor large number of donors for these stopovers. But on this morning, Namperumal went to almost each of the large apartments in Raghavendrapuram and then on the Moolai Thoppu street. It was a challenging time for the large contingent of Sripatham personnel including the Vethal team for they had to shoulder Namperumal for five hours without a break. At each of these apartments, that have come up over the last decade or two, huge number of devotees had darshan of Namperumal presenting fruits and vegetables. 

From couple of mandagapadis to almost 30 now
The manifold increase in the mandagapadis meant that Maniam Sridharan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/03/srirangam-temple-time-keeper.html) had a list in his hand with details of each of the stopovers on this morning. From a two-hour procession, this has now expanded to five hours and from a couple of mandagapadis, today there are close to 30 stops from the temple to Thathachariar Thoppu.At each mandagapadi, Thaligai from the temple madapalli was presented to Namperumal. He recalls the days from his teenage years when it was a pretty quick procession on the fourth morning of this utsavam “There were no mandagapadis like now in those decades. I myself have carried Thaligai from the Madapalli to the Thoppu and was paid Rs. 5 as Sambhavanai for my service four decades ago.”

The Thoppu Owner arrives
It is just after 3pm and Nandakumar makes his way to the Kasukkadai Chettiar mandapam in the middle of his Thoppu along with his Scientist son Raja (who has been a Scientist in the UK for 15 years) and his relatives for the Ubayadarar darshan and mariyathai. Through the afternoon, scores of devotees from Srirangam made their way to the mandapam to have a once in a year darshan at this thoppu. 
The Silver Garuda Vahana arrives at the Thoppu just before 4pm. While the archakas are decorating Namperumal and Garuda at the mandapam, police personnel gathered in good numbers at the entrance gate. There is not a space for anyone to move around the Kasukkadai Chettiar Mandapam as devotees wait eagerly to find out the colour of the attire of Namperumal and Garuda on this special Maasi evening in Srirangam. Prolific temple writer Prema Nandakumar has had health challenges in recent times but for decades she has always made  her way to this Thoppu for a darshan of Namperumal atop the Silver Garuda Vahana. 

Maasi Velli Garuda Sevai 
Even as the screen opens, video cameras and phone cameras raise for a first shot of the Garuda Sevai of Namperumal. Through the evening, the clicks continue unabated. There are discussions among the devotees of the blue vastram that Garuda is sporting on the evening and the jewels of Namperumal and his decoration. Even as the Sun is setting in the west, Namperumal makes his way out of the Thathachariar Thoppu on to the Moolai Thoppu Veethi that now houses the Srirangam Munsif Court and the office of the Electricity Board. Devotees continued to swarm in large numbers on this street.

It is 7.30pm when Namperumal makes his way on to the South Uthira Street for the Prabhandham Ghosti Thodakkam of Naangam Thiruvanthathi. The Uthira streets are jam packed on the eve of Ratha Sapthami as hundreds of devotees continue to have darshan of Namperumal on Velli Garudan. The Prabhandham Ghosti lead the procession around the Uthira Streets while a few devotees walk along with the Nagaswaram troupe enjoying their traditional presentation. 
It is the one big evening ahead of the Maasi Theppam when devotees throng all along on this three hour evening procession from Thathachariar Thoppu to the Vahana Mandapam inside the Ranganathaswamy temple. A good number of devotees stay back for the pallakku procession to the Gayathri Mandapam and the Padi Etra Sevai just after 9.30pm. There is a certain delight in the faces of the devotees after having had darshan of Namperumal atop the Garuda Vahana and they head back home discussing the attire of Namperumal, the special steps of the Sri Patham, who did a commendable job through the 8 hour processions (5hours in the morning and 3hours in the evening) and also wondering as to how mangoes would turn up this summer at the Thathachariar Thoppu with very little rain in Srirangam in 2023.

Theppam will take place on Monday (Feb 19) evening. 

P Ramesh TN Opener 1970s

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He burst on to the scene with a half century against West Indies and then thrilled the Madras crowd with a century on Ranji debut against Chandra and Prasanna at Chepauk but the cricketing end came sooner than expected much to everyone's disappointment
In the late 1980s, left arm spinner Sunil Subramanian was young and bubbling with enthusiasm at the SPIC nets in YMCA Nandanam. S Vasudevan, who captained SPIC in that phase, retired from first class aged 33 soon after winning the Ranji Trophy in 1988 to make way for Sunil. The young spinner would often challenge the best of players at the practice sessions to go after him. Left hander state opener from the 1970s P Ramesh, the great grandson of Buchi Babu, was well past his prime but he repeatedly showed glimpses of the fearless power hitting that he had become famous for  the previous decade. Even as Sunil was about to deliver the ball, he would shout out ‘Six’ and the ball went soaring over the fence at the north end of the ground.  Such was his class. After his half century for Indian Universities against the West Indies and the debut century against Karnataka in Ranji Trophy at Chepauk, expectations went up. His teammates were in awe of the natural ability he possessed and expected him to play for India in the 1970s. But he faded away in the late 70s after some sparkling knocks and it was to be another case of ‘what might have been’. Here’s the story.

Cricket at Baliah Avenue at the Luz House
Most of his early cricket was played at Baliah Avenue in Luz, a property of 4 acres owned by his maternal grandparents. Every evening senior school boys from PS and RKM came there to play cricket with Ramesh being the youngest. The locals in the area also formed a cricket club (Srirama) with a subscription of Rs. 25paise.

He is now 70 and undergoing some health challenges. At the gated villa in Puppalguda, 15kms West of Hyderabad, he told this writer as to how his uncle MM Kumar, who played for TN, was his first and early inspiration in cricket “My uncle would come and bowl to me on the Marble floor of our house and that helped me develop my stroke play. He also gave me his bat for me to practice and play in school matches.”

There was a lot of encouragement at St. Bedes, where he was coached by the AG Ram Singh. He credits his first coach as being a big positive influence “He was such a disciplinarian and would always be at practice ahead of the boys. He came in simple canvas shoes but shared some great insights on how to play together as a team and inculcated the importance of discipline and a positive attitude.”

Six decades friendship
Former IOB opener M Sundar has lived almost all his life at Luz Avenue and been Ramesh’s closest friend from childhood. The two played gilli thanda, marbles and flew kites from atop the teak tree in addition to playing cricket in the verandah of the palacious Luz House in Baliah Avenue from the time they were five. 

Sundar has great memories of the childhood days of climbing the oak, mango and teak trees and Ramesh’s uncle MM Kumar throwing fast paced balls from 15 yards to help develop their stroke play. He recalls Ramesh from those days from the early 1960s “He hailed from a wealthy family and had a luxurious upbringing. He had cricket in his blood. He was always cheerful and kept all of us in good humour. A lot of the time he would foot the bill at drive in woodlands where we spent the evenings.”
Sundar says he owes a lot of his cricket learnings to Ramesh “He inspired me to play cricket, took me doubles on his cycle to the selection at St. Bedes, allowed me to use his high- quality kit and also helped me learn cycling and later on the motor cycle as well.”

In his first match, the team was bowled out for 36 by Hindu HSS’ Devaraj, who Ramesh refers to as a whippy and a terror of a fast bowler “I top scored with 21 and was immediately noticed as someone with potential.”

The Leggie bags 4 in 4
In that early phase in cricket, Ramesh also bowled leg spin and picked up 4 wickets in 4 balls for Bharathi cc in the lower division league at PS School ground. In his early teens, he also scored a league century that same season. Pretty quickly he moved up the league ladder to playing first division cricket for MCC. 

At Lovedale - Captured on camera for the first time
He went to Lovedale to play for city schools. Ramesh recalls the first photo shots of his cricketing career “The Hindu’s Editor G Kasturi (father of Balaji who too went on to play Ranji cricket in the late 1970s) was present there with a 30mm camera to take pictures of the match. And I was all excited to be photographed as a school boy cricketer.”

By his mid-teens, he had played for South Zone schools. And was then selected to play for the Indian schools against a strong Ceylon side comprising Roy Dias and Wettimuny, among others. 

Hits Mohinder for a six off the first ball
In shivering cold in Jammu, playing for Madras University against Delhi, he hooked the first ball from Mohinder Amarnath for six and made runs both against Delhi and Bombay. Based on these performances, he was picked to for the selection trials in Indore where the Indian Universities was to picked to play against the touring West Indians.

Impresses the Selectors with his technique
PR Ramakrishnan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2021/10/pr-ramakrishnan-coimbatore-cricketer.html), under whose captaincy Ramesh played for the Madras University, was in prime form that season in the inter university matches and was confident of finding a place in the Combined Universities side but was once again overlooked. In the story in 2021, this section had featured as to how SMK and Ramesh had booked the return ticket to Madras and Ramki had not. 

He recalls the innings that Ramesh played in the selection match in Indore “There was stiff competition for the top order slot. He played with aggression in the practice match and captured the attention of the selectors with his fearless display. After watching him bat, one of the selectors, who was mightily impressed, remarked ‘this Ramesh plays so close to the body’. He also had the advantage of having played for the Indian Schools earlier.”

Lot of similarities with  K Srikkanth
SM Krishna Kumar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2024/01/sm-krishnakumar-madras-university.html) captained the Madras University to a triumph in the Rohinton Baria tournament the next season. He opened with Ramesh for Madras University and also later in the 1970s with K Srikanth in U-22 and U-25 cricket. He found similarities between them “I always found that both of them were quite similar in that they had that bit of extra time to play the ball which comes from a quick eye and good hand-eye coordination. He did not hesitate to play his shots, irrespective of the opposition, as this was his natural style” 

“When playing against him in collegiate and league cricket, it was vital to get him early as otherwise the scoreboard would move quickly against you.”
Krishna Kumar was also in Indore in Nov 1974 for the selection trial. While he and Ramesh had many good partnerships at the top of the order in that phase, he fondly remembers the century opening stand before lunch in that two-day selection game where both scored half centuries before retiring to give opportunities to other batsmen “The bowling attack was spearheaded by medium pacer Amitava Roy of Bengal who was talked of as a Test probable at that time. With everybody vying for a spot in the Combined Universities team, it was a pretty strong attack. I still remember Ramesh’s fluent batting that day. He was duly selected for the team to play the WI. It is likely that the selectors were impressed with his approach and style of play.

Slams the feared quickies, gets out to Richards
Against a strong attack, Ramesh scored another aggressive half century in the second innings after failing in the first innings. Having survived the fast bowlers, he surprisingly got out to a seemingly innocuous spinner “I was ‘given out’ LBW in IVA Richards’ first over. As I was making my way back dejected at the decision, Alvin Kallicharan came up to me and offered his condolences and said ‘hard luck’ (about the decision).”

(Anshuman Gaekwad scored a century in the first innings and was soon inducted into the Indian team)

Ramki says that it was that innings that transformed his cricket career “Till that time, he was on par with many others his age but this half century gave him a lot of confidence and took him to the next level in cricket.”

A memorable century on Ranji debut
He made his Ranji debut a month later  and played the best innings of his life against two legends“I had only heard of the greatness of Chandra till then. It was a great experience to play him in my first Ranji match. I treated him like a fast bowler and that’s how I managed to survive. When I was 96, I swept Prasanna to the boundary to reach my century and he immediately hugged and said ‘you will do well in cricket’. 

"The great GRV called me aside and said 'the ball is there to be hit and you should continue to play your strokes without fear'.”

These gestures from the cricketing greats boosted my confidence and my aspirations went sky high, says Ramesh on his recollections from that match.

He would have been a 'Standout' performer in the white ball era
TT Srinivasaraghavan (TT Ramesh to friends in his teenage years) played for Vivekananda College in the early 1970s under P. Ramesh’s captaincy and went to head Non Banking Finance company Sundaram Finance for close to two decades. The two along with M Sundar and K Sundar were ‘foursome’ of a kind and met almost every evening at Woodlands during their collegiate years. It was TTS (he owned a 'Royal Enfield' bullet very early in his life) who inspired Ramesh to buy a Java. 
TTS (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2021/08/tt-srinivasaraghavan-tts-sundaram.html) watched Ramesh make his Ranji debut from the prestigious Pavilion Terrace at Chepauk with M Sundar and other close friends at College. He recalls what he saw of Ramesh as a cricketer in that phase  “Ramesh and I were classmates through the 4 years of college and I was fortunate to play for the college team under his captaincy. He was an extremely positive and fearless cricketer and someone who led from the front. Though he was primarily a gifted opening batsman, he took on the mantle of opening the bowling as well, and did a pretty good job of that as well, because the team needed it. His exploits with the bat are many, but for me, the enduring memory is his century on debut at Chepauk, against a Karnataka attack comprising the two legends, Prasanna and Chandra. I was privileged to watch that match from the pavilion terrace, alongside my Vivekananda college teammates. Had he been part of the white ball era, he would have been a standout performer.”

Buys a Java to ride alongside TT Ramesh's Bullet
His Ranji opening partner V Krishnaswamy (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/08/krishnaswamy-v.html) asked him to join IOB as soon as he completed his graduation. One of the first things he did was to buy a Java, a decision that he says was motivated by his namesake (TT Ramesh) owning a bullet. Both were so close to his heart that P Ramesh still remembers the registration numbers of the Bullet and the Java.

Duleep Trophy Debut - A meeting with another cricketing legend
A year after his Ranji debut, he was picked in the South Zone team for the Duleep Trophy match against Central Zone. He has great memories of sitting for a couple of hours with another cricketing legend of the time “I had got out to a rash shot in the first innings but scored an unbeaten half century in the second to take our team to victory in the run chase. Legendary Hanumant Singh, who saw me closely in that match,  asked me to meet him at the West End Hotel and took a two hour class about batting. He said that I had the potential to play for India and I should not throw away my wicket.”

“After the gestures from GRV and Prasanna, this was yet another great moment early on in my cricketing life” says Ramesh.

From Indiranagar to Padi with Vasudevan
He quit IOB after just a year to join Lucas TVS at their Padi Plant. “Ratnam was a close friend of appa and he asked me to join. Vasudevan and I took turns on the two wheeler to ride from Indira Nagar every morning at 6am. This long ride as well as my frequent trips to Avadi on work took a toll on my neck. And in the coming season, I had to take multiple pain killers before going into bat.”
Due to the daily two wheeler trips to Padi, Vasudevan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/06/vasudevan-tn-ranji-trophy-retirement.html) developed a great understanding of Ramesh in those years “He was a most aggressive and a dashing batsman. He had a great sense of humour and when he was around, we always had a joyful time. We all had great expectations of him at that time.”

Great Gesture from Venkat
In Sept’76, batting in the middle order he scored a century against Andhra at the Forest College grounds in Coimbatore “When I was going into to bat, Venky asked me to score a hundred and I did it with a big partnership with Jabbar. When I returned to Madras, he presented me with an ‘autograph’ bat. It was a terrific gesture from him and I still cherish it as a great gift from a legend.”

A couple of months later, in December, he scored his third and final Ranji century against a strong Hyderabad attack taking TN quite close in its fourth innings run chase.

Fails in the Biggest Match of his life
These performances earned him a place in the South Zone team to play MCC in January 1977 but he scored a duck in both innings. In that phase, the match against visiting teams was considered as the stepping stone to play for India “It was a big match for me but it turned out to be a bad one. Lever (the series is known for his Vaseline incident) was swinging big. I was on the threshold of the selection into the Indian team but was overlooked after this failure. In the first innings, I edged the ball on to my pad and it trickled on to the stumps. They judged me just on this one match!!!”

For about three years, he had on a cricketing high - Century on Ranji debut followed by two more centuries and playing in the Duleep and Deodhar trophy tournaments. But after the twin failures against MCC and two lean years in Ranji cricket, he was dropped from the TN team for the 79-80 season. Ramesh was vocal in those days and went up to the selector Balu Alaganan to enquire the reason “I was told that I did not make runs in the first division league!!!”

A Ranji Revival as a new ball bowler
He came back the next season only to be dropped again after a duck against Hyderabad in the season opener. And then late in January 1981, he says he received a surprise call from Venkataraghavan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/04/venkataraghavan75.html) on the morning of the Ranji match against Karnataka asking him to come to Chepauk immediately “TA Sekar had injured his ankle and Venky asked me to bowl with the new ball. I picked up 5 wickets and scored a rapid half century batting in the middle order. This comeback gave me a lot of satisfaction and my hopes were once again revived.”

In the quarter final against Haryana, the next month, he scored 60 but his twin failure in the semi-final against Bombay signalled the end of his Ranji career and he was never to play for TN again. 

Ramesh was great fun and had some lovely times together
SPIC was promoted to the first division after he joined in 1981. He went on a hiring spree roping in V Sivaramakrishnan, TA Sekar and S Vasudevan among others. The team went on to win the first division and The Hindu trophies under his reign as captain.  In the mid 80s, he convinced AC Muthiah to send the triumphant team to the UK on a cricket tour. Shiv met his opening partner recently at the 1970s players get together organised by SM Krishna Kumar at MCC and the two recollected some wonderful memories from their playing days.
He says that Ramesh was a stylish left hander with immense talent. “Our first stint together as an opening pair was with Alwarpet. He was a hard striker of the ball and I really enjoyed partnering him. He was also a very useful medium pace bowler. His debut century against Karnataka consisting of Chandra,Pras and Vijayakrishna was a brilliant one. Off the field he was great fun and we had some lovely times together.”

TN middle order batsman from the 1980s and the current Head of the TNCA Academy PC Prakash played for Alwarpet and SPIC alongside Ramesh. He says that Ramesh made batting look easy.“He was stylish and a gifted cricketer and had so much time to play  his shots.”

Technically Sound - did not seem to have any weaknesses while batting
Former India fast bowler TA Sekar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2013/08/ta-sekar-architect-behind-worlds-best.html) played for five years at SPIC in the 1980s under Ramesh. He is particularly disappointed that Ramesh did not fulfil his potential “Among the three, Kicha was defensive and did not play rash shots. V Shiv was sedate and good against spinners. Ramesh was stylish, versatile and had great eye hand co-ordination. He was technically sound and did not seem to have any weaknesses. He never flinched against the fast bowlers opening on matting wickets and not once did he get hit. Very quickly, he earned the respect of the opposition. He could suddenly change gears and move into an ultra-aggressive mode. He hit sixers with such ease that it was a treat to watch him bat. His class came to the fore when he played Prasanna and Chandra with such ease. After his century on debut in Ranji, I thought he would go all the way but he disappointed me. Coming from a cricketing family, he had all the facilities. He was easy going and may not have worked hard enough.”
“In the 1970s, the standards were high and competition was stiff. I felt Ramesh gave up his national aspirations far too quickly for my liking.”

A Bowler's Captain
At SPIC, Sekar says Ramesh showed his captaincy mettle “He was a bowler’s captain and was quite demanding of me and KAK (K Arun Kumar). He would needle me in an act of motivation to get me to do better. He himself was quite good at the club level and bowled sharp bouncers and cutters.”

Sixers land up at the Presidency College
IOB’s Rocko’ Sundar was at the receiving end of some of Ramesh’s power hitting“He once hit IOB’s Dayakar off successive balls on to the Presidency College batting for TVS in The Hindu Trophy final when he scored a rapid 75.”

Sense of Humour high like his towering sixers
S Srinivasan, who played Ranji cricket for Bombay and Madras, is now the selector of the TN Ranji team. He too was roped in by Ramesh at SPIC. He says that Ramesh was one of the most technically equipped hard hitting batsman of his time.“He made batting look so simple. His sense of humour was always like his towering SIXERS. There was never a dull moment when he was around.”

Vasudevan succeeded Ramesh as captain at SPIC after having played under him through the first half of the 80s. He says that Ramesh was a great motivator and got the best out of his players. “If he had worked hard, he may have played higher levels of cricket. Unfortunately, his glory was short lived after the highs of a debut century in Ranji.”

TTS too says that it is a pity that he didn't go on to bigger things.

VV belonged to a different space, admired Kalli for his guts
Ramesh counts Bishen Bedi as one of the best spinners he faced. “At the Kotla, I wanted to sweep Bedi and ended up playing a defensive shot outside the off stump. That was testimony to his greatness.”

But like many others of his generation, for Ramesh too VV Kumar was the best “VV belonged to a different space and simply mesmerized batsmen.”

In the 1970s, he says he had great admiration for B. Kalyanasundaram “After just a few overs, Kalli  would be taken off from the attack and despatched to long leg but he rarely showed any dejection. When Venky threw the ball at him late in the innings, he gave him crucial breakthroughs with the old ball. As a fast bowler, you needed a lot of guts to shine in that phase dominated by spinners and Kalli had that in abundance.”

He is delighted with the revival of Buchi Babu tourney that was once upon a time the stepping stone to a budding cricketer in Madras. He was in Coimbatore last year for the finals. He was also recognised by the TNCA during the TNPL for his contribution to TN cricket.

Hitting out at Chandra remains in my everlasting memory
He says he harboured great hopes between 1974 and 77 to play for India but the failure against MCC (England) was a big setback and in the years that followed ‘I lost that aspiration to play at the next level’. Looking back at that phase, he says he could have been given more chances in the Deodhar trophy given his aggressive instincts. 

For this handsome man, not getting right to the top in cricket was a disappointment but he says that the century on debut in Ranji and stepping out to Chandra and hitting him with ease that day will remain in his everlasting memory as will the childhood days of playing marbles, gilli thanda and climbing teak trees to fly kites at the Luz House with 'great friend' M Sundar.”

Srirangam Maasi Theppam 2024

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Prabhandham Ghosti present Thiru Mangai Azhvaar’s Madals in the hot sun, Poor Management lead to chaotic scenes after the Theppam during Mariyathai and a once in a year late night procession of Namperumal through North Adayavalanjan mark Maasi Theppotsavam at Ranganathaswamy temple on Monday
Its just past 3pm on a hot Monday (Feb 19) afternoon. It is a big day in the year in Srirangam – the evening when Namperumal will provide darshan on the float at the sacred tank west of the temple. The Prabhandham Ghosti members are waiting on the South Chitrai Street for Namperumal to arrive on the palanquin on his way to the Theppam.

Back inside the Naazhikettan Vasal, the two EOs of the temple are present ahead of the start of the procession to ensure that everything is on track. Only  last week, the JC of the temple Mariappan had told this writer that the Theppotsavam is a challenging day for the temple authorities and a lot of care has to be taken on this day.  

Prabhandham Ghosti present the Madals
Hot chakkarai Pongal is presented to the Sthalathars and the Sripatham members following which Namperumal leaves for this two-hour procession. As he enters the Chitrai street, the Prabhandham members, who have gathered in good numbers, begin the presentation of the Siriya Thiru Madal (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2012/10/thirumangai-azhvaars-madal.html). The Sun is beating down from the West and hence the full screen is on through the procession on the South Chitrai Street with the devotees running towards the West Chitrai Street for darshan of Namperumal.
This is the first time in the Thai and Maasi utsavam that Namperumal makes his way on a procession through the Chitrai streets (through the entire Thai Brahmotsavam and till the day of the Maasi Theppam, the processions are all on the Uthirai Streets).

Like on the Garuda Sevai procession last week, Namperumal makes his way this time too to apartments on Melur Road and a devotee home adjacent to the tank to provide darshan as part of the mandagapadis on this evening. The Prabhandham members have completed the rendering of the Siriya Thiru Madal and have begun the presentation of the Periya Thiru Madal. Its past 5.30pm when Namperumal has made his way around the tank streets and the screen is shut for alankaram of Namperumal ahead of the procession on the float.

Namperumal presents himself with Kili Garland
By 7pm, devotees have gathered in large numbers outside the mandapam waiting for the first glimpse of the alankaram and as the screen opens, they are delighted to see Namperumal adorning a Kili Garland. The devotees count the number of parrots on the garland and engage in conversation on the beauty of the parrots.
The float itself is grandly decorated as well as any float in a TN temple Theppotsavam. The lights are bright. Everything is colourful and grand inside the float. The service personnel and the temple staff get on to the float along with Namperumal.

The devotees positioned themselves at marquee locations around the huge tank for the best view as Namperumal goes around thrice in hour long procession before he makes his way to the mandapam in the middle of the tank for Thaligai presentation.

It is 9.30pm when Namperumal makes his way out of the float for the return trip to the temple. And what followed over the next half hour or do did not make for good viewing. It has been a customary practice for many years now that on the Vedu Pari evening during the Adyayana Utsavam and on this Theppam evening, the ubayadarars and the workers who made the float a success are presented with Mariyathai. While the programme schedule has the return of Namperumal to his abode as 11.15pm, it has been rarely stuck to over the last decade. 

Devotees walk out from the Mariyathai process
It was expected for the shatari mariyathai to go on for at least half an hour. But when a set of devotees weren’t happy at the respect given to them, they protested and staged a walk out in a group. The maniyakarar, (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/03/srirangam-temple-time-keeper.html) who is the time keeper of the procession and whose responsibility it is for ensuring that all goes as per plan, was away on his phone even as the mariyathai was being accorded and was not aware of what was going on.

It is 10.15pm when the priests and the service personnel call out for him to resolve the challenge ahead of the return procession. A decision is taken that the aggrieved devotees will be presented with the Mariyathai on the east side of the tank and they are consoled.

JC should ensure that the processions are orderly
It was quite badly handled by the temple authorities. The JC, who has been known to straight forward and on the dot on any issues relating to the temple, has to ensure that devotees are not put off and made unhappy for Namperumal makes the procession to provide darshan to the devotees. Even on the Garuda Sevai (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2024/02/srirangam-namperumal-maasi-garuda-sevai.html?m=1) procession, there was a lot of noise and pushing of devotees and was not handled well last Thursday evening. Such unsavoury events take away the charm and the grandness of the utsavam which has grown in scale in recent  years.

MAV joins the Ghosti for Thiru Kurunthandagam
It was back to the sacred events past 10.30pm as Namperumal made his way on to the West Adayavalanjan Street for the start of the night session of the Prabhandham Ghosti. It is the one day in the year when Namperumal makes his way through the North half of West Adayavalanjan and the North Adayavalanjan Street. There was a surprise visitor at the late wvening procession. Thiruvallikeni’s MA Venkatakrishnan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/05/ma-venkatakrishnan-thiruvallikeni-divya_16.html) joined the Thodakkam of Thiru Mangai Azhvaar’s Thiru Kurungthandagam while his son was with the Vedic members even as hundreds of devotees came out of their homes to have darshan of a beautifully decorated Namperumal.

11pm and Namperumal gets into another apartment - this one the last on the night- at the junction of West and North Adayavalanjan. 

MAV told this writer that he has bought a house in North Adayavalanjan street and as a thanking gesture to Namperumal, he was with his family in front of his house to present his offerings to the Lord.

After Thiruvanthikaappu in front of Thaayar Sannidhi, Namperumal made his way back to the temple via the Chitrai Streets. It was 12.30am when he made his way back via the Naazhikettan Vasal after a nine hour trip. 

Tail Piece: Kudos to Theertha Kudam Singan and the Sripatham Vethal team
Journalist Singan worked with the Press Trust of India (PTI) for several decades before retiring a few years back. During these utsavams, it is he who carries the Theertha Vessel on his shoulder. On this long return trip, it was yet another occasion when he carried on his shoulder the heavy sacred Theertha Kudam all the way from the Tank side to the temple during the procession.

The Sripatham personnel comprising of Vethal volunteers were patient and joyful on this three hour late night return trip. It is their positive spirit that kept everyone going on this long evening for Namperumal. Many of their shoulders are swollen but with their minds firmly on carrying Namperumal, they withstand the pain finding great joy in performing this Kainkaryam as a Sripatham.

Srirangam Brahmotsavam Padippu Sridhar

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The historical Padippu event on the final evening of the big utsavams has been revived over the last decade at the Ranganathaswamy temple
Temple staffer Sridhar has been assigned this sacred Kainkaryam of reading out the greatness of the temple near the Dwajasthambam in front of Namperumal
When TVS’ Venu Srinivasan was assigned the task of the restoration exercise of the Ranganathaswamy temple in Srirangam a decade ago, he undertook a Prashnam to understand the violations that had taken place at the temple earlier and the corrective measures that were required to be initiated. The outcome of the Prashnam pointed to a deficiency in the conduct of the big utsavams. The Padippu at the end of the utsavams had been a centuries old historical practice performed as a hereditary service and takes place at the conclusion of the big utsavams such as the four Brahmotsavams, the Adyayana Utsavam and Vasantha Utsavam on the final day.

When there were no descendants of the Thiru Thaazhvarai Dasar clan to continue this service, this sacred event came to a halt around four decades ago.

Venu Srinivasan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2017/11/venu-srinivasan-srirangam-temple.html), the then Chairman - Board of Trustees, was keen for the historical Padippu event to be revived and in discussion with the temple authorities identified a Vaishnavite to perform this service .
N Sridhar, who has been working in different departments at the Srirangam Temple since 1999, was asked if he would be interested and willing to don the role of reading out the text and the verses on the final evening of the utsavams. While he had no prior knowledge or experience in this recital, he considered this a great blessing to be assigned this Kainkaryam.

He reached out to the Mela Thirumaligai Vishnu Chithan Swami and learned the Santhai from him. Sridhar told this writer that he sourced the historical script relating to the Padippu from Krishnamachari of Sri Sri Press “Only after Mela Thirumaligai Swami was convinced that I was equipped to present the padippu and gave me the nod did I proceed to present the Padippu, the first of which was at the end of the Vasantha Utsavam just under ten years ago.”
“I was very emotional on that Satru Murai occasion. It was well past mid night when Namperumal made his way back from the Vasantha Mandapam. At that debut performance, there was a certain fear within me that I should present this to the best of my ability in front of Namperumal and without mistakes.” 

Padippu at Thayar Utsavams and on Vedu Pari evening
Since then, Sridhar has been the man who has performed this Padippu kainkaryam at all the Raksha Bandhanam utsavams. In addition, he also presents ‘padippu’ during the big utsavams for Thayar. Also, on the evening of the Vedu Pari event in Manal Veli during the Era Pathu Utsavam, he presents the Parimuthal Kanakku reading out the list of jewels of Namperumal.

The Padippu goes into the legend of the temple, the origin of Periya Perumal, reference to Srirangam as Bhoologa Vaikuntam and the greatness of Chandira Pushkarani, among other details. 

His appa, K Narayanan, who worked in the commercial taxes department had been the ‘double lock officer’ at the temple three decades ago.

His thatha, Krishnamachariar, performed Theertha Kainkaryam at the Chakkarathazhvaar Sannidhi in the middle of the 20th century. He credits the sincere kainkaryam of his thatha in those years when there was very little financial returns and the fruits of his service to him being belessed with this Padippu Kainkaryam. 
Now, almost a decade after the Padippu revival, Sridhar is confident and renders the Padippu with great devotion. He did not seek this kainkaryam nor did he expect that one day in his life, he would be the one to present such a sacred recital at the end of the Brahmotsavams. He considers it Ranganatha's blessing that this Kainkaryam has come on its own to him and that he has been reciting without a break for almost a decade.

Following the Bandha Katchi procession on the final evening of the Maasi Utsavam 2024, Sridhar presented the Padippu on Tuesday (Feb 20) evening  in front of Namperumal near the Dwajasthambam at the Ranganathaswamy temple.

Kesava Perumal Temple Mylapore Hereditary Priests

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Giri Bhattar's forefathers came to Mylapore from Vandavasi in the 1550s and have been performing archaka service at the Kesava Perumal temple for almost 500 years
Srinivasarangan (Giri) Bhattar is 30. Over the last 15 years, he has been carrying on the hereditary archaka service that has been performed by his forefathers at the Kesava Perumal temple in Mylapore from the 1550s. At various points in time, the family have been in serious financial situations but the message that has been passed on through generations has been the same ‘Believe in Mayuravalli Thayar’ and ‘Perform archaka kainkaryam with sincerity’.

A lot in the current generation have moved away from archaka service into the corporate world but for Giri Bhattar, the only thing that he is reminded of everyday is the message from his Thatha Veera Raghava Bhattar  (popularly known as 'Chellapillai') who performed kainkaryam for almost seven decades and who passed away during the Pandemic. “I would sit with Thatha and listen to the stories about his grandparents and the way they lived their lives” Giri Bhattar told this writer at the location opposite the Kesava Perumal temple where several generations of this family have resided.

Kainkaryam as the only way of life
He recalls two unforgettable stories that Veera Raghava Bhattachar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/06/veera-raghava-bhattar-kesava-perumal.html) narrated to him when he was young “Over 125 years ago, a financially rich businessman from North Madras was handing out 4gm gold coins to the Brahmins in this village (Madras). My Thatha’s thatha – Srinivasa Varada Bhattar -  performed archaka kainkaryam from the 1870s till the 1930s. The family was experiencing financial challenges in that phase and my ellu patti asked him to go to Parry’s and collect the Sambhavanai.”
It would have been reasonable for Srinivasa Varada Bhattar to have gone and collected the gold for it was being donated to the Brahmins performing service but Giri Bhattar’s ellu thatha refused and told his wife that he would not let go of Kainkaryam to Mayuravalli that day. It would have taken a great deal of time to go to Parrys and return back to Mylapore in those days.

Tears roll down Giri Bhattar’s cheeks as he narrates what happened in the second half that day “My ellu thatha was sitting at the Mayuravalli Thayar Sannidhi when a group of devotees from North India visited the temple. They had been to Thiruvallikeni earlier in the day and were now visiting the avathara sthalam of Pey Azhvaar. Pleased with the Kainkaryam of my Thatha, they placed 8gms gold in the Thattu which was double of what the North Madras businessman was handing out that day in Parrys. He came home and told my ellu patti as to how Mayuravalli blesses archakas who perform kainkaryam with complete devotion.”

Giri Bhattar says that his thatha, Veera Raghava Bhattar, constantly reminded him of this story to instill in him the importance of unflinching faith in Mayuravalli Thayar “My Thatha would often say that Kesava Perumal has a 1000eyes and keeps total watch on us every minute of the day. And he would not let go easily those that stray away from the dharmic path but Mayuravalli is full of Karunai and that she is always considerate and hence we should fully surrender to her and perform our service with utmost sincerity.”
Chellapillai Veera Raghava Bhattar

Wouldn't eat without presenting Thaligai to Kesava
On another occasion, just under a century ago, there was a death in the far corner of the Sannidhi street and Thiru Aradhanam could not performed and Thaligai presented to Perumal for almost 36 hours “My Ellu Thatha (Srinivasa Varada Bhattar) did not eat anything in that period because his way of life was such – he would not eat food without presenting the Thaligai to Perumal. They were steadfast in their faith and lived their entire life in the belief that complete devotion to ‘Kesava and Mayuravalli’ was the only way of life and there was no compromise permissible in the way they performed kainkaryam at this temple.”

Giri Bhattar’s forefathers moved from Vandavasi to Madras around the 1550s and came to reside in the Sannidhi Street in front of the Kesava Perumal temple ‘When the financial situation was really bad, my great grandfather Kesava Bhattar went to the Parthasarathy temple in Thiruvallikeni as a support priest (during his non service days in the month at the Kesava Perumal temple). With the income generated during his Kainkaryam there, he performed the Deepavali utsavam at the Kesava Perumal temple.”

Born to perform Kainkaryam
The thought that this Vaikanasa Bhattar clan has been born only to perform archaka service to Perumal and Thayar had been instilled in Giri Bhattar right from the time he was five years old “Instead of learning the alphabets at Chellammal School, I learned the slokas. When a traditional event was held at Sivaswamy Kalalaya, I donned the Hanuman Thirukolam and won a prize. Similarly, when my teacher at school asked how it rains, I said that Lord Varuna throws water from the sky in a Jug. My early life was almost completely centered around Kesava Perumal and Bhakthi towards him. Hence I related everything in life to the concept of devotion and kainkaryam.” 

He says from being an academically poor student in early school, he managed good marks in Class X and XII and completed his graduation in commerce from the Vivekananda college. He later went on to a degree in law. His thatha and appa had lived through poverty and there were days when there was no money at home to even eat a meal. During the Pandemic, when his thatha passed away due of Covid, there was not enough money to even perform the last rites and the monthly Kaaryams but Giri Bhattar says that Kesava and Mayuravalli have always shown the way and helped them come of all kinds of challenges.
The previous consecration had taken place 20 years ago and the temple is currently seeing a restoration exercise with Thiruppani works having started in the second half of last year. The consecration is expected to take place later this year by when it is hoped that the temple will wear a new and fresh look. 
 
Taking forward the Hereditary Service into the next phase
Given the current scenario in temples, Giri Bhattar will continue to don the role of an advocate in the foreseeable future but as has been way of this family over the last 500 years, Giri Bhattar is clear that his first and foremost duty in this life is to perform Kainkaryam at the Kesava and Mayuravalli Sannidhis at the Kesava Perumal temple in Mylapore. There are challenges for archakas relating to hereditary service in temples but Giri Bhattar is confident that with the blessings of 'Mayuravalli', he will be able to continue this five centuries old tradition during his life time. At this young age, he has been able to captivate the minds of the devotees with his sincerity and committed service. He says that he will endeavour to perform Kainkaryam in  a way to not spoil that regard the devotees seem to currently have for him as a devoted archaka.

K Srikkanth India Opener 1980s

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Heartbeat shot up for the fans when he batted in the 1980s as he thrilled them with a new brand of cricket that was hitherto unseen at the international level 
From the Sundal seller in the D-Stand to the most knowledgeable of cricket fans, Srikkanth was a crowd favourite and created a new audience for cricket with his exhilarating batting 
I learned a lot from Srikkanth. He transmitted Positivity - TVS' R Dinesh
It’s a scene from the 1980s. Tamil Nadu is batting first on a sunny morning at Chepauk. The Peanut vendor is all set at the far end of the ground at the D Stand with his basket and all excited as his favourite cricketer walks on to the middle with his Symonds bat. He shouts out the best wishes to him and within 15 minutes has sold a sizeable quantity of the nuts with the opener in blazing form striking fours and sixers including the answering the request of the vendor with a hit straight into the D Stand. The packed crowd in that stand is just as thrilled as the vendor boy as they go up in chorus cheering another six. It is what they have come for that morning – fireworks from ball one. There are near misses as well as a lofted stroke just clears the fielder and an outswinger beats the edge, each of which send the crowd into silence. It was always tense as one did not know what would happen the next ball and how long the blitzkrieg would last but they enjoyed every minute of what came their way. And when his favourite batsman gave it away yet another time when he was just beginning to look dangerous and well set for a big score, the peanut vendor’s mood changed quite drastically. The chatty guy suddenly turned sad and angry after his ‘Thalaivar’s’ dismissal. He was done with it for the day and left the D Stand happy with what he saw but his heart still yearning for more and shouted out the message that the King of Chepauk would score a Century the next time.

In the 1980s, Krishnamachari Srikkanth set the stands on fire with his batting that was well ahead of his time. Most of his teammates were conservative and traditional in their approach but not he. He was fearless and aggressive and wanted to dominate the fast bowlers right from the word go.  He was also terrific against the spinners and dismissed them to all parts of the field with nonchalant ease. A feature of his batting was that his aggression was all directed straight – back over the bowler and over mid-off and mid-on. Rarely did he play ugly cross batted swipes. When the pacers tried to bounce him out, he hooked them into the stands with the best of that generation getting a taste of his medicine in the 1983 World Cup final. In the one dayers, he used the field restrictions in the first 15 overs to his advantage and hit over the top leaving the fast bowlers stunned.

His dashing stroke play reached its peak in Australia where a lot of the Indian openers had struggled previously and he even had the Aussie commentators looking forward to his demolition of the opposition bowlers. Many a time he committed Hara-Kiri and that’s one regret he has but the 1980s was a memorable decade when he transformed the way international openers looked at batting at the top of the order. Three decades after his retirement, he looks back with great joy at his cricket career in a chat with this writer. Here’s the story.

The Early days - Devotional learnings from his amma
Srikkanth’s amma was very religious and initiated him into a devotional way of life during his school days. Sitting at the verandah of his home in Neelankarai, Srikkanth recalls those early years when his interest in serious cricket was limited and restricted to playing tennis ball cricket “We lived a middle class way of life and as was the tradition those days, my parents inculcated in me devotional habits very early on that held me in good stead later on in life. I would regularly recite Adithya Hridayam and Hayagriva stotrams during my schooling years. Visiting the nearby temples was also a ritual that was initiated into me by my amma. The focus was on excelling in academics and in those early years, I batted in a ‘natural’ way, which turned out to be an aggressive way. It was not any well thought plan to play in that fashion. When the tennis ball was hurled at me, I instinctively hit it hard and back past the bowler and that’s how I developed that style of play.”

His Devotional Engagement with the Sun God
Later on in his cricketing years, his walk towards the square leg umpire and looking frequently at the Sun became a distinctive feature of his stay at the crease. Srikkanth once again credits his amma for instilling in him the devotional thoughts “Right from my school days, Surya Bhagawan was part of my daily prayers. We were told that Sun is the visible God and hence I always invoked His blessings when I was on the cricket field, especially while batting.”

It was those lessons from his early days that taught him humility. Despite his mega achievements at the international level, he did not forget the past and remained the same simple, down to earth, friendly human being to all his teammates from the 1980s. He simply did not have any airs about himself and continues to move around with cricketers in the same way he did back in his prime.

No Cricketing Ambitions
As a young boy, he had no inclination to play serious cricket. Even into his teens, the focus was on academics and he joined Engineering at the Guindy Engineering College with the intention of getting into a corporate life “Doing well in academics was the only focus and I joined Engineering with the intention of pursuing a career path similar to the boys my age. Even into my mid-teens, I had absolutely no ambition of even playing for the state let alone for the country.”

A Distinctive style right from his teenage days
But Devanatha Perumal of Thiru Vahindrapuram (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2008/03/thiruvahindrapuram-devanathan_29.html), who he had great devotion for, had different plans for him. By the time he was into his late teens, things changed dramatically for Srikkanth. There was a rapid upswing in cricket and he made his Ranji debut at 19. Rohinton Baria winning captain SM Krishna Kumar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2024/01/sm-krishnakumar-madras-university.html) saw the aggressive side of Srikkanth even in that early phase much before he had made his Ranji debut “The fearless cricket that Srikkanth played at the top of the innings reminded me of the aggressive style adopted by P Ramesh in the preceding years in the mid 1970s. While most others in the city played in a traditional way focusing on building an innings, Srikkanth was different and his natural ability to hit the ball right from the start stood out distinctly even in those early years of his cricket.”

No role model for his aggro
Srikkanth says he had no role model whose approach he based his game on and this just came naturally to him “While I was really impressed with Richards and Lillee and their aggressive way of playing cricket, GRV was the one I admired the most in my teenage years. But my aggressive batting style was just instinctive and there was no role model that I wanted to emulate. I tried to be as natural as possible and like in tennis ball cricket during my school days, I just wanted to hit it back over the bowler as straight as possible. I felt it was a simple approach to batting.”

Selectors back the new approach of this teenager
He gives credit to Sriraman, Annadurai and Rangachari for spotting the talent in him “Right through my career, I adopted the same approach and in fact threw away my wicket many times after crossing 50 when I could have easily converted those to centuries. But in that early stage in my career in the late 1970s, the Selectors and the Powers that be at the TNCA took a judgement call based on my approach. They liked the way I batted and saw something different in me and encouraged me a lot. Unlike the more conservative and traditional players who built long innings, those like me could get out early because of the ultra aggressive style and hence needed that extra support. They really backed my style of play and believed that I could go a long way with that different approach that not too many adopted in that period in the late 1970s and early 80s.”

Play and become like Venkataraghavan – Elders tell him
It was a traditional practice in the century gone by for youngsters to take blessings from elders on special occasions or ahead of important events. He recalls as to why S Venkataraghavan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/04/venkataraghavan75.html) was such a legend and an iconic cricketing face for Tamilians “When in my late teens, I began showing some promise in cricket, the blessings from elders would always be the same thing every single time ‘Play and become like Venkataraghavan’. It showed what an impact he had made in the minds of middle-class families in Tamil Nadu."
In the late 1960s, opener KR Rajagopal (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2021/03/kr-rajagopal-dashing-opener-brilliant.html) was a brilliant wicket keeper and had amassed huge runs in domestic cricket but could not get into the squad to Australia. Similarly, B Kalyanasundaram picked up a hat trick in the Ranji final and always picked up the crucial big wickets when his captain needed him to but he too was overlooked at even the zonal level. Srikkanth has great regard for Kalli in the way he contributed to TN cricket and that came through in the way he agreed to meet this writer (when Kalli spoke about this writer at the 1970s cricketing meet at MCC and suggested to Srikkanth that he should meet and get featured in this section, the trust factor - another distinctive characteristic of Srikkanth - came through. He trusted the words of Kalli so much that in a matter of a few seconds he agreed to meet this writer despite the fact that he has not met any other media house for a story on his cricketing career). 

In light of the above challenges that high performing TN cricketers faced in the 60s and 70s, Srikkanth credits Venkat's mental strength for holding his own in international cricket for such a long period "To play the kind of cricket he did at the international level amidst such stiff competition and to hold his own against three giant spinners was unbelievable. I had the greatest respect for him right from my childhood. There were times when he shouted at me especially when I did not meet his expectations and threw away my wicket but I took it in the right spirit that he was well meaning. He encouraged me a lot and was the guiding force and inspiration for me in cricket. He was my ‘Guru’ in cricket. I am also happy that I was able to fulfil the prayers and wishes of the elders. Like Venkat, I too did Engineering, played for India and also captained the country."

Sudden rise to cricketing glory
Srikkanth made his Ranji debut when he was just 19 in the 1978-79 season. Within a couple of years, he rose to great heights in cricket. Instead of donning the role of an engineer in the corporate world, he engineered a cricketing revolution on the cricket field with a style of play that was transformational “Like I said, till well into my teens, I had no cricketing ambitions. But its all Karma, and God decided that I should spend that decade in cricket and not as an Engineer. The big differentiator was that I scored big when it really mattered – be it the Irani Trophy match or the Zonal matches or those against visiting teams” says Srikkanth crediting all his success to the divine powers.

A great partnership with V Shiv – Opposite poles like each other!!!
In a glorious two year phase, Srikkanth forged a great opening partnership with V Sivaramakrishnan and the two posted several century stands both for TN and the Zone. It all began against Hyderabad in Dec 79 when Shiv came up against his brother Ramnarayan and almost notched a century with Srikkanth scoring 66. A month later the two put on a century stand in a Deodhar Trophy match playing for South Zone.

The knock against Goel gives him great confidence
The 1980-81 season was a big one for Srikkanth, one that catapulted him into the next phase in cricket. He scored close to 500 runs in Ranji Trophy including a belligerent 172 against Karnataka, once again sharing a century opening stand with V Shiv. But the knock that stood out that year was the fourth innings chase at Chepauk against the spin twins Rajinder Goel and Sarkar Talwar in the Ranji QF. Chasing over 250 to win, Srikkanth and Shiv posted another century stand to help take TN into the SF.

Srikkanth is philosophical about his big partnerships with Shiv in that phase “Shiv was a solid bat with a good temperament. We had a great understanding. When we went out to bat, he would ask me to play my strokes freely while he focused on giving me the strike. Yes, we did not have too many common qualities in the way we batted but maybe it was the case of ‘opposite poles’ coming together in a big way. I really enjoyed batting with Shiv and many a time we gave great starts to TN and SZ in that phase.”

He says that innings against Goel was a big confidence booster for him and it played an important role in him moving up the ladder in cricket.

The transformational season
The great start to the 1981-82 season got him into the teams against the visiting English side. He began the season with another century stand with Shiv in the Deodhar Trophy Final and followed that up with  two half centuries in the Duleep Trophy. He scored half centuries playing for India U22 and the Board Presidents XI against England, innings’ that got him into the squad for the first test in Bombay “In those days, scoring big against visiting teams counted a lot as the selectors kept a close watch on these matches to see if the players were up to it against the international teams. My knocks against England in these two matches went in my favour ahead of that first test.”

The Debut Test - Takes a stroll and is run out
The previous year Ian Botham performed extraordinarily in the one off Golden Jubilee test in Bombay with a 13 wicket haul and a century. And just a few months prior to this first test, Botham made a remarkable comeback in the Ashes after being stripped of the captaincy. The old Botham was back to his aggressive best as was Bob Willis, who too was on the verge of being dropped. Willis' 8 wickets to bowl England to that famous win in Headingly is still spoken about four decades later as one of the best spells in cricket. And Srikkanth knew he was up against two of the best that year and the spinner in Emburey, who too had played a role in the Ashes earlier that year.

Srikkanth recalls the tension that ran through his blood in that debut test “I was not yet 22 and had received an early break in international cricket. I was really tense in that test match and overwhelmed by the occasion.”

While he made a duck in the first innings, he was in the spotlight for the wrong reasons in the second. He was infamously run out by Emburey when he strolled down the wicket for a casual walk after playing the ball to Gully. “The bigness of the occasion got to me and it was a mindless act. Yes, I did not attempt a single but I had no business to walk out of the crease and they were right in running me out. It was one of those early lessons in international cricket and that came to me in my very first test match.”

But this wandering itself and him being in his own world was not new, for in a Ranji match earlier he moved around in the field all on his own much to Captain Venkat’s anger. Later that decade, in a WSC match against Australia, when he was hit wicket and no one noticed and appealed, he quietly picked up the bail and placed it back on the stumps and continued to bat!!! 

The first of the many big partnerships with Gavaskar
His debut was a huge disappointment to him and his fans back in Madras. He also scored a duck in his One day debut but he turned around the disappointment of the week in the 2nd test in Bangalore where he was to share the first of many great partnerships with the legendary Sunil Gavaskar. However, Srikkanth looks back with a bit of disappointment in the way he let go that opportunity “In my playing career, there were many days when I let go the opportunity of converting my fifties into big knocks. This was the first of those on the big stage. I had put together a century stand with Sunny and was batting well at 65 and should have gone on to a century. A hundred in just my 2nd test after the way I got out in the first would have given me greater confidence but I missed that opportunity and gave away my wicket.”

Kudos to the TN and Indian Selectors of the time
Owner of TSM(TS Mahalingam & Co), 2nd hand car dealer, K Ravishankar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/12/k-ravishankar-alwarpet-tsm.html) played for Alwarpet for five seasons under Srikkanth starting 1987. It is a typically busy day at the TSM headquarters on Royapettah High Road and Ravi is at the receiving end of non stop calls from customers with queries on the sale and purchase of 2nd hand cars. But when he hears the name Srikkanth, he is all excited to talk for he considers Cheeka as a one in a generation and his All Time Favourite cricketer.  "For a youngster like me, he was the greatest blessing I could have had in cricket. He had no airs about himself, mingled with all of us as equals and wanted the youngsters to succeed. What a confidence booster it was for the teenage cricketers to have him around at Alwarpet."
 "The selectors of the time really need to be appreciated for having backed him early on. Based on pure stats and numbers, there were others at that time who made big hundreds but there was no opener in the country who could have batted like him. And the TN selectors, initially, and later the Indian selectors placed their faith on Cheeka and felt that his unique approach would put the opposition on the defensive. At a time, when you were told by your coaches to start slow, leave the first few balls alone and ‘pace your innings’, Srikkanth chalked out his own path but very importantly the selectors backed his approach when the selection methodology was to pick players who played the traditional way. It was a huge call by the selectors and it paid off for them through the 1980s."

The Greatest Chase in Domestic Cricket
At the start of the next domestic season, he played an innings that stands out as one of the best in his career. In the Irani Trophy match against Delhi, Rest of India were set a target of 420 in the fourth innings in less than 100 overs. Srikkanth, who made 83 in the first innings, recalls the message from his captain at the start of that chase “The rivalry between Bombay and Delhi was huge and Gavaskar did not like losing to Delhi. We had given away a big first innings lead and he was keen for me to give us a blistering start and asked me to go after their bowling.”

The fastest Indian bowler of the time TA Sekar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2013/08/ta-sekar-architect-behind-worlds-best.html) was part of that team and remembers watching that magical innings “Scoring over 4 runs an over was unheard of in those days and definitely not in the fourth innings of a match. The way Srikkanth treated Sunil Valson at the start of that innings was unbelievable. He really had the belief that we could win and that was always his differentiator throughout his career. He always played positively and to win and believed that anything could be achieved. It was one of its kind success and he laid the foundation to chase a seemingly impossible 420runs and we did it in 80overs. Srikkanth’s century stood out for its positivity and he impressed everyone with that knock.”

Srikkanth himself credits that knock for his selection for the tour to Pakistan that immediately followed.

(Interestingly, six years later, his TN opening partner VB Chandrasekar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/01/vb-chandrasekar.html) played a similar belligerant knock in the fourth innings to chase out an unlikely 350+ target in the Irani Trophy)

Very helpful to fellow cricketers
Sekar was roped into the Indian team ahead of the fifth test after Madan Lal sustained an injury midway through the tour. He has a lot of words of praise in the way Srikkanth guided him in that last part of that tour “Throughout his career, he was always helpful to his colleagues. I landed up in Karachi just one day before the match and did not know any bit of Hindi (or Urdu). Srikkanth was very supportive that fortnight and gave me a lot of confidence encouraging me all the time from his fielding positing at Short Leg. He genuinely wanted his teammates to succeed and did everything in his might to give them that much needed confidence.” 

Score against Venkat and you will get in
Ravishankar recalls how Srikkanth motivated him and helped him get into the Buchi Babu team. "He came up to me at the end of the first day’s play against India Pistons and asked me to score big the next day as Venkat was watching me 'Perform against Venkat and show him that you belong'."

“It was his piece of advice that helped me concentrate the next day to score 96 before I got out to Venkat. I was soon roped into the Buchi Babu squad and I owe a lot of that to Cheeka in the way he encouraged and motivated me to make big scores. Alwarpet was a dream dressing room. He kept it light, the atmosphere was jovial and there was always good spirit when he was around. He made a big difference to Alwarpet. He was big hearted, trusted everyone around him and didn’t carry anything to heart. He was such a selfless cricketer."

Crowd lost interest after Cheeka's dismissal
Ravi says that he was always under huge pressure when he went in at No. 3 for Alwarpet "Sanku and Cheeka would blaze away at the start and when Cheeka got out and I went in and defended a few balls, the crowd got restless and slow handclaps would start that put a great deal of pressure on me. He set the standards so high at the start that it was an uphill task for a No. 3 like me to keep the crowd happy with my style of batting. The hands would shiver when you heard those claps from the crowd expressing their displeasure but Cheeka was always encouraging and allowed me to play my natural game."

Owe everything to Cheeka
Srikkanth's opening partner in the 1980s VV Sankapani (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/01/sankapani-vv_21.html) says that he owes all his success at the club level to Cheeka"In order to allow me to express myself, he would slowdown his pace of batting and ask me to bat freely. He gave me all the space and freedom to showcase my talent. He wanted me to play my strokes and always backed me when I got out early to a rash shot. It was his backing that gave me the confidence to play my strokes without the fear of being dropped hanging over your head. If I am today known a little bit for the way I played cricket, it was solely due to Cheeka's motivational talks and his encouragement. He was easily the best captain and a player's delight."

Bazball model in the 1980s!!!
While he did not make much of an impression through the matches in the first phase of the World Cup, one of his biggest moments in his cricketing career came in the final. He top scored in the final with 39, a knock that is talked about even today for the way he punished the greatest fast bowlers of the time. Middle order TN bat from the 1970s and owner of The Hindu, K Balaji, watched the final (he had also watched Richards’ century in the 1979 final at Lords) - https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/10/world-cup-1979-reliving-final-k-balaji.html- from a vantage position at Lords and is all praise for Srikkanth’s style of play in that phase “I had seen Srikkanth start off his TNCA league career in the mid 70s as a school boy in the same aggressive way that he later displayed at the international level. It is creditable that he continued in the same vein unmindful of the criticisms that came his way when he got out cheaply to a rash shot. For a World Cup final, when India were clearly the underdogs and against the best fast bowling attack in the world, he showed no nerves at all. I saw that square drive on one foot off Roberts from a reasonable distance and it was mindboggling- the confidence with which he played that shot. And so too the hooks that day of the bouncers that were hurled at him.”
“It is one thing to play aggressively at the domestic level and completely another to achieve success playing the same way at the international level against top notch fast bowlers. It is really creditable that he did not conform to the traditional style of the time and yet managed to succeed the way he did. He followed his natural instincts and unmindful of what others (the critics) thought of his game, he continued to pursue his unique style”, Balaji told this writer this week of how Srikkanth managed to buck the existing trend.

“I would say that he followed the Bazball kind of approach way back in the 1980s and that says a lot about Srikkanth’s thought process. He was way ahead of his time in terms of approaching the batting at the top of the order.”

Expectations soar
Srikkanth says that the World Cup Victory and his contribution in the final changed his life completely “When I came back to Madras, everyone started talking about my innings and the way I demolished the West Indian quicks. It was a feeling of conquering the ‘Everest’ and I was over the moon. The expectations among fans and friends shot up dramatically.”

On the test front, he went through a lull for a couple of seasons and it was not until the tour to Australia in 85-86 that he made any significant contribution.

Cricketing Peak
For a couple of years from early 1985, Srikkanth went through a glorious phase in his cricketing life. He captivated the worldwide audience with his dashing stroke play in the world championship of cricket (WCC) leaving even the Aussie commentators stunned. They had seen the West Indians play that style of cricket in the past and the only Indian who had given a glimpse of such attacking stroke play was Sandeep Patil with his knock in Adelaide earlier that decade but he did not last too long in the international circuit. The consistency with which Srikkanth tore apart the new ball attack sent shock waves across the opposition teams and 'there goes SriCant again' became an oft repeated phrase in the commentary box in the Australian summer of 85 and 86.
A Special Knock that he cherishes
While he played two scintillating knocks against Australia in the league phase in the WCC and then in the final against the Imran Khan led bowling attack, Srikkanth counts his knock against England as one of his favourite innings in his cricket career. It was a match famous for Sadanand Viswanath’s five dismissals and L Sivaramakrishnan and Ravi Shastri bamboozling the English batsmen with their turn but it was Srikkanth who set the Sydney crowd on fire with his breathtaking half century that afternoon It was the kind of knock that had been rarely seen from an opener in Australia and definitely not from any one from the sub-continent. None of the English bowlers had any answers to the way Srikkanth batted that day and he finally got out the only way he could have – run out beaten by a throw from the deep as he attempted a second run“That knock gave me a lot of satisfaction. It was one of the cleanest innings I played in one day cricket. Run a ball half century was unheard of in those times (from an Indian) and I played the perfect game that day. It ranks as a very special innings in my career and I cherish it to this day.”

The Humane side- WCC Final
Srikkanth’s humane side came to the fore in the WCC final when one of his favourite lofted shots over long off saw Ramiz Raja bang his chest against the railings. Srikkanth immediately showed great concern about the well being of Ramiz and that was a characteristic he displayed throughout his cricketing career. He always cared for his fellow cricketers.

His best test innings overseas- Flaying Bob Holland
He continued this one-day form in Australia into the test series later that year. Srikkanth had his best overseas test tour with a knock of 86 at MCG and a century at the SCG where he took a particular liking to the leggie Holland. Srikkanth considers taking on Holland and hitting him all over the park as an unforgettable experience“Only the previous year at the same ground, he had picked up a 10wicket haul against a very strong West Indian side at its peak. You never know about leggies. That knock gave me a lot of satisfaction and I count that as one of my best innings, overseas.”

In a matter of 12 months, Srikkanth had played his two most memorable knocks at the SCG.

Ravishankar is not surprised at the way he despatched Holland and recalls an innings at Chepauk that remains etched in his memory“Venkatramana had moved to Indian Bank from Alwarpet. After Sanku got out, I joined Cheeka at No. 3. While most count Srikkanth as a great player against fast bowling, he was equally outstanding against spin. On that day, he tore apart Venkatramana, who had already made his test debut by then and was in prime form. He hit him for over 50 runs in two overs including five sixers in an over and moved to a double hundred in no time. He hit Ramana to every part of Chepauk and showed what a class player he was against spin bowling too. He would look at the crowd and ask if they were happy. And when they wanted more, he hit another one into the stands. That's how entertaining he was and I was greatly privileged to watch one of the greatest innings in first division league cricket from the non striker's end."

Positive outlook made a huge difference
Sekar says that his was a significant achievement. "In a purist era, when the focus was on a strong defence, Srikkanth had the mental strength to buck the trend and play the way he wanted and succeed at the highest level. The biggest advantage he had was that he did not fear facing the fastest of bowlers and took them head on. It was very difficult to bowl to him as he hit the length balls over the top and hooked the short balls to the boundary. The selectors saw that as a big plus in him. He was always positive and energised his teammates with his outlook and instilled the feeling in them that a team could win from any situation. He rarely played for a draw." 

His Best and most favourite innings in Test Cricket
In February 1987, at his home ground where he had thrilled the crowd over the previous decade, he played the innings of his life with a century against a strong Pakistan attack “The Chennai crowd and especially the supporters from D-Stand hold a special place in my heart. It was their encouragement that had given me a big boost early on in my career even from the time I was just getting into Buchi Babu cricket. It was always my desire to pay back to them through a big innings at Chepauk in international cricket. To play that kind of a knock against Imran and Akram and the legendary leggie Qadir remains the most memorable innings of my test career. I can still hear the crowd cheering every stroke of mine that day.”

Kind Hearted and Found Joy in others' success
It was around this time that a cricketer from Madurai was spotted by Srikkanth and whose life was immediately transformed. From nowhere, it was Srikkanth who spoke to TVS Chief R Dinesh to send the teenaged M Venkatramana from Madurai to Madras. Venkatramana, who is just back in the city from a coaching engagement with the Kerala Ranji team looks back at how Srikkanth transformed his cricketing life“It was the annual inter office match in the 1980s between TVS Chennai and TVS Madurai where Srikkanth saw me for the first time. He was so good at spotting talent and helping young cricketers that he immediately called Dinesh requesting him to send me to Chennai for greater exposure.”
“It was a very important phase in my life and he gave me the big break at the right time. It opened up new opportunities for me and I went on to play U22 and U25 cricket. Within a year or so, I was in the TN Ranji team and then shortly after I made it to the Indian team. Without Srikkanth, I would have missed the bus. It was also Cheeka who, soon after my test debut, asked me to join Indian Bank for long term security.”

“He was very kind hearted, always looking to give opportunities to youngsters and took great joy in the success of others.”

Srikkanth - The surprise off spinner
End of 1988, he shone with the bat and ball against New Zealand including taking two five wicket hauls in the one dayers with his off spin. Unfortunately, a few months later in the final one dayer against the West Indies, he had his hand broken by Ian Bishop that ruled him out of the entire test series, one where his ‘Guru’ Venkataraghavan was the manager. Venkatramana bemoans that as a personal loss in his career "Had Cheeka been there for the test series, I may have played earlier on a turning track at Port of Spain and it may have given me a boost to my career, especially as I had performed well in the tour matches."

Makes a mark as a captain
In what was to be one of his biggest achievements in his test career, Srikkanth captained India in late 1989 to a famous series draw in Pakistan, something that had not been achieved in earlier periods, though he himself was woefully out of form with the bat. 

Once again, like with his batting, he credits his approach for his success in captaincy "As a captain, you need to show confidence in the team given to you. I trusted the players and had faith in them and allowed them to express themselves without any restrictions. It was the same reason that we were able to chase the huge target in the fourth innings in the Irani Trophy match in 1988. When they did not enforce the follow on despite  a lead of over 200, I told my players that we have it in us to chase whatever target they give us and instilled the belief that we could do it come what may. And it rubbed off on VB who played a once in a life time innings." 

Not changed one bit in four decades
TN opener of the time NP Madhavan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/05/np-madhavan.html), who later moved to SVPB Udumalpet first opened with Srikkanth at the U22 level in the late 1970s and also opened with him later in Sri Lanka in the Gopalan Trophy match. He met his opening mate at the 1970s cricketer meet organised by SM Krishna Kumar at the MCC in January (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2024/01/1970s-madras-cricketers-meet-mcc.html) and is surprised at how Srikkanth has remained unchanged over four decades “Cheeka is still what he was and remains a very good friend. There is no change in his attitude or mannerism. He had always been lively and helpful to anyone. He never held grudge against anyone and never complained or spoke a bad word about any cricketer. Whenever he meets, he never forgets to enquire about the well being of the family. For a player of his stature, it is amazing that he has not forgotten his early days in cricket and the players he played with before he became an international star."
Hat Trick man from the 1973 Ranji final B Kalyanasundaram (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2011/08/kalli-b-kalyanasundaram.html) was the Chairman of TN Selection committee when Srikkanth was the Chairman of the National Selection committee last decade. He echoes Madhavan’s sentiments and says that despite his huge success at the international level, he remained very humble and has always been down to earth.“Cheeka was the one who showcased to all the cricketers on how to hit over the heads of mid off and mid on. He paved the way for the upcoming generations to play fearless cricket. He is a big legend in Indian cricket having played a big role in India’s famous victories in the 1983 World Cup and the 1985 WCC tournament but has always remained very simple and never forgotten his old friends.”

Unfortunately, a rift with the BCCI cut short his captaincy stint and that remains one of his regrets. He had been unanimously praised in the way he handled his players and the way India came back with their heads held high after the Pakistan tour but he had to let go his captaincy when he believed he had it in him to captain the country a bit longer. 

Another special knock against Windies' quicks
At the tail end of his career, he gave one final reminder to his fans. In the triangular WSC match at Adelaide in December 91, he scored 82. He counts that as one of his best innings in one day cricket “It was a pretty fierce attack comprising of Marshall, Ambrose and Patterson and once again I scored a run a ball 82. That knock gave me a lot of satisfaction for I could show the cricketing fraternity that I could still hold my own against the fastest bowlers in the world.”

Displayed great warmth and was genuinely affectionate
With his international success, he was wanted by every club in the city in the 1980s but he would never leave the TVS group and Alwarpet right till the end for he believed that they backed him all the way and at the top of his career. Srikkanth told this writer in May 2022 that very early in his domestic career, Jolly Rovers had reached out to him but in his mind he had provided  a lifetime commitment to the TVS Group and would not move away from them irrespective of the lucrative offers. 

A day after he was with the PM of India at the MSME event organised by his firm in Madurai, TVS’ R Dinesh spoke to this writer on how he himself learned a lot of positive things from Srikkanth “For all his big achievements at the international level, he displayed no ego. He was genuinely interested in the game and enjoyed playing cricket at any level. He simply gave his heart and soul to the game.”

International Cricketer - By Train to Virudanagar to play a match!!!!
Dinesh is still awe struck with the simplicity of Srikkanth “In the 1980s, soon after he returned from an international match, he took a train from Madras and played a match in Virudanagar. It was mind boggling to see 10000 people come to watch a match in that town and every single person came just to see him. That was the kind of positive impact he had on people in that phase.”

“His biggest differentiator was the ability to connect with everyone. He could relate to the fan on the street and get into an engaging conversation with him. And the next minute, he could be talking serious intellectual stuff with the CEO. And his friendly Chennai lingo was a big hit with the cricketing community.”

"Even when you met him after a year’s break, the way he engaged with you made it feel like he was there with you the previous day.  For a man who achieved such great success at the international level with the greatest cricketers of the time being spell bound with his approach to batting, he displayed great warmth and was genuinely affectionate as a person off the field even when he was at his peak for India. Even today we are good friends because of that."

"I learned a great bit from the way he conducted himself and imbibed a lot of the positive qualities from him."

THE GREAT ENTERTAINER
Srikkanth went on to become the only Indian to win the World Cup both as a player and a selector. He provided a dashing start in the fourth innings chase in the tied test in Madras in 1986. He was a trend setter in international cricket in the 1980s with his dashing style of play at the start of the innings. It was only towards the end of that decade that New Zealand opener Mark Greatbatch followed his model in one day cricket. And it took another decade for Adam Gilchrist and Virendra Sehwag to adopt the aggressive model that Srikkanth had kicked off in the early 1980s. He was an extra ordinary fielder in the outfield as well as at short leg. 

His biggest contribution was the cheer he brought to everyone around - his teammates, the opposition and the crowd alike with that incident in the 1985 WCC semi final being testimony to the way he played cricket and entertained everyone. With Cairns going great guns in the final few overs to take NZ past the 200 mark (which was a big deal in those days in one day cricket), Srikkanth dropped a sitter at deep mid wicket. And then the next ball, he refused to go for the catch when Cairns hit another big one. In front of that huge crowd at the SCG, an angry Gavaskar, unhappy with his effort, dismissed Srikkanth away to square leg much to his anguish. But Srikkanth had the last laugh and with him the entire cricketing world too as the next ball was skied once again in his direction this time high to square leg and the great judge of a catch that he was, he held it with ease. Even as he was explaining the twilight as a reason for not being able to spot the previous ball, the cameras shifted its attention to a blushing Gavaskar who covered his face with his hat to hide his sheepish smile. That was Krishnamachari Srikkanth for you – always an entertainer.

Kapali Temple Pushpa Kainkaryam GG Sivakumar

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Over the last year, this devotee, who runs a Recruitment firm, has put together a team of 35 ladies to knot and present flower garlands every day at the Kapaleeswarar temple
Devotees at the Kapaleeswarar temple have found different ways to engage themselves with the Lord. When S Harini Yogalakshmi moved from Madras to Erode following a transfer, she missed Kapali and took the late night Yercaud express to be on time for the start of the Adikara Nandi procession and on another occasion for the return of the Lord in the morning on the Rishabham (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/04/kapali-panguni-utsavam.html) during the Panguni Utsavam. IT Professional KS Sankar has been leading the crowd management during the Panguni Utasvam, especially on the Arubathumoovar and Chariot days in the last few years (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/11/sankar-ks-kapali-festival-crowd.html) . 

It was at the start of the Vasantha Utsavam in 2022 that the former World Bank Consultant, V Ramkumar,  a consultant to the PMO in 2023, began his Theevatti Kainkaryam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/07/kapali-theevatti-pmo-consultant-v.html). Ever since, over the last couple of years, he has expanded this service to other utsavams round the year including the annual Panguni Utsavam.  

And last year, ahead of the Vasantha Utsavam, GG Sivakumar, a long time devotee, kicked off a Kainkaryam of a different kind. When he found that there was a shortage of flower garlands for the deities, he asked the hereditary priests if he could present garlands during the utsavam. Buoyed by the positive response from them, he went about collecting flowers from the wholesale market in Parrys and put together a team of like minded individuals who were interested in knotting the flowers.

Sitting in front of the Yaaga Saalai, the team knotted garlands through the entire period of the long 25 day utsavam. Delighted with their presentation, the hereditary priests asked Sivakumar if he could expand this to a round the year service. Interestingly, the temple trustee too vouched for this and got an official approval for him to continue the service through the year. 
It was also around the same time that PS School teacher Veda began initiating young kids into the Thevaram verses in another corner of the kapali temple(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/08/kapali-temple-thevaram-kids.html?m=1). 

Very early on his life, Sivakumar's appa had initiated him into devotion by taking him everyday to the Parthasarathy temple in Thiruvallikeni (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/11/manavala-mamuni-utsavam-thiruvallikeni.html).

From a one off initiative, when this exercise became an ongoing and long term one, Sivakumar, who joined hands with his relatives and close friends, to support service personnel at TN temples through the Pandemic period reached out to them again asking them if they would be interested in partnering in this Kainkaryam “Following the Vasantha Utsavam, we began presenting flower garlands every morning at the Swami, Ambal and Singaravellar Sannidhis”, Sivakumar told this writer on a hot afternoon at the Navarathri Mandapam where his team now knots the flowers every evening between 7pm and 9pm.

 “This exercise costs approximately Rs. 70000 every month and my friends and relatives who pooled in money happily agreed to partner on this one as well” says Sivakumar.

Into the second half of 2023, Jayakanthan Shivachariar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/07/kapaleeswarar-temple-jayakanthan.html) asked Sivakumar if the team could present for the four Kaalams of the Pavitrotsavam. The Pushpa Kainkaryam also expanded to the Naalvar and Naayanmar Utsavams.

47 year old Sivakumar, who runs a recruitment firm in the city, says that while initially during the first few months, he came in every morning to present the garlands knotted the previous evening to the priests in the respective sannidhis, his team member Kumar has taken up this role in recent months. Similarly, another team member Sumathi has taken up the responsibility of coordinating every day with the entire team whose strength has now risen to 35.
During the course of the year, Balaji Gurukal (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/04/kapali-temple-balaji-gurukal.html) suggested that they could explore more Sannidhis at the temple and thus the Pushpa Kainkaryam expanded further and now includes Pillayar, Annamalayar, Jagadeeswarar, Saneeswarar, Pazhani Andavar and Vayilar Nayanar Sannidhis, among others. Sivakumar points out that with the expansion to many more sannidhis, the Kainkaryam has become even more interesting “Each of their deities are in different sizes and the team is now required to knot the garland in many different sizes.”

Priests happy with this Daily Kainkaryam
He is particularly happy that the hereditary priests as well as the trustees have presented positive feedback about the way the ladies have gone about the Kainkaryam “Jaya Anna specifically told me that there is very little noise while the ladies are performing this Kainkaryam and they seem to be fully committed to this and asked me to continue this without a break.”

Team Members have found this engaging
That, Sivakumar says, was very motivating. He is also happy that his team members have found this to be ‘stress buster’ in their everyday lives “There are different challenges that we encounter in our lives every day. For a number of these team members, sitting together in a group and performing this Kainkaryam has relieved them of the stress. Knotting a flower garland is a traditional activity and they seem to be energised at the end of this exercise every evening. Seeing the garland they have knotted draped on the Swami and Ambal has given them a great deal of satisfaction.”

This young devotee considers it a great blessing
One such devotee is Shivapriya Viswanathan who is pursuing her BS in Data Science at IIT Madras, a large part of which is run through the online model. She is aiming to get into the Fintech world following the completion of this degree. Even as a school student, she had developed great interest in knotting flowers having learned the art from her Thatha Gopalakrishnan, a retired staffer at BSNL and has presented the garlands both at the monthly anusham celebrations of Periyava as well as the annual ten day festival at Kanchipuram for many years. 

"My Thatha would collect flowers from the garden, engage himself in knotting these into a garland and present it to a near pillayar koil every day of the year. He was my inspiration and after he taught me the basics, I became very interested in this Kainkaryam" she told this writer on Monday.

She moved from being a devotee of Marudeeswarar (Thiruvanmiyur) to Kapaleeswarar in mid 2022 after shifting to Mylapore. While she has been on the laptop through the day with her academics, she considers the Pushpa Kainkaryam opportunity that came her way out of the blue as a great blessing "When Sivakumar (Sir) asked me if I would be interested in participating in this, I immediately agreed for I had already done it for many years. Kapali has been my life over the last 18 months or so since the time I moved to Mylapore but I never expected that such a Kainkaryam at the feet of Kapali and Karpagambal would ever come to me and not at such an early stage in my life. Not all get such an opportunity and I grabbed it with both hands when he offered it to me."

She says that these two hours of Pushpa Kainkaryam have been a big devotional break away from academics and that it has been a wonderful experience over the last year to be part of this team where she has learned the finer nuances of this art from the seniors.

Other devotional engagements of Shivapriya include presenting Konnakol (learning from Guru Ghatam Rajaram) at temples and performing at Thyagaraja Aradhana. In the past, she has also presented at the Kapali temple, which has now become very close to her heart.

Panguni Utsavam 2024 - A different set of Kainkaryam activities 
The annual Panguni Utsavam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/04/kapali-panguni-utsavam-2023.html) is round the corner and Sivakumar has a different kind of Kainkaryam lined up for that as well. Based on the suggestion from Theevatti 'Sanyasi 'Ramkumar, he is hoping that his team will be able to take care of the Kainkaryapakas during and after the daily processions “Through all the days of the utsavam, our pushpa kainkaryam team members are planning to distribute butter milk and water, on the West and North Mada streets, to the service personnel of the temple during the processions and also present curd rice at the end of each of the processions to the service personnel who participated in the procession."
He says that this kainkaryam has also brought together the family members of the team to both support the ladies in this endeavour as well as back them in newer initiatives such as the one that is being planned during the Panguni Utsavam next fortnight. 

The next time one sees a beautiful garland on the Lord, it may be one knotted by this set of volunteers led by Sivakumar. 

For Sivakumar himself, there is a great deal of satisfaction in putting together a team for the Pushpa Kainkaryam and to have grown this to 35 from out of nowhere just under a year ago. He is open to more Kainkaryapakas coming forward to participate in this daily service to the Lord.

Those interested may call him on: 98402 00661

TN Ranji Semi Final 2024 Coach Captain Public Spat

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Sandhu in 85, Shardul in 24
At Lords, in 1991, Azhar went against Bedi's instructions, chose to bowl first and England amassed 650runs with Gooch scoring a triple hundred
Like Bedi, Kulkarni let out his frustration against Captain Sai. Unfortunately, TN lost the match not at the toss but on the 2nd afternoon when they let Bombay slip from 100/7 
Over the last 36 hours, in the aftermath of TN’s exit from this year’s Ranji Trophy following another  big defeat against Bombay, there has been a public spat on the reasons for the defeat. Interestingly almost all the leading media houses have let go an important phase in the match and instead focused on the more juicy part of the post match conference of Captain Sai and Coach Sulakshan Kulkarni.

Batting on a seamer friendly wicket after winning the toss, TN was bowled out for less than 150. Following the innings defeat Kulkarni has held that the team lost the match at the toss. He pointed out that the idea of TN picking three fast bowlers was to take advantage of the conditions and that it was lost after the team chose to bat. He also said that in his discussion with Sai just ahead of the toss, he wanted TN to bowl first if he won the toss. 

Minutes later, Sai followed his instincts and chose to bat for he felt that the team had an advantage bowling fourth as the two spinners had picked up over 85 wickets in the season (it turned out later there was no fourth innings in the match as TN lost by an innings on the third day).
                                            Sai Kishore- from his X page

In a cricket world that is now dominated by social media opinions, former players have hit out against the coach for letting down his captain and the team in public.

However, this public spat between the captain and coach is nothing new and not restricted to domestic cricket. Way back in 1991, on India’s tour to England, Bishen Singh Bedi, who was designated as the manager on tour (there were no coaches in those days) asked Azhar to bat first at Lords if he won the toss and went around for a walk around the stadium. 

And similar to Sai Kishore, Azhar followed his instincts and chose to bowl on what was to turn out to be one of the flattest wickets later in the match. However, there too, similar to this match, there was a big opportunity that came its way that was not capitalised.

Within the first hour of play, Kiran More dropped a sitter when Gooch was not yet in his 30s and he went on to score his first and only triple hundred as England amassed over 650runs. Interestingly, Gooch was so shocked after having edged that ball that he did not run the single even though the ball went towards third man. Had that catch been taken in that first hour when there was movement, things may have been different. As it turned out, Gooch had a glorious run scoring a century in the 2nd innings as well. 

This match is also known for one of the best test innings played by an Indian batsman at Lords with Azhar scoring a scintillating century at better than run a ball. No bowler in the opposition rank had an answer to his masterful stroke play. Later that innings, Kapil Dev hit Hemmings for four successive sixers to save the follow on.

On that first morning, when Bedi heard that India were bowling he was furious that Azhar went against his decision. Bedi was not known to mince words and let his frustration on Azhar at the end of the day for having gone against instructions. Similar to Kulkarni this week, Bedi had held that the decision to bowl tilted the match in England’s favour (England won the match at the toss!!!). And similar to Sai Kishore's fourth innings turner argument, Azhar justified that there was swing on offer on that first morning and had that catch been held, the match may have taken a different course on day 1.

In the Ranji Semi Final, Kulkarni’s views were endorsed with TN collapsing on day one. However, what almost the entire journalist fraternity has failed to focus on over the last 36 hours is the fact that TN bounced back on the 2nd morning and had Bombay on the brink at 100/7. Had they got the tailenders cheap, it is likely they would have been on even terms after the first innings and then Sai’s decision to  bat so as to leverage the advantage of bowling fourth may well have come true. TN lost the match on that 2nd afternoon when they allowed the tail to score over 250runs. 

Historical matches of TN bowlers letting it slip
Here too, it’s not the first time.  Multiple occasions, in the 1980s, TN let go golden opportunities to beat Delhi and Bombay in the knock out encounters when they allowed the a rather unfancied lower order to flourish after TN had got through the top order of the opposition. 

The Famous LS match
In that famous Quarter Final at Chepauk in Feb 82, where Vidya Mandir school boy LS got 7 wickets in the 2nd innings (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/04/l-sivaramakrishnan.html), TN had had Delhi on the brink at 290/7 in the first innings. But Surinder Khanna engineered a recovery to take the team past 400.  

All rounder Madan Lal did it then like Shardul this week
Two years later, against the same team and at the same venue, TN had got half the Delhi team out for just over 200 chasing TN’s 350+ score but Madan Lal, similar to Shardul Thakur, led a big recovery scoring a century that took Delhi past the 450mark. 

BS Sandhu- Another Bombay all arounder, another late order recovery
The next year, history repeated itself again in the semi final at Bombay. Current state selector, S Srinivasan, was part of that TN team (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/08/s-srinivasan-tn-bombay-ranji-svpb-spic.html). He had declared with confidence on the eve of the match that TN would well inn this match. Chasing TN’s 400+ first innings score in March 1985, (TN collapsed after V Shiv and CS Suresh Kumar - https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/07/cs-suresh-kumar-india-schools-tn-opener.html) - had put together a big opening stand), Bombay had lost half its side for 300 but Balwinder Singh Sandhu, another fast bowling allrounder most famously known for that big down the slope inswinger that got Gordon Greenidge in the 1983 World Cup final, forged a late order recovery to take Bombay past 500. That match turned out to be the last for Srinivasan's SVPB team mate NP Madhavan, who scored a century in his last innings.

Back then in the 1980s, Venkat and Co did not have any answers to the opposition lower order in the Ranji knock out games. And this week, Sai and Kulkarni did not have one. 

Both of the Captain and the Coach will have to keep the argument of the toss for another day for TN did not lose the match at 9am on Day 1.

Rajesh Kannan IPL Umpire

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This honest and straight forward cricketer makes his mark in Umpiring
It's mid February and the biggest match in the life of this down to earth umpire from Mylapore, Chennai. And he has a surprise visitor in his room at tea time. Former India star and captain of Bombay Ajinkya Rahane has himself come to meet Rajesh Kannan. The reason - Rahane, who has had a terrible season as a batsman, has just been given out obstructing the field. Rajesh is unflustered at this star batsman making a polite enquiry and explains the reasoning behind his decision and stands by it. That is Rajesh Kannan for you. He played fierce cricket for IOB for two decades in the first division league in the city but with a great deal of honesty. He is as straight as it comes and does not mince words irrespective of stature of the person on the other side. He also once, just under two decades ago, innocently asked B Kalyanasundaram (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2011/08/kalli-b-kalyanasundaram.html) as to what cricket he had played when the two were selectors at the U17 level.

On the back of his strong showing in the Ranji Trophy this season including in this match between Bombay and Assam, Rajesh has made the big leap in umpiring. 

From a rank outsider as a cricketer to an IPL Umpire
He was a rank outsider in the mid 1980s with no backing in those early days. Very few in the cricketing circles knew him. He did not have a cricket kit of his own. He was not financially strong. But he made up for all this with a determination that indicated very early on that he would succeed against all odds.In those early years in the 1980s, he would walk all the way from Saidapet to play matches over the weekend and during the summer against a little more fancied YMCA (TSR) team at the YMCA ground in Nandanam. Other times he would catch the crowded 45B bus to Nandanam. But he was always on time and raring to go and prove himself against the more established players. Almost every match, he would take his team to victory single handedly from precarious position that he would find his team in. Many a ball was dispatched into the tennis court on the Western side and the YMCA boys had to jump the wired fencing to fetch the ball back. 

Close to 40 years after this writer first played against him in a Saturday match at YMCA, R. Rajesh Kannan (Kanna to all the cricketers in those days) has just received news that he will be officiating in this year's IPL as a fourth umpire, quite a significant achievement for a quiet and low profile cricketer. It is 11.30pm and Rajesh is fast asleep. He is woken up by an email notification and as he opens the mail, he is all excited to read that he has been assigned the fourth umpire role in the IPL this year. 

It is a big moment in his life after what he went through during the Pandemic and what he had to endure from a lot of his bank colleagues and relatives.  The national lockdown came at the worst moment for Rajesh. It was only six months earlier that he had quit a high paying manager’s job at IOB, where he had worked for 25years.  He could not straddle between working late as a manager at the branch and umpiring cricket matches. When BCCI began to assign women’s matches that required travelling across the country in the 2019-20 season, he found it challenging to take off from the Bank for many months. With the prospect of an umpiring career ahead of him, he quit the job to focus full time on umpiring. 
When he informed his non cricketing colleagues at the bank about his decision, each of them asked him if he was quitting the job to umpire in the IPL and if he would be officiating in matches with Simon Taufel. His relatives too were looking for to him umpiring in the IPL for they thought that cricket did not exist outside of the IPL.

The Pandemic impact 
However, the pandemic dealt a severe blow to Rajesh and his umpiring dreams. He neither had cricket matches to umpire nor the bank job to continue his flourishing career in the banking space. The only companion during that phase was this writer with whom he spent hours walking at the Nageswara Rao Park unsure of his future and wondering repeatedly if he took a wrong decision to quit the Bank job. It was a tumultuous 2020 for Rajesh with him spending most of his time in anxiety and constantly reviewing this big decision he took the previous year. Lord Hanuman of Alamelumangapuram, where he has been residing over the last few decades, was the one he looked up to for confidence in that phase. 

Makes up for lost time - Graduates to Ranji
He managed to somehow wade through that phase patiently waiting for cricket to resume.  When it did, he spent a lot of time in background work – focusing on his physical fitness, continuously working on 3rd umpire simulations with TNCA umpire Rakesh Raghavan, improving his communication skills and learning the protocol aspects relating to umpiring at the highest level. He also worked very closely with senior umpires such as his old colleague KN Ananthapadmanabhan and JR Madanagopal (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/10/madanagopal-j.html) who he says were always ready and immediately available to clarify complex umpiring scenarios. When he began to umpire the BCCI matches once again, the negative thoughts about quitting a secure bank job became history and in the last couple of years, he has made rapid strides on the umpiring front. 

Rajesh graduated to officiating in the national U23 tournament including in the knock out this year (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/02/rajesh-kannan-ranji-debut.html).  He umpired in the entire set of league matches in the Vijay Hazare national one day tournament this season and did well. Good performances in the plate group of the Ranji Trophy in 22-23 led him to moving up the ladder into the Elite group this year. In the meanwhile, he also officiated in the TNPL including gaining experience as third umpire and the DRS.
Now an International umpire  Ananthapadmanabhan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2016/09/ananthapadmanabhan-kn.html) watched Rajesh Kannan closely through the 1990s and the 2000s when the two played together for IOB. “Rajesh is someone who takes a lot of pride in whatever he does - from representing the IOB team in cricket to being a Banker and now as an Umpire. He always tries to get better and give his best. I wish him the very best for the forthcoming IPL season” Anantha told this writer this week.

The terrible times of the Pandemic seem to be distant memory for Rajesh. It will now be an entirely new experience of officiating in the IPL, with the fourth umpire role being the entry point and he can now proudly go back to his non cricketing colleagues at IOB and tell them that he indeed will now be officiating in the IPL!!!

Best Wishes to Rajesh Kannan in his new assignment.

Kapali Panguni Utsavam 2024 Rajeswari Devotee

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This 96 year old lady is looking forward to the midnight Rishabham next Wednesday

This section has featured many stories in the last few years on the devotees’ love for Kapaleeswarar and their attachment to the annual Panguni Utsavam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/04/kapali-panguni-utsavam.html) and how each of them play a part in it. There are just a few days to go for this year's utsavam, and the grand processions from the decades gone by are already playing out in the mind of this 96 year old devotee.

Hailing from Kadaladi village near Pozhur (Vandavasi), K. Rajeswari has been present at the Panguni Utsavam for close to six decades. It is a hot Tuesday (March 12) morning at the Kapaleeswarar temple but unmindful of the heat she has made her way to each of the Sannidhis and is walking around the prakara with her son VK Manoharan, a retired Sanskrit teacher. Just 48 hours earlier, devotees thronged in large numbers on Sunday morning to carry the 1000 Paal Kudam to the Kola Villi Amman temple. This is an event that she fondly remembers from her early years in Mylapore.

To the temple before 5am on the Adikaara Nandi morning
Rajeswari is all excited as she recalls to this writer her experiences at the Panguni Utsavam dating back to the late 1960s and early 70s “I would wake very early on the third morning and reach the temple well before 5am for the start of the Adikaara Nandi procession. There were three specific locations that I would particularly stand and have darshan – the deeparathanai at Yaaga Salai, the Gopura Vaasal and the 16 pillar mandapam. These are three points where I never missed having a close darshan during this utsavam.”

Rishabham - A Lifetime favourite
Rishabham (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/03/kapali-devotee-aparna-panguni-utsavam.html), like for most other Kapali devotees, has been a lifetime favourite for this nonagenarian. “Even as the procession started inside the temple, there would be big fire crackers that would go on the north mada side of the tank near the Indian Bank. It was a grand display of fire works that all the devotees look forward. And then the Gopura Vaasal Deeparathanai at midnight was the big moment for me as devotees roared with shouts of ‘kapali, kapali’. It was an unforgettable experience to be amidst those hundreds of devotees in front of the Raja Gopuram” says Rajeshwari even as tears roll down her cheeks narrating that most devotional midnight moment of the Panguni Utsavam.

All the way on the Chariot morning
As the Panguni Utsavam moved into the second half, Rajeswari would be present end to end for the Chariot festival pulling the car at the start of the procession on the East Mada street. “It was the one day in the utsavam when devotees congregated from afar to pull the chariot around the four streets. We saw huge crowds on that morning and there would be devotees on the top of house floors to witness the chariot passing by at a slow pace.”

“Being the start of the summer, cucumber, butter milk and paanagam would be distributed and that came as a relief to the devotees.”

The Arubathumoovar
On the Arubathumoovar evening (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/04/kapali-panguni-utsavam-2023.html), she recalls having darshan of Lords from different temples in the city. "While we were all excited to have darshan of the 63 Saint Poets, it was also an evening for us to have darshan of swamis from different temples in the city and we heard stories about each of these temples on that evening"Rajeswari tells this writer.
 
Her husband V. D. Krishnaswamy Sarma, who passed away in the early 1980s, was a school teacher at Vayalamoor, a village near Senji. He was an Upanyasakar and would sit near the Pillayar Sannidhi at the eastern entrance of the Kapaleeswarar Temple presenting historical stories including interesting episodes from the Thiruvachakam. “Once he went to Calcutta to present an upanyasam. A week later, Kripananda Vaariyar too presented one at the same location. When he found a name from the Senji village in that memory book of the organisers, he came back to the village and located Krishnaswamy Sarma.”

Maasam Pathu - enakku 'Maa Sampathu'
Impressed with his contribution to our history and culture, Vaariyar organised Rs. 10 to be sent to him every month by money order. Acknowledging this support, my husband told him ‘Maasam Pathu is ‘Maa Sampathu’ for me bringing out a big laughter in Vaariyar.”

 “Later when the sons had grown up and we moved to Madras, my husband went to an upanyasam of Vaariyar at Asthiga Samajam and requested him for the financial support to be stopped. Vaariyar was so impressed with this gesture that he made a public announcement about the contentment of my husband at the end of that upanyasam."

Sandy Prakaras
Son Manoharan says that she likes being in the midst of devotees at this temple. Even though she has to climb two floors at home, she insists on coming to the Kapali temple every day and is already looking forward to the Panguni utsavam. "There was no cement flooring like you have now in those early years and the sandy path around the prakara was soft on the feet in those years. We enjoyed walking around in a pradakshinam.”

Her son donned the Sripatham role
One of her sons, Sekar, who passed away in a road accident, was an active voluntary member of the Sripatham team that carried Kapaleeswarar on their shoulders during this utsavam. She misses him badly at this utsavam but the sight of him carrying Kapali is still fresh “Every year, when I am at the procession, I visualise Sekar carrying the Lord around the four streets.”

Come 9pm on Friday evening, it is likely that the longtime Mylaporeans will see this familiar face yet again at the start of the Pillayar procession on the Mooshika Vahanam. It has been 55 glorious years for Rajeswari at the Panguni Utsavam and she just cannot wait for this year’s utsavam to start and the shouts of 'Kapali Kapali' is already ringing in her ears. 

Srirangam Panguni Uthiram 2024 Namperumal Diamond Necklace

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A devotee couple from North Chitra Street present a Rs. 60 Lakhs Diamond Studded Kili Haaram on the occasion of Panguni Uthiram
Bhama Ranganathan is 74 years old. She grew up in West Adayavalanjan, very near the Thayar Sannidhi and was a lecturer at Seethalakshmi College, Trichy. Both her Grand Fathers dedicated themselves to Lord Ranganatha and were to spend their lives in Srirangam till their last breath. They were always keen on kainkaryam at the feet of Namperumal. It had been her long time wish to present something to Namperumal and finally an opportunity presented itself. 

In conversation with hereditary priest Harish Bhattar, also a resident of North Chitra street where Bhama and her husband have been residing since his retirement, she found that there was no Kili Haaram for Namperumal and took that opportunity as a great blessing

Over the last year, she worked closely with Harish Bhattar and a jeweler in Bombay to craft this beautiful necklace that Namperumal adorned at the Serthi Sevai on this Panguni Uthiram day on Monday here in Srirangam. 

Shortly after the Serthi Sevai, she told this writer that it was a great feeling to be blessed with such an opportunity to present the necklace on this sacred occasion “We readily agreed when Harish Bhattar told us that Kili Maalai would be a good addition to the collection. We identified a high quality jeweler in Bombay who would get us the best quality stones and who was experienced in this field. He came to Srirangam to have darshan of Namperumal and was excited at this opportunity to craft the necklace. Harish Bhattar was involved in every step from designing the necklace to selecting the stones.”

There are thirty parrots in the necklace in line with Andal’s 30 verses from the Thiruppavai.

It was a time consuming process and took a year but Bhama is delighted to Namperumal adoring this necklace on the sacred occasion of Panguni Uthiram with several thousands thronging the temple through the afternoon for a darshan of Namperumal and Ranganayaki Thayar at the Serthi Mandapam.

Bhama’s husband Ranganathan, an electrical engineer worked in Dubai for four decades and he told this writer that his wife was always in thoughts of Lord Ranganatha and for long had been keen to present an ornament for the Lord. He too expressed happiness at the end to end involvement of Harish Bhattar in this devotional engagement.

Harish Bhattar who draped Namperumal with this beautiful necklace told this writer that the stones comprised of high quality and pure diamonds, emeralds, blue sapphire and ruby. He says he was particularly keen for it to be pure and original and hence he and the jeweler took time to find the right stones for Namperumal.

In a beautifully crafted letter to EO Mariappan, Bhama requested for the temple to use this necklace on appropriate occasions through the year.
On Monday afternoon, following the debate between the Araiyars on Namperumal's side and Pandari on Thayar's, Namperumal made his way to the Panguni Uthiram mandapam followed shortly by Ranganayaki Thayar. 

When the screen opened for the first time just after 1.30 pm for the first glimpse of the divine couple, devotees were thrilled to find the star studded Kili Maalai across Namperumal’s chest. Many stood there spell bound watching the glittering jewel on Namperumal.

The Diamond Studded Necklace costed over Rs. 60lakhs.

Srirangam Panguni Chariot Festival 2024

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Driven by a straight forward and a no nonsense JC, the Panguni Uthiram festival saw an unprecedented flow of events on Monday and Tuesday and a 'sticking to schedule' never seen before

It is not often that a HR & CE EO is at the temple till midnight for a festival. But Srirangam Ranganathaswamy temple’s JC Mariappan is different. Not only is he honest and straight forward, he is also keen for the events to flow smooth and is personally committed to remove all obstacles that obstruct the schedule. 

He was at the temple early on Monday morning to oversee the events on the Panguni Uthiram morning. Amidst his busy schedule, he told this writer at the Thayar Sannidhi as to how he foresaw the next 24 hours “The Chariot is scheduled to start at 8am on Tuesday and I am keen for us to stick to that schedule. Working backwards, I am keen that all the events today (Monday) happen keeping the Chariot procession in mind.”

Money Collecting Procession - Fastest return to Thayar Sannidhi
For the first time in several decades, Namperumal, who started out on a 8 street – Chitrai and Uthirai Veethi - procession at 6am on Monday to collect money from devotees for a new ring (he had presented his ring to Kamalavalli Nachiyar at Uraiyur a couple of days earlier) made his way to the Thayar Sannidhi by 8.30am. 

For many decades, this was a big money collecting exercise for the service personnel at the Srirangam temple and it was no different on Monday morning as well. Devotees were furious at the way the service personnel entered their homes and coerced them to handing them money. This act of the service personnel also led one devotee to shout out that they are poor role models for the next gen who he said are unlikely to be impressed with the way the service personnel and the HRCE staff were demanding money from every resident around the 8 streets.

Given this exercise, typically Namperumal made his way to the Thayar Sannidhi only around 9.30am but this time he was there one hour ahead. Message too had gone out to the Araiyars of the day and Pandaris who were to be involved in a heated debate representing Namperumal and Ranganayaki Thayar on how the Lord had made a secret trip to Uraiyur and handed his ring to his beloved there.

Mattai Adi Event by 9.30am
Nam Azhvaar arrived soon in front of the Thayar Sannidhi and the enactment of Ranganayaki Thayar shutting the door on Namperumal’s entry into her Sannidhi was conducted in front of hundreds of devotees. The representatives of Namperumal were seen smeared with butter that was thrown at them by the angry representatives of Thayar. The hour long debate between Thayar and Perumal ended by 11am with the former finally relenting to Nam Azhvaar’s suggestion to permit Namperumal into the Sannidhi. 

Single Minded Focus on Chariot Procession
JC Mariappan told this writer that he would close down the ticketed entry by 7.30pm for Chinna Perumal to make his for the Theerthavari at Kollidam. It was once again an unprecedented decision for typically the tickets were issued till 10pm in the decades gone by. “We are interested in ticket collections and are keen for the events to go as per schedule and for the Chariot to start at 8am on Tuesday.”

It was a single minded devotional endeavour rarely experienced at this temple from a HRCE EO.

Serthi Sevai from 1.30pm - Earliest start
By 1.30pm, both Namperumal and Ranganayaki Thayar had arrived at the Serthi Mandapam and the screen opened to a loud cheer from the large number of devotees who had gathered at the prakara for the a first glimpse of the divine couple. Once again, the JC surprised one and all by being physically present to ensure that the crowd was managed well and no special VIP treatment was being meted out on this crowded afternoon. He directed his staff on the management of the crowd and the opening and closing of the gates at the mandapam. Through the afternoon and evening, he kept every HRCE member on their toes.

TN Ranji winning captain surprised
Former TN Ranji Trophy winning Captain S Vasudevan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/06/vasudevan-tn-ranji-trophy-retirement.html) was at the Panguni Uthiram festival after many years and he too was taken by surprise at the early darshan of Serthi Sevai "Our idea was to have darshan by 3pm which is the usual time that the first darshan of Serthi Sevai takes place. We arrived just before 1pm by car and came straight to the Sannidhi and were surprised as to how the Divine Couple were almost ready to provide darshan. We were happy that we could have a peaceful and orderly darshan well before 3pm."
Sayana Perumal at Kollidam Northern Banks- 7.30pm start!!!
As promised in the morning, the ticket sales were closed by 7.30pm and shortly after Chinna Perumal made his way to Kollidam for the Theerthavari event. Rarely had Chinna Perumal made his way before 10pm on this Panguni Uthiram evening. There was not a drop of water on the Southern banks and hence the Vedic Pundits along with the priests  and the service personnel made their way to the Northern Banks of Kollidam to near Nochiyam for the Theerthavari event. Raksha Bandhanam priest Arvind Bhattar who works in an IT firm in Madras, made his way to Srirangam for the Panguni Brahmotsavam. He was the one who performed the Theerthavari at Kollidam on Monday evening. 
The day’s events were so well orchestrated that Maniyakaarar Sridhar had informed the Gadya Trayam Ghosti of the preponement well in advance and the entire Ghosti team was present by 9.30pm. In decades gone by, the Ghosti started well past 11.30pm and there have been years when it had been 1am when the Gadya Trayam Thodakkam took place. But on Monday evening, much to everyone’s surprise, the recital started at 9.30pm and ended by 10.30pm. Even the Ghosti members could not believe the way as to how the Satru Murai had been completed at the Panguni Uthiram mandapam by 11pm.

JC stays till the end of Gadya Trayam 
It was past 11.30pm and JC Mariappan was still at the Thayar Sannidhi. He was visibly happy with the way the day had panned out “I think we are on track for the Chariot procession to start at 8am. Devotees have had a peaceful darshan and those that were present seemed to have enjoyed the Gadya Traya presentation with silence being maintained for a large part.”

This was followed by a five-hour Thirumanjanam when the vastrams were draped on Perumal and Thayar 16 times. It was a long and tiring exercise for the priests but they stuck to their task through the night.

It was 5am on Tuesday morning when the screen finally came down after the Thirumanjanam. Devotees began streaming in large numbers to the Thayar Sannnidhi to have a final darshan of the divine couple and for the return procession of Thayar to her Sannidhi which took place at 7am. Shortly after, Namperumal made his way to the Go Ratham on East Chitrai street. 
At the entrance of the Thayar Sannidhi, a special mariyathai was presented to JC’s assistant Vel Murugan who had planned and anchored the HRCE side of these events over the previous 24 hours. He told this writer that he was delighted that the entire set of events had gone almost fully as per plan and that a 10-15minute delay was understandable and acceptable. 

For Maniyam Sridhar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/03/srirangam-temple-time-keeper.html), it was a tiring 24 hours as he was the one who ensured the timely conduct of the Panguni Uthiram Utsavam but he was happy that the day had gone as per plan. There was still a bit in his bag to be completed and that was to take Namperumal safely to the Chariot and to start the procession as planned. 
The prabhandham ghosti gathered in good numbers just past 7.30am and began their recital of Siriya Thiru Madal as Namperumal made his way through the North Chitrai Street to the Chariot.  JC Mariappan’s face wore a fresh happy look on Tuesday morning as he swarmed by Kainkaryapakas and devotees alike with congratulatory handshakes of how this historical temple town had seen an unprecedented sticking to Panguni Uthiram schedule.

In his parting comment, he told this writer on East Chitrai Street as he walked in front of the Chariot that it had been a very hot week and one had to ensure that devotees and service personnel are not put to hardship during this Chariot procession “We were clear that we wanted this utsavam to be devotee friendly and focused for it to start 8am so the devotees enjoy the procession before the Sun beats down hard.”

He had his wish fulfilled. Namperumal mounted on to the Chariot at 8am and after a sacred pooja, the Go Ratham began its procession around the four Chitrai streets at 8.30am much to the delight of the few hundred devotees who gathered for the start of the procession.

Namperumal Panguni Ellakarai Procession

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A trip to measure the Eastern Boundary of the Srirangam Temple
This section had in 2018 featured a story on Namperumal’s long 15km trip, westwards, to Jeeyapuram as part of the Panguni Brahmotsavam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/03/srirangam-namperumal-jeeyapuram-utsavam.html). This story is about a five hour trip to the Ellakarai Mandapam and his march towards the Eastern boundary of Srirangam on the 8th day of the Brahmotsavam.

It is 6.30am on Sunday (March 24) and the Sripatham are there in good numbers for this long and complex procession. The temple authorities have taken a decision not to allow any devotees inside the ariya bhattal vaasal given the length of the pallakku and the challenges relating to manoeuvring it inside the Naazhikettan Vaasal. Hundreds have lined up in front of the Garuda Sannidhi to have a first glimpse of Namperumal on this 8th day procession.

In the decades gone by, there were not too many mandagapadis on this procession but things have changed dramatically at temple utsavams in TN and devotees have been queuing up to associate themselves in some way during the large ustavams.

Restoration of Theerthams in Srirangam by a Bhagavatha
As seen in the Maasi Garuda Sevai procession last month (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2024/02/srirangam-namperumal-maasi-garuda-sevai.html), the mandagapadis have increased manifold on this procession too from single digit a couple of decades ago to well over 30 on this Sunday morning Ellakarai procession. 
Bhagavatha Jagadish, a manager at Axis Bank, has quietly restored many temple tanks in Srirangam over the last few years. One such is Ashwa Theertham opposite the popular Devi Talkies. This had been in a dilapidated condition not so long ago but now wears a fresh look thanks to his tireless efforts. But there is no water though inside the tank for the moment and the priests take the steps down the tank to perform the sacred pooja at the well in the middle of the tank.

A long detour- Ashwa Theertham to Andavan College
The next big stop for Namperumal is the Andavan college and it would have taken only a few minutes for the Lord to reach there from the Ashwa Theertham. But it has been a tradition for him not to go over the flyover or an underpass. Hence the Sripatham have to take a long detour as they head back one km North towards the Srirangam Govt Boys school and then to Singar Koil crossing the railway line at the Srirangam station. Past Singar Koil, they reach the Andavan college where there is a large number of devotees waiting to receive Namperumal. A large part of the college has been funded by the TVS Group with the blocks inside the campus named after TS Santhanam and TS Krishna.

Namperumal heads back South again and to the other side of the flyover for a mandagapadi at Srinivasa Nagar near the sacred tank of Thiruvanaikaval temple.
It is past 10am and its scorching hot. The temple authorities have been thoughtful enough to organise two water tankers to sprinkle water on the Grand Southern Trunk road to help the Sripatham personnel. 

Octogenarian Araiyar's devotional trip
83 year old Araiyar Varadarajan has been alongside Namperumal all through the morning. He is devotionally excited as he recounts his blessed feeling to this writer on being part of this journey for so many decades. He is in happy tears as he rolls out the sacred verses of the Vaishnavite Saint Poets and their praise of Lord Ranganatha and tells this writer in an hour long chat along the GST road as to how each one of us on this Sunday morning procession should feel elated. "There have been so many changes in the last several decades but the tradition of this long procession of Namperumal continues", he says even as his son, working in a MNC firm, joins him on the procession.

"My appa initiated me into this Kainkaryam even as a school boy and his message was always for me to be devoted at the feet of Namperumal and that has stood with me all through my life. There may be any number of changes happening around us but our faith in and devotion to Lord Ranganatha should never waver and we should remain steadfast in our service to him till our final breath" he tells this writer on why he is on this five hour trip on this hot Sunday.

After a few more mandagapadis on this historical road, Namperumal makes his way for his second theerthavari, this time at the Ramar temple near the check post, half a km north of Jambukeswarar temple.
In a kind gesture, the donor devotees at this location have organised coconut water for all the Sripatham personnel for whom it has already been close to a four hour trip on this hot summer’s day.

Unfortunately, the Ramar temple is currently in a dilapidated state and the idol had been shifted to the Srirangam temple decades ago.

Reaches the Eastern Boundary after five hours
It is 11.30am and five hours after his departure, Namperumal has finally reached his destination for the day measuring the Eastern boundary of the Srirangam temple. Ellakarai Mandapam is just a couple of yards off the Trichy-Madras bye pass road on the southern banks of Kollidam. 

Markings of the boundaries
Former correspondent of PTI and a sthaneegam at the Srirangam temple, Singan Srinivasan tells this writer that there were stone carvings endorsing the boundaries of the Srirangam temple as well as the Thiruvanaikaval temple. In times gone by, there used to be a Soolam to mark the boundary of Jambukeswarar temple and a Chakkram marking the boundary of Ranganatha temple. He bemoans the fact that a lot of important historical records have gone missing – those that have stood testimony for this trip of Namperumal and the significance of the Ellakarai Mandapam.
On Sunday evening, he takes this writer beyond the Ellakarai mandapam to the complex that marks the boundary of Jambukeswarar temple. A few minutes later, 74 year old ST Subramaniam (STS) Pandithar, the decades long hereditary priest at the Thiruvanaikaval temple (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2018/06/thiruvanaikaval-jambukeswarar-temple.html), arrives at the Ellakarai mandapam for a darshan of Namperumal. He proudly claims to this writer that his Lord arrives here a couple of months earlier for celebration of the Thai Poosam utsavam. 
His son, now past 30, works in the accounts section at India Cements in Madras but as has been the trend in recent times has not been able to find a bride for him. He told this writer that they are open to an Iyengar girl too and hoped on this Sunday evening that Namperumal would answer his prayers and soon help find a life partner for his son.

Golden Horse Vahana Procession through Kollidam
Devotees had had darshan of Namperumal through the afternoon at this mandapam located amidst the greenery of large coconut groves and now it was time for the Golden Horse Vahana procession. The sun is still beating down strongly from the west when Namperumal mounted on the Horse Vahana is ready to begin the return procession at 6pm. Hundreds of devotees have lined up the entire stretch of leading to the check post on GST road. As is the norm these days, devotees double up as photographers and videographers taking continuous shots of the Lord as they instantly shoot of the pictures and videos to their group members. 

Vande Bharat slows down for Namperumal
On to the Kollidam road, the railway and the temple authorities have been working through the second half of the day to make a special path for Namperumal over the railway line (there is an underpass near Yatri Nivas but the Lord would not take that). Even the superfast Vande Bharat Express slows down as passengers from the train have a quick darshan on Namperumal as he makes his way towards the railway line.
By now, the thee panthams have lit up and Namperumal crosses the railway line after the departure of the Vriddachalam DMU. 

The sun has set and Namperumal continues his return procession led by the ghee lit torches. There is the Alavanthar Thiruvarasu ahead and it has been a tradition for Namperumal to not make his way near a certain distance of burial grounds. And thus he goes north to the Kollidam banks and enters the dry river. It turns out to be a strenuous half hour for the Sripatham personnel as they make their way through the thick sand filled Kollidam. Another reason stated for this passage through the Kollidam is for him to search the lost ring that was likely to stand him in good stead in his debate with Thayar the next morning.

The moon, a day ahead of Pournami, is just up in the East and makes for a great photo shot of the Sripatham carrying Namperumal. The Sripatham members cheer up each other motivating themselves along this hard stretch to keep the momentum going. 
It is well past 7pm when they make their way to the North Chitrai street where the prabhandham members begin their recital of the Periya Thirumozhi verses. Shortly after, there is a big cheer on the East Chitrai street for it is time for the much awaited Voyali presentation by the Sripatham. It is the big moment of the day for a large section of the devotees. Just past the Go Ratham, the Sripatham thrill the several hundred devotees present on the occasion with a 15 minute presentaiton of fast paced voyali going back and forth and sideways much to their delight. 

Interestingly, a majority of the devotees disperse after the Voyali while a few remain for the final part of the procession. 

Back to his abode after a 15 hour trip
It is past 9pm when Namperumal finally entered the Gayathri mandapam bringing to end a 15hour trip. The Sripatham members are tired after a three hour procession from Ellakarai mandapam but there is a certain sense of satisfaction and happiness in their faces of having been blessed to carry Namperumal on this historical day of measuring his Eastern boundary.

Shortly after 10pm, Harish Bhattar, son of Murali Bhattar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/01/murali-bhattar-srirangam-temple-chief.html) got down to decorating Namperumal for the next morning procession including draping him with the Rs. 60 Lakh diamond necklace presented by a devotee couple (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2024/03/srirangam-panguni-uthiram-2024.html).

Srirangam Prabhandham Adyapaka leader Sampath Ramanujam

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Dedicating his life to the Sacred Prabhandham Verses
After the passing away of long standing leader Kidambi Bashyam Iyengar, 'Kapisthalam' Sampath Ramanujam has taken over as the Saathu Sri Vaishnava of the Prabhandham Ghosti at the Ranganatha Swamy temple in Srirangam and is keen to create the next generation of Prabhandham Scholars
Till about half a century ago, Divya Desams in Tamil Nadu were reverberating with Prabhandham recitals all through the year. But in recent decades, with traditional Vaishnavites moving away from their ancestral locations to larger cities in search of jobs, the strength of the Prabhandham members has come down drastically in remote temples. At the Parthasarathy temple in Thiruvallikeni, MA Venkatakrishnan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/05/ma-venkatakrishnan-thiruvallikeni-divya_16.html) has been anchoring a strong team, while a long standing battle between Vadakalais and Thengalais has led to a temporary halt to the recital at the Varadaraja Perumal temple in Kanchipuram(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/01/pazhaya-seevaram-battle-for-vaishnavite.html). Srirangam is the one other Divya Desam where Prabhandham recital has remained non controversial and is still vibrant with a good number of Kainkaryapakas continuing the presentation of the sacred verses of the Azhvaars both daily as well as during the big utsavam processions.

A new leader takes over after several decades
56year old Sampath Ramanujam, a descendant of Thirumalai Ananthan Pillai, has been part of the Prabhandham Ghosti at the Srirangam temple for the last four decades from the time he was in his mid teens. In 2022, he took over as the 'Saathu Sri Vaishnava', the leader of the strong Prabhandham team and is hoping to inspire the next gen to take to the sacred verses as part of their lives. His forefathers moved to Srirangam from Kapisthalam Gajendra Varadar Divya Desam (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/07/kapisthalam-seshadri-bhattar.html) about 150 years ago and five generations of this family have been presenting the sacred verses at the Ranganathaswamy temple.  
A student of Srirangam Boys School, Sampath Ramanujam began learning Prabhandham from the time he was seven years old from Srirangam Narayana Jeer. He has been sporting a tuft right from his childhood and restrained from eating outside. Shortly after presenting the Periya Thirumozhi verses around the eight streets on Monday (March 25) morning ahead of the Panguni Uthiram celebrations, he told this writer as to how his amma Mangammal, now 91 years old (she has performed Kolam Kainkaryam for over five decades), kindled his interest in Prabhandham at an early age that has stayed with him over the last five decades "My amma had learned the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham and the Granthas and she was my first inspiration. She motivated me to learn the sacred verses and every evening after I returned from school, she would  encourage me to go to the class.”
Guided by Seniors
By the time he was into his mid teens in the early 1980s he had learned the entire Nalayira Divya Prabhandham. For a dozen years, he was to be in the back row of the ghosti. He says that the seniors in the team kept a close watch on his presentation and guided him in the learning process “Adyapaka Kidambi Bashyam Iyengar was instrumental in initiating me into leadership. He watched me closely and guided me on the unique presentation style that continues to this day in Srirangam. It was he who taught me the important aspects of leading the Prabhandham group.”

He counts Narayanan Iyengar and Kutti Swami as having inspired him in the Prabhandham recital in the early phase, in addition to Kidambi Bashyam Iyengar.

Propagating Vishnu Bhakthi
His forefathers took it upon themselves to propagate Vaishnavism among Bhagavathas in villages. His appa TAK Krishnamachariar was the principal of the Blind School in Poonamallee. “He was a Sastra Vidwan and presented Upanyasams in villages to take Vishnu Bhakthi to the common man” says Sampath Ramanujam.

Presents Prabhandham in Thirumalai
In line with the trend of the time, Sampath Ramanujam worked as a medical representative while he continued to be part of the Prabhandham team at Srirangam. He says he was blessed to have performed Kainkaryam at Thirumalai reciting the sacred verses there.

Special Features in Srirangam - Arulicheyya as against Saathitharulaa
During the Azhvaar and Acharya annual utsavams, the prabhandham members recite the entire 4000 verses. He says that a special feature of these utsavams is that they start the recital with ‘Arulicheyya’ as against the usual ‘Saathitharulaa’ “The start of the recital with Arulicheyya is a unique feature during the Azhvaar/Acharya utsavams not seen in any other Divya Desam.”

Yet another special feature of the Prabhandham Ghosti in Srirangam is the Vahana Mandapam Kaappu “Even after Namperumal is back from the street procession and goes into the Vahana Mandapam, we continue our recital. This is very unique to this Divya Desam.”

The mettu also turns different when they recite the Iyarpa verses, especially Thiruvirutham and Ramanuja Nootranthathi, a tone and flow not experienced in any other Divya Desam.

Over 1200 Prabhandham presentations annually
The Prabhandham members at Srirangam recite the sacred verses over 1200 times every year. For this service, the Ranganathaswamy temple pays the Prabhandham Ghosti less than Rs. 900 annually but Adyapaka Sampath Ramanujam says that they are not in this for financial returns “We have a strong 20-25 member team. There are professional well qualified auditors in the Ghosti who have chosen to stay back in Srirangam to make the prabhandham recital an integral part of their everyday life and that is a very positive development.”

Dreams of creating the next gen of Prabhandham Scholars
Saathu Sri Vaishnava Sampath Ramanujam is hopeful of continuing the Prabhandham recital through his entire lifetime at the Ranganathaswamy temple. He is now initiating his teenaged son into a traditional way of life teaching him the Vaishnavite Sampradaya including Thiru Aradhana Krama and Stotras. His sister too is well versed in the sacred verses. While his family members continue to perform daily Thiru Aradhanam at the Ananthan Pillai Thirumaligai on North Chitra street, Sampath Ramanujam is keen to rope in as many youngsters as possible into the Prabhandham Ghosti so as to further strengthen the team and get the next gen to take this sacred service forward in the future. Recently, he went from home to home around the eight streets trying to convince parents to get their children initiated into the sacred verses of the Vaishnavite Saint Poets “There is a bit of inhibition currently as parents are too focused on academics but I am confident that the next generation in Srirangam will take to learning the Prabhandham verses and continue this historic tradition in the future” signs off Saathu Sri Vaishnava Sampath Ramanujam on a positive note. 

Srirangam Aravinda Bhattar IT Director

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Financial Challenges and missing hereditary rights led him into the IT Sector where he has now become a Director, but Aravinda Bhattar is back to his devotional best at the Ranganathaswamy temple in Srirangam where for the second year in a row he has anchored the Panguni Brahmotsavam with Raksha Bandhanam responsibilities
This section has featured stories in the past as to how the 1970s and 80s saw an exodus of service personnel from TN temples given the challenges that had begun to crop up in the 1960s that continued into the succeeding decades (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2020/04/temples-lockdown-1960s-70s.html). The Ranganathaswamy temple in Srirangam that now sees a devotee crowd of 50000 and more on utsavam days was no different back then. Outstation devotees were few and Thattu Kaasu was minimal for the priests. Many of them faced financial challenges and the next generation focused on academics given the uncertain future in the temple space.

45 year old N Aravinda Bhattar is just back in Madras after a dozen days in Srirangam having anchored the Panguni Brahmotsavam as the Raksha Bandanam Bhattar. In a couple of days, on Monday (April 1), he will join as the Engineering Director in a global IT firm having just let go a coveted position at a Top Tier 1 IT company headquartered in Bangalore. Through the entire Panguni Utsavam, he wore a large smile and was complimented by everyone for finishing the Thirumanjanam on the Panguni Uthiram night before 5am, an unprecedented occurrence in recent decades.

Tough times in the 1980s/90s
But his life has not been all smiles, for his parents went through treacherous few decades. Though his forefathers had been hereditary priests for several centuries at the temple with an annual service of 180days in multiple sannidhis, family circumstances and internal family decisions led his appa, the revered VS Narasimha Bhattar, to not having an ‘official’ murai at the temple in the phase when Aravinda Bhattar was a young boy. Given the financial challenges in the family (there was not enough money to even pay his school and college fees), his amma, Ranjani, asked him to focus on academics and he came out on top in Class X with over 80%. Despite not having the official Murai at the temple, Aravinda Bhattar was closely attached to the Divine Couple and would not miss a single purapadu as he walked along with the Lord during the street processions. Every day, he would stand in the queue and have darshan in the perumal sannidhi, hoping for things to turn around.

He says in that challenging phase, Nandhu Bhattar, who holds over 200days service rights, offered his appa a Kainkaryam role whenever possible and thus his appa was able to perform service at the sannidhis.

His amma's probing question and the turning point - 1994
His amma was his biggest guiding force in life and gave him the much needed confidence and belief that one day this family would get back their Kainkaryam.   He recounts his amma's role in a move that turned out to be the turning point in his life “The year was 1994 and I was not yet 15. We (boys my age) were playing street cricket in Mela Uthira Veethi when my amma went to SKR Bhattar and posed a polite question as to when all these boys would start performing Kainkaryam. That was a big turning point as that question led SKR Bhattar to begin an initiation process into temple agamas.”

He credits SKR Bhattar for the systematic way in initiating the temple krama in the young boys “Being a school teacher, dealing with young boys came naturally to him. He began with slokas and then created a Q & A format where he would pose challenging questions and see how the young boys faced up to it. He would then provide the answers that registered forever in our minds. During that period of 4-5 years in the late 1990s, he also taught us Thiru Aradhana Krama and Samprokshanam event management lessons. In the summer vacation, we were with him all through the entire two months learning vigorously under his tutelage.”

Thatha's significant contribution
His grand father V Srinivasa Bhattar was an agama expert and Aravinda Bhattar learned a lot under him as well. He also learned Agni Kaaryam exclusively and in great detail from his Thatha. In 1996, his thatha directed him to perform the Sannidhi Paricharaka Kainkaryam so he could watch the pooja krama from close quarters “My Thatha liked me a lot and I spent a lot of time with him during the first two decades of my life. He would challenge me with questions after SKR Bhattar’s classes and stump me most of the time as I fumbled for answers. On most occasions, I had to go back to SKR Bhattar for more insights. On his part, SKR Bhattar took it as a challenge and expanded the syllabus to include the parts raised by my thatha so it benefitted all the students.”

After the formal learning from SKR Bhattar, he learned one year exclusively one on one under  SKR Bhattar as well as his appa who also taught the agamas and pooja kramas in that phase to all the Bhattars including Sundar Bhattar.

At the turn of the century, Aravinda Bhattar had becoming extremely confident in the Pancharatra Agama and the temple pooja krama. In 2002, he had Deekshai from his Thatha that made him eligible to enter the Sanctum and perform Thiru Aradhana inside the Sannidhi. He was involved in the Samprokshanam that year playing a supporting role to the Chief Bhattars.

Into the Corporate World
By this time, he had completed his Masters Degree in IT at the St Josephs College. He wanted to live a life around the temple as right from his childhood he had developed a quiet bonding with the divine couple and searched for jobs in the Trichy area but could not find a good one. The family had lived a hand to mouth existence during his school and college days and having completed a Masters degree, his amma directed him to reach out elsewhere for a job.  Till  that time, even though they had lived all their lives in Srirangam, the family did not even have a house of their own.

Staying in his Chithappa’s house in Villivakkam, he widened his job search and found one for Rs. 5000 just under two decades ago in Madras. He was always interested in IT and helped out the final year students at St. Josephs with their projects. In 2006, he secured a big break in his corporate career when Global IT firm Covansys (earlier CBSI and later CSC) – a company whose PR this writer handled – offered him a job that almost doubled his then salary. 

Through this phase, he would come every weekend to Srirangam to perform small Kainkaryam but without an official archaka murai.

Secures back the hereditary rights 
His amma always wondered as to why they did not get the Murai that they had been entitled to (the reason had been an internal family decision). She would meet the temple authorities every now and then and ask them probing questions. Between 2011 and 15, this gained in intensity and finally the temple handed his appa the archaka Murai orders that had been absent all through his life till then “It was a momentous achievement. It looked like she extended her life only to ensure that her family secured their rightful dues. She had fought for long for these rights and instilled in me the confidence to fight for our rights. When my appa went to the hospital to show her the order letter which provided for a 90 day Murai (split equally among the three brothers) annually, she had one look at it and I could see the delight in her eyes. She felt her duty had been done in this life and passed away in that happiness.”
Having lived in great financial difficulty for a large part of her life, his amma was also happy that her son had secured a stable job at a top IT firm for by this time he had moved to Cognizant. Within six months after her passing away, he joined as a Project Manager at Infosys, something he says his amma would have been delighted to hear.

That year, he was actively involved with the Samprokshanam anchoring the Thayaar Kundam and later in 2019, he performed a similar role at the Uraiyur Kamalavalli Nachiyar temple (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2019/09/uraiyur-kamalavalli-nachiyar.html).

The Coveted Raksha Bandhanam responsibility
Aravinda Bhattar recounts as to how his appa was stickler for tradition and the temple processes “I had to first anchor the big utsavam at Uraiyur and then utsavams such as Vasantha Utsavam, Poochatru at the Ranganathaswamy temple before I could be handed the Raksha Bandhanam responsibilities for the Brahmotsavams. After completing all these, I went to my appa and asked him if he would permit me at least now. He directed me to KSB to take guidance from him for the Pavitrotsavam. It was a challenging 10 days and KSB was with me through the utsavam. It went well and as a positive sign, it rained during the utsavam.”
In 2022, he joined Wipro as a delivery head. In the last fortnight, on the first day of the Panguni Brahmotsavam soon after he tied the Raksha Bandhanam, he received the appointment order as an Engineering Director from Agilisium Consulting, a Datamatics firm founded by former Cognizant staffers. He says that Ranganatha and Ranganayaki Thayar have been with him right through his life “Every time, I have faced a big challenge, the divine couple have saved me and provided me the right opportunities.”

People have now recognised his agamic knowledge and the devotional way he performs Thirumanjanam and offers are flowing in. In recent years, there have many offers to anchor Samprokshanam events in temples across TN. He has just received invitation to participate in the mandalabhisekam event at Naimisaranyam and the 100th year celebratory event at the Vedantha Desikar Srinivasa Perumal temple in Mylapore (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2021/01/vedantha-desikar-srinivasa-perumal.html). 

Refuses lucrative overseas opportunities
In the last many years, he has refused close to 15 overseas corporate opportunities, each of which would have been turned out financially lucrative so as to continue his service at the Ranganathaswamy temple in Srirangam. Like Harish Bhattar(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2024/03/srirangam-panguni-uthiram-2024.html), he takes his time during the Thirumanjanam and with his strength in agama, performs the sacred bath in the way it should be. 

Big Devotional Strength behind the innocent smile
While he sports a big innocent smile most of the time and is quiet to himself much like his appa Narasimha Bhattar, he has no qualms in taking on anyone who interfere unreasonably in his Kainkaryam. 

From taking to the corporate world in the just over two decades ago in financially turbulent times, Aravinda Bhattar is now in a delightful space having secured the hereditary rights that had been missing for a few decades during his appa’s youth. He is already initiating his sons, Anirudhan and Aprameyan, into the Vedas and the Agamas and is keen for the next gen to continue the hereditary service that his amma had fought for so long. He himself along with Harish Bhattar, Sriram and Sridhar Bhattar is getting deep into Agama research. 

This last fortnight has been a particularly enjoyable period for him. The Thirumanjanam on the Panguni Uthiram night has been widely appreciated for the quality of its conduct and that has given him a lot of happiness and self-satisfaction. The Rakshana Bandhanam role is something that he respects as a big responsibility. Through this entire utsavam, he was always ahead of time to ensure that he performs his role to the best of his abilities and enabling the succeeding events to proceed smoothly. On the corporate front, he has just bagged a coveted directorial role in an IT firm. From a hand to mouth existence in the 1970s and 80s, he has managed to turn around the financial fortunes of the family as well as secure back the hereditary rights. After the passing away of his uncle (whose son is away from India), Aravinda Bhattar and his appa have now got 45days service annually in addition to another 30 days provided by the temple. He is now upbeat that he will be able to perform round the year kainkaryam with the 75days service and become even more devotionally attached in his service to the Divine Couple. 

Thiru Vellarai Pundarikakshan Panguni Garuda Sevai

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12 hours after returning from a trip to Srirangam, Pundarikakshan provides Garuda Sevai darshan to several hundreds of devotees on Saturday evening
CA Professional Sivakumar delights devotees with a 2 hour Namasankeerthanam
This section had featured a story last year on Thiru Vellarai Divya Desam Pundarikaksha Perumal’s night long trip to Kollidam as part of the Panguni Brahmotsavam(https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/03/thiru-vellarai-pundarikaksha-perumal.html). This story is about Pundarikakshan providing darshan atop the Garuda Vahana around the four streets just over 12 hours after he returned from the Srirangam trip.

3700 Vaishnavite families once lived here
This is a historical divya desam  where 3700 Vaishnavite families once lived. Thiru Vellarai is the birth place of two acharyas – Uyya Kondan and Engal Azhvaan. It was from here that Vedic Pundits and Bhattars went to other Divya Desams and Purana Sthalams, such was the greatness of the scholars of this historical place. 'Kainkaryam' personnel consistently walked over 15 kms from Srirangam across the Coloroon to perform service at Thiru Vellarai Divya Desam. 

Things had turned for the worse in the second half of the previous century when traditional inhabitants left the temple town seeking greener pastures elsewhere. Till about 2010, priests would sit at the entrance of the sannidhis waiting for the next set of devotees to arrive but that wait proved elusive for most part.

But there has been a dramatic turnaround over the last decade. The daily devotee crowd has increased manifold at this historical divya desam praised by Thiru Mangai Azhvaar and Periyazhvaar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2015/09/krishna-kaapidal.html).

இந்திரனோடு பிரமன்
 ஈசன் இமையவர் எல்லாம்
மந்திர மா மலர் கொண்டு
மறைந்து உவராய் வந்து நின்றார்

சந்திரன் மாளிகை சேரும்
சதுரர்கள் வெள்ளறை நின்றார்
காந்தியம் பொது இது ஆகும்
 அழகனே காப்பிட  வாராய் - Periyazhvaar

Once in a year Kannadi Arai Sevai
On Saturday morning just after 5am, the Vethal volunteers of the Srirangam Sripatham group carried Pundarikakshan back to his abode at Thiru Vellarai after a night long return trip from Kollidam. Shortly after, Pundarikaksha Perumal provided Kannadi Arai Sevai along with Shenbagavalli Thayar. The fourth day of the Panguni Brahmotsavam is one of the only two days in the year when he provides darshan at the Kannadi Arai. Through the day, there was a steady flow of devotees including from the North and Karnataka. They were delighted to have arrived at the temple on the day when the divine couple provided Kannadi Arai Sevai. Soon after, a devotee family from Singapore for whom this was the Kulam Deivam temple presented a large bundle of Rs.500 rupee notes in the thattu, something that would have been unthinkable in the not so distant past. It was yet another sign of how remote temples are now flourishing.

From Kannadi Arai to Northern Mottai Gopuram
It was well past 5pm when Pundarikakshan and Shenbagavalli Thaayar made their way down the steps through the North gate to reach the Mottai Gopuram, who Raja Gopuram construction (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/11/thiru-vellarai-new-raja-gopuram-by-end.html) will start in full swing from the Tamil New Year day (April 14). There is still no indication of this being a Garuda Sevai evening with very few devotees making it for this procession from Kannadi Arai to the entrance of the Northern Gopuram. Hereditary Priest Vinodh Bhattar had to hurriedly put together Sripatham personnel for this procession.

What one saw over the next couple of hours was quite unbelievable. By 6.30pm, the crowd had swelled to a few hundreds and half hour later, there was no place to stand at the North Sannidhi street in Thiru Vellarai for devotees from all the surrounding villages had gathered in for the start of the Garuda Sevai.

.......மன்றில் மாம் பொழில் நுழைதந்து
மல்லிகை மௌவளின் போது அலர்த்தி
தென்றல் மா மணம் கமழ் தர வரு
 திரு வெள்ளறை நின்றானே

..........உயர்கொள் மாதவிப் போதொடு உலாவிய 
மாருதம் வீதியின்வாய்
திசை எல்லாம் கமழும் பொழில் சூழ் 
திரு வெள்ளறை நின்றானே- Thiru Mangai Azhvaar


A Devotional Namasankeerthanam sets the tone for the big evening

For the first time, Vinodh Bhattar had organised for a Namasankeerthanam presentation ahead of the Garuda Sevai processions. CA professional Sivakumar, a resident of Adyar, Chennai, had come all the way on Saturday evening to Thiru Vellarai with his troupe members to participate in the Garuda Sevai celebrations. Seated in the open space next to the Ramanuja Sannidhi, Sivakumar and his team delighted the several hundred devotees with a two hour devotional presentation that had several Bhajanai kids dancing to the Namasankeerthanam. Beginning with praise of Ramanuja, Andal and Rama, the Namasankeerathanam moved on to presentations on the greatness of Krishna and Vittal. 
A bhajanai too had been organised on this evening and those kids numbering around 25 danced rapturously to the songs on Vittal even as the devotional buzz on the Northstreet reached a peak at around 8pm. With every passing song, the noise grew louder and the participation from the kids expanded. The Namasankeerthanam and the dancing to their tunes by these young kids took one back to historical times when remote temple towns was abound with such presentations during the annual festivals.

By now, the Sripatham had arrived in large numbers from Srirangam. Vinodh Bhattar spent an hour decorating Pundarikaksha Perumal with Garuda draped in a white silk vastram. It was almost 8.30pm when the screen opened to a devotional roar as Pundarikakshan came out majestically on to the North Sannidhi street even as the Prabhandham members began their presentation of the Naangaam Thiruvanthathi. Devotees stood on the terraces of their homes and at the Ramanuja Sannidhi for a first glimpse of Garuda Sevai.
The Sripatham members did a commendable job to carry the Lord swiftly through a highly crowded street. The procession lasted almost an hour with devotees in good numbers walking along with Pundarikakshan back to the North Gopuram. It was past 10pm when Pundarikakshan made his way back to his abode via the North Gopuram after a devotional evening that saw crowd throng in large numbers at the Thiru Vellarai Divya Desam.
Tail Piece
There was a sour point though right at the end that does not augur well for the Vaishnavite and the archaka community. The devotee donor of the evening was liberally dishing out Sambhavanai to the service personnel when Thottiyam Kannan Bhattar, a priest at Thiru Vellarai, raised some objections that turned into a heated debate for 15 minutes. It was an unsavoury episode that could have been easily avoided. The tone and manner of his conversation led the devotee donor to ask if this was the way a Vaishnava Archaka should conduct himself. All the other archakas of Thiru Vellarai as well as the Kainkaryapakas watched in silence from 100 yards away as the argument turned ugly. Repeatedly, the devotee donor and his team members made the point that they would give him what he wants but Kannan Bhattar could not be quietened as he continued to talk in high pitch much to the devotees’ disappointment. A highly devotional evening and the quality of the alankaram and the procession had been undone in a matter of 15 minutes as the devotee donor left the temple with a tinge of sadness at this conduct of the Vaishnavite archaka.
On a more positive note, after a gap of four decades, Pundarikakshan made his way last year on the Sesha Vahana on the fifth day of the Brahmotsavam to a historical mandapam a km North that had been in a dilapidated condition for long. A huge nandavanam is coming up around the mandapam, which still requires repairs and restoration. Hope the mandapam will be restored fully by the time Pundarikakshan makes his way next year in Panguni to this location.

Manachanallur Bhoominathar temple Giridharan Gurukal

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Your House Problems will be solved at this temple
Over the last 15 years, Giridharan Gurukal has successfully created a 'faith' model among devotees to relieve them  from their house related issues 
As with most remote temples in TN, the Bhoominathar temple in Manachanallur, that dates back to Agastyar period, went through a challenging phase in the 1970s and 80s. Original inhabitants had left this town in search of jobs.  Ramani Gurukal did not have money to even pay the son’s education fees. There was no oil to light the lamp, only minimal devotees. Thattu kaasu was non-existent.

Against this background, he asked his son Giridharan to focus on academics. He was also a sportsman and came third in the state athletics tournament in Avadi in the 400 meters in the early 1990s. He has a Masters degree and also pursued a M. Phil. He is now a school teacher in Pettavaithalai.

While he went this way, all along, there was a fire burning inside him that the temple had remained deserted and was keen to bring back devotees to the temple. Like in Nachiyar Koil, where the then bhattars created a Thursday prarthana model for Kal Garuda in the 1990s, Giridharan Gurukal created a prarthana model two decades ago, when he was just 30 years old, that promised to solve house related problems. 

A Namboodari from Kongu Nadu recommended the installation of a Vaastu Yanthram in the Moolavar Sannidhi. And Giridharan Gurukal actively marketed this with devotees.

Devotees throng Bhoominathar
It is just after 9am on Saturday and devotees are thronging the temple in large numbers, contrasted with the scenario a decade ago. Almost all the devotee are there presenting their house related issues to Giridharan Gurukal. He is vocal about the solution and the impact of the prayer in front of Bhoominathar. 

An hour later, another set of families arrive at the temple. These are devotee families whose problems have been solved and there is a certain delight in their faces. They are to perform an abhisekam and present annadhanam as promised earlier when they had come to the Sannidhi with their house related issues. Each of these families are grateful to the Gurukal for solving their problems.

Creates a Vaastu Yanthram Solution Model
Giridharan Gurukal later tells this writer that there was anger building up inside him a couple of decades ago having watched his appa struggle at the temple with no archanai, no money and no devotees.  Ramani Gurukal had served till he was 78 “My appa never displayed any anger at the state of his life and spoke very little. He would go from home to home to collect money for the special pooja every Krithigai. That was about the only day when there was some activity in the temple in those decades. Amma asked me to go to the temple but I told her that there was no income at all at the temple.”

This scenario at the temple and the silent struggles of his appa saw his blood boil “I thought long and hard as to what could be done to revive the temple’s fortunes and came up with this idea of Bhoomi pooja. The Vaastu Yanthram that I installed two decades ago is very powerful. On the first Sunday of Margazhi, I do an abhisekam and Rudra Yaagam for 14 hours. That provides results to devotees through the year.”

His brother Manikandan Sivan is the officially appointed Gurukal at the temple. Interestingly, HRCE manages the morning session while Thiruvavaduthurai Atheenam takes care of the remaining three pooja kaalams each day at the temple. Giridharan Gurukal has received an order from the Mutt to perform special pooja at this temple as a Kainkaryam.

In a dramatic turnaround, there has been at least 5 abhisekams every day in recent years. The scenario is so positive in terms of devotee turnout that Giridharan Gurukal now engages another priest to support him. There is also a person that he engages at the madapalli for neivedyam and anna dhanam. He happily shares his earnings with the service personnel at the temple as he is conscious of the life his appa led and wants those in the temple space to live a financially stable life. 
He is also happy that he has been able to solve the problems of several thousands of devotees each of whom back him ever so strongly. “We were so down with issues relating to our house and did not foresee an end to the problem. The way Giridharan Gurukal gave us confidence that Bhoominathan and Dharma Samvardhani Ambal will take care of us made us believe. And that real faith has helped solve the issue in no time”, a young devotee who is at the temple with his wife and two children told this writer on Saturday just after noon at the temple complex.

No oil to now 'only ghee lit lamps'
Giridharan Gurukal proudly remarks that during his appa’s time, there was no oil to light the lamp. And now ‘we use only ghee to light the lamp’. Driven by his appa’s financial struggles in the final decades of the previous century, Giridharan Gurukal, with creative thinking and a mind that focused on ‘revival’, has fashioned a remarkable turnaround much like the one at Nachiyar Koil Divya Desam. Giridharan Gurukal is vocal and open in the way he communicates with the devotees. He asks them to express their concerns and suggests the solution loudly and clearly. From minimal crowd and no thattu kaasu, he has brought in crowds into the temple in large numbers instilling confidence and faith in the devotees and a belief that all their problems will be solved. And they seem to trust him completely.

The annual ten-day Vaikasi Utsavam is also now celebrated in a grand way at the temple. 

The temple is open from 7am to 12noon and 5pm to 8pm. Contact Giridharan Gurukal@ 9344769294

Kapali Temple Staff Suspension

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Unprecedented Development
JC Kavenitha suspends Maniyakaarar and three other staffers for not carrying out their duties
In an unprecedented move, Kapaleeswarar temple JC Kavenitha has suspended four staffers including the long standing Maniyakaarar.

The long Vasantha Utsavam is just under 36 hours away and on a hot Friday afternoon, Kavenitha, who took over from Hariharan last June, is busy looking into the audit papers for records and accounts. One does not often hear of a suspension of multiple members in one go at a HRCE temple and definitely it has not been seen at the Kapaleeswarar temple in the past. 

An angry JC told this writer at the temple complex that she is tightening the screws at the temple and getting the staff to create registers and records for every activity. These staff members have focused far too much on taking care of VIPs. In the first Panguni Utsavam that she experienced recently at the Kapaleeswarar temple, she found many shortcomings and this led to the suspension of the staffers “The post of Maniyakaarar is not just one of power but of great responsibility. I found that there were no registers maintained for any abhisekam or ubayam. There were unnecessary additions to pandals around the Mada Streets during the Panguni Utsavam, many of which were without official permission”, she said explaining the reason behind the suspension of Thirunavukarasu, the maniyakaarar who had been holding this post for over a decade at this temple.
“When I found him not carrying out his duties as expected of a Maniyakaarar with processes not being followed and records not being maintained, I decided to suspend him. As an immediate replacement, two staffers have been assigned to this post for the moment. It is a very important responsibility and I am looking to create a separate room for them within the temple complex so that devotees can reach out to them for any ‘Ulthurai’ issues and queries.”

Thiru Chinnam Kumar suspended pending enquiry
This writer had featured a story on Kumaraswamy following his appointment as Thiru Chinnam at the temple a couple of years ago. The JC told this writer that she has also suspended him pending enquiry for not carrying out the Thiru Chinnam services as expected of him on a daily basis during all pooja kaalams. “His role is to play the Thiru Chinnam during the daily poojas but he has often been noticed taking care of VIP darshan. I also found him to be donning the Sripatham role at the expense of performing the Thiru Chinnam. I have directed him to stop the Sripatham service and have asked him to create a record of the vahanas and number each of them within a certain deadline”, she said.

Two Security  staff suspended
"For long, the staffers at the temple have taken their jobs for granted and felt that it was time for those failing in their duties to be brought to task. We are also getting ready suspension orders for Kumar’s brother Kapali who carries out the security duty and Sivarajan, the night security at the temple. Their role is to be at the temple entrance as security. Instead, they are seen doing other random staff which is not within their purview”, Kavenitha told this writer on how she is keen to bring in transparency at the temple on all fronts.

For long, the EOs at the Kapaleeswarar temple had gone slow on the internal issues. In the past, there had not been a single suspension of a staffer. Kavenitha is clearly taking a tough stance and bringing the wrongdoers to book. 

She also said that she has asked for a couple of EOs for this temple so she can focus on replying to RTIs and also legal issues relating to the temple.
It is a welcome development and inspiring to see a JC take a tough stance with her staffers. Recently, she has hired a few staffers who she assigned for the long and tedious ongoing Vastram auction to give them a feel on what temple work entails.

Kavenitha said that she is monitoring her staff closely and those failing in their duties will be taken to task. It is a great blessing to be posted at the Kapaleeswarar temple and every staff member has to realise his / her responsibility and carry out their duties diligently, she said. 

Sivakumar Infosys to Namasankeerthanam

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In the last three years, this Chartered Accountant has taken Bhakthi to the masses in a big way through his Namasankeerthanams
He is now planning to launch a Namasankeerthanam programme for students at the Vedic Patshala in Thandalam
Last year, this section featured a story on how Namasankeerthanam in his childhood days in Udumalpet was a big influence on the life of the now popular Upanyasakar Kidambi Narayanan (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/09/kidambi-narayanan-upanyasakar.html). This story is about a Chartered Accountant who having begun his career at Infosys is now looking to spread the relevance of Namasankeerthanam to the nook and corner of TN Villages. 

From the legendary temple town of Manakkal
K Sivakumar grew up in Karpagam Gardens, Adyar to the recital of the sacred verses during Rama Navami and Navarathri utsavams with his appa, a Sales Manager at M&M, having moved to the state capital from his home town after his graduation. His forefathers hailed from Manakkal (a town near Anbil Vadivazhagiya Nambi- https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2007/11/108-divya-desam-anbil-vadivazhagiya.html) famous for the great Vaishnavite acharya Manakkal Nambi, a disciple of Uyyakondan of Thiruvellarai. Interestingly, Sivakumar and his team presented the Namasankeerthanam on the Garuda Sevai evening at Thiruvellarai last month.

என்னுயிர் தந்த அளித்தவரைச் சரணம் புக்கு 
யான் அடைவே அவர் குருக்கள் நினைவணங்கி 
பின்னருளால் பெரும்பூதூர் வந்த வள்ளல் 
பெரியநம்பி ஆளவந்தார் மணக்கால் நம்பி 

நன்னெறியை அவர்க்கு உரைத்த உய்யக்கொண்டார் 
நாதமுனி சடகோபன் சேனை நாதன் 
இன்னமுதத் திருமகள் என்றிவரை முன்னிட்டு 
எம்பெருமான் திருவடிகள் அடைகின்றேனே - அதிகார ஸங்க்ரஹம் 


Childhood - Devotionally Inclined with high academic focus 
His amma (a graduate in music) and patti were devotional singers and that rubbed off on the young Sivakumar in the development of a devotional mindset right from a young age. He actively participated in the Sita Kalyanam celebrations during the Rama Navami utsavam at Karpagam Gardens. He was also a Mridangam player and presented many kutcheris but as was the trend in the 1980s and 90s, the focus through most of his early childhood was to focus on academics and to secure good marks at Sankara School. By the time he graduated in Commerce, he was already well on his way to becoming a Chartered Accountant. 

Two decades as a high flyer in the Corporate world
He joined Infosys in Bangalore soon after his professional degree moving and was with them for close to a decade. Keen to come back to Madras, he quit the Tier 1 IT firm to join Payments Tech provider FSS, where he worked for well over a decade.

The Pandemic in a way came as a blessing in disguise for Sivakumar for it gave him the time to sit back and ponder over his future. Sitting in the prakara of the Anantha Padmanabhanaswamy temple in Adyar, he told this writer that he was keen to move away from a full-fledged corporate life to try and make a more meaningful contribution to the society “Until that point, I had spent over two hours each day commuting to my work place and back. The Work from Home model led me to performing Sahasra Gayathri regularly. That was a turning point in my life.”
Everyone in his family had an interest in devotional songs. “The Rama Navami celebrations that had been organised for several decades could not take place in 2020 due to the Pandemic. I was keen to revive the event the next year and consulted my Guru Panchapakesa Bhagavathar, who guided me through the entire process. I began presenting Ashta Pathi and performed Kalyana Utsavam at home.”

Gives up a full fledged corporate career to focus on Namasankeerthanam
This opened the doors for Sivakumar and served as a trigger for him to get out of the mad rush of the corporate world and its hard deadlines that he had been part of for the previous two decades. “I evaluated multiple options including working for large multinational consultancies and taking care of Mutt Administration. And ended up with founding CFO Bridge, a firm of around 30 partners that offers shared CFO services targeted at SMEs and start up firms. This decision led to a ‘balance’ in my life and that’s when we began presenting the Sampradaya Namasankeerthanam on a regular basis from early 2021”, says Sivakumar looking back at the transformational decision to let go off the corporate career.

His Guru’s son Neela Krishna, now a marketing leader, was Sivakumar’s junior at school and he too had developed interest in Namasankeerthanam “My Guru asked us to present together and we began this exercise to take Bhakthi to the masses spreading the message that Namasankeerthanam is an important way to achieve salvation. It is the one form of Bhakthi where there is no discrimination of caste and anyone can sing. All that is needed is a devotional interest and once they are into Namasankeerthanam, it is likely that the common man will realise as to how it helps transcend oneself to a different level in life.”
Sivakumar is particular happy that there are a lot of youngsters now getting into Namasankeerthanam. While the group comprises of singers, harmonists and mridangists and a couple of them to perform pooja krama, a flautist too has joined them recently and that Sivakumar sees as a positive development.

Sivakumar’s patti, who was into devotional music, had presented Bhajans in the name of Gaana Smrithi Bhajana Mandali. He was keen to revive that and his group of around 10 members have presented over 175 Namasankeerthanams over the last three years under this same banner. The group have been presenting the Namasankeerthanam almost every weekend in recent times and the frequency is only likely to increase, going forward.

Forms of Namasankeerthanam
While Sita Kalyanam, Radha Kalyanam, Parvathi Kalyanam, Sastha Kalyanam and Rukmini Kalyanam are the popular ones, he says that theme based Namasankeerthanam including Guru Keerthanai, Perumal based songs and general devotional songs are also a way to take this form of Bhakthi to the masses. Ayyappa Bhajans are also becoming popular these days.

Devotees are now inviting Sivakumar and his team for namasankeerthanam at home events and this he counts as a welcome move. “This leads to Sathsangam and a positive vibration at homes. Namasankeerthanam should become an integral part of all traditional weddings” says Sivakumar.

A surprise move- Two Sons take to Patshala Education
Most interestingly, his two sons gave up regular academics and have instead opted for Patshala education in a remote town near Sirkazhi. His wife Nandini who worked as a journalist with The Economic Times writing on retail and healthcare beats too has now become an integral member of the Namasankeerthanam team. “My elder son, now aged 12, came to me a couple of years back and expressed interest to take to formal Vedic Education at a Patshala. My younger son too has followed in his footsteps. It was a revolutionary and unprecedented step for no one in the family over the last 100 years or so had taken to Vedic Education in this way. The two have committed themselves to spending 8 years at the Patshala in Kadavasal near Sirkazhi”, says Sivakumar expressing great delight at this decision of his two sons.

“This extraordinary interest of our sons in traditional value based education spurred my wife to take an even more active interest in Namasankeerthanam and she now accompanies me at every event.”

Namasankeerthanam as part of Patshala Learning Programme
Like former World Bank consultant Ramkumar who has now taken to serving Kapaleeswarar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2022/07/kapali-v-ramkumar-world-bank-to-sanyasam.html), Sivakumar too is in that phase to slowly give up the corporate life. As part of his next phase in promoting a traditional way of life, he and his wife have taken to administration of the Kadavasal Patshala on the invitation of the Chennai based Trustee. The two are also helping out the students with communication aspects giving them the much needed confidence to express themselves to the outside world. Having now immersed himself almost full time into Namasankeerthanam and spreading Bhakthi through this model of presentation, Sivakumar is now keen for Namasankeerthanam to be introduced as a form of education in Patshala. He is hoping that very soon he will be able to launch a programme at Periyava’s Patshala in Thandalam. And when that happens it will be a big moment in his life for Namasankeerthanam would have received a formal recognition as an important Bhakthi instrument. 
While the Pandemic has dealt a deathly blow to many in this world, for this couple from Adyar, it has brought about an unexpected transformation towards a traditional way of life. From coats and blazers at the top tech firms in the past, he has now moved full time into sporting a traditional attire. Even as hot sambar rice prasadam is served at the temple after the noon pooja, Sivakumar signs off with a message that this is only the beginning and there is still a long way to go to make Namasankeerthanam an integral form of Bhakthi in the life of the common people. He is confident that with Periyava's blessings and with the guidance of his Guru, he will be able to play a meaningful role in taking this form of Bhakthi to interior parts of Tamil Nadu and to getting people to embrace Namasankeerthanam as a way to reach God.

Srirangam Rama Navami Poochatru Utsavam 2024

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On the fifth and final day of the Veli Kodai Utsavam, Namperumal provides darshan with Senkazhuneer flower garland at the Poochatru Mandapam in the Manal Veli
Earlier in the day, on the occasion of Rama Navami, he provide Serthi Sevai with Chera Kula Valli Nachiyar at the Arjuna Mandapam
It is the one day in the year when Namperumal, the utsava deity at the Ranganathaswamy temple in Srirangam, provides serthi sevai with Chera Kula Valli Nachiyar. Just under a month ago, he provided Serthi Sevai with Ranganayaki Thayyar at the Panguni Uthiram mandapam. On Wednesday, on the occasion of the Rama Navami utsavam, hundreds of devotees lined up in a long queue at the Arjuna Mandapam to have darshan of this once in a year presentation with the daughter of Kulasekara Azhvaar.

Unlike many other Divya Desams in Tamil Nadu, the Rama Navami utsavam is celebrated on the Navami (9th day after the No Moon Day) day in Chitrai at the Ranganathaswamy temple. It is the day of the coming together of Chera Kula Valli Nachiyar and Namperumal and the one day in the year when the otherwise secluded and almost unnoticed sannidhi North West of Arjuna Mandapam comes to light. 

Kulasekara Azhvaar's devotion towards Lord Ranganatha
King turned Saint Poet Kulasekara Azhvaar, of Thiru Vanjikalam, was a great devotee of Lord Rama and he had a special liking for Lord Ranganatha. He himself was born on Punarvasu. Relinquishing his kingdom, he came and settled down in Srirangam and was taken over by the idol presented by Lord Rama to the residents of Srirangam.He was so moved by the Lord of Srirangam and the devotion of the residents that he dedicated the first three decads of his Perumal Thirumozhi to the Lord and his devotees at Srirangam. With each passing decad, Kulasekara Azhvaar, from being a new entrant to this temple town showcases how well entrenched he had become at this sacred town and how he now knew the Lord very well.
தேட்டருந்திறல் தேனினைத் தென்னரங்கனை
திருமாதுவாழ் வாட்டமில் வனமாலை மார்வனை
வாழ்த்தி மால்கொள் சிந்தையராய்

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

After thus beginning with three decads to the Lord of Srirangam, Kulasekara Azhvaar ends Perumal Thirumozhi with three decads dedicated to Lord Rama including narrating the entire Ramayana in the final decad of ten verses. So heartwarming was his experience here in Srirangam that he wanted to give the hand of his daughter to the Lord of Srirangam. This episode of Kulasekara Azhvaar’s daughter being seated alongside Namperumal is played out every year on the occasion of Rama Navami utsavam.

Serthi Sevai at Arjuna Mandapam
On Wednesday (April 17) morning, Namperumal made his way from his abode at 7am to the Arjuna Mandapam. Shortly after 3pm, devotees lined up both sides of the mandapam for this once in a year sevai. Chera Kula Valli Thaayar was dressed in a beautiful white silk saree and seated alongside Namperumal. The entire talk on this afternoon was around the daughter of Kulasekara Azhvaar. As the devotees stood in front of the two, one was reminded of the elevation of spirit referred to by Kulasekara Azhvaar in his Perumal Thirumozhi and there seemed to be a mood of true devotion reverberating around the Arjuna Mandapam.

மெய்யில் வாழ்க்கையை 
மெய்யெனக்கொல்லும்
இவ்வையந் தன்னொடும் 
கூடு வதில்லையான்

ஐய்யனே அரங்கா என்று அழைக்கின்றேன்
மையல் கொண்டொழிந்தேன் 
Kulasekara Azhvaar describes the prayers offered by the people of Srirangam. The residents are seen clapping their hands and singing the Lord’s praise as a group. He finds the loud beating of the drum, a scene probably during a festival. Describing a methodology to invoke the Lord’s blessings, he wants to roll on the ground and dance around in joy praising the Lord.

தூராத மனக் காதல் தொண்டர் தங்கள்
குழாம் குழுமித் திருப்புகழ்கள் பலவும் பாடி
ஆராத மனக் களிப்போடு அழுது கண்ணீர்
மழை சோர நினைந்துருகியேத்தி
எந்தன் மாலுக்கே

After a day long stay at the Arjuna Mandapam, Namperumal began his procession at 6pm to the Manal Veli for the fifth and final day celebrations of the Veli Kodai Utsavam. Being the Rama Navami day, Namperumal is welcomed at the three Rama Sannidhis on his way to the Manal Veli- Mela Pattabhiramar on the Western side, Kulasekara Azhvaar- South facing Kothandaramar Sannidhi and the Keezha Pattabhiramar Sannidhi.

Huge crowds thronged the Ramar Sannidhis on this evening to have darshan of the special alankarams at these sannidhis.

Around 7pm, devotees congregated at the Poochatru mandapam at the Manal Veli for the big event of the evening. Before settling down for over an hour at the Poochatru Mandapam, Namperumal provided darshan to devotees along the manal veli with Sripatham carrying him in a majestic walk to the South end of the Manal Veli and back. 

Saathatha Vaishnava clan's Pushpa Duppatti
Sathatha Vaishanavas (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2014/12/saathaatha-vaishnavas-saathaanis.html), the clan assigned by Saint Ramanuja to perform various services at the temple have also been assigned the task of making the exclusive summer garland for Namperumal on each of the days of the Poochatru Utsavam. Referred to as Pushpa Duppati, the special garland on the occasion of Poochatru Utsavam, involving a special skill and an artistic touch, takes at least three hours to design and create. 


Vaishnavite Saint Poet Periyazhvaar dedicated an entire decad of verses praising the favourite flowers of the Lords in different Divya Desams. In one of the verses, Periyazhvaar lures the Lord of Srirangam, whom he describes as one seen in a Sleeping Posture referring to Iruvatchi flowers.
ஆமாறு அறியும் பிரானே
அணி அரங்கத்தே கிடந்தாய்
ஏமாற்றம் என்னைத் தவிர்ந்தாய்
இருவாட்சிப் பூச்சூட்ட வாராய்

Senkazhuneer Flower Garland
Devotees were curious as to what the flower garland would look like on this 5th evening and the entire manal veli was abuzz with high expectations. And they were not let down with the Saathatha Vaishnavas making it an evening of Senkazhaneer flower garland. The priests draped Namperumal with the heavily weighing Duppati and sprayed the fragrant rose water on the Lord much to the delight of the devotees. Soon after, the Sripatham lifted Namperumal to display the special Pushpa Duppatti of the day to all the devotees gathered at the Manal Veli.
புள்ளினை வாய் பிளந்திட்டாய் 
பொருகரியின் கொம்பு ஒசித்தாய் 
கள்ள அரக்கியை மூகோடு 
காவலனை தலை கொண்டாய்
அள்ளி நீ வெண்ணெய் விழங்க அஞ்சாது அடியேன் அடித்தேன்
தெள்ளிய நீரில் எழுந்த செங்கழுநீர் சூட்டவாறாய்

Historical Poochatru utsavam at 1000 Pillar Mandapam
The Araiyar of the evening, Baradwajan Araiyar (https://prtraveller.blogspot.com/2023/01/barathwajan-araiyar-srirangam-goair.html), who is also a Pilot, has an interesting view on the Sripatham lifting high the Lord to display the fragrant flower garland. Shortly after this episode, he told this writer at the Manal Veli that historically Namperumal made his way to the Poochatru Mandapam on the East side inside the 1000 Pillared Mandapam 
“At the far east in a now secluded and unvisited corner of the 1000 pillar mandapam was where the Poochatru Utsavam was celebrated historically. The entire East Uthira street comprised of Araiyars and they would present each of the verses of Periyazhvaar’s Poochoodal verses. Delighted at the devotional presentation of the Araiyars, the Sripatham lifted Namperumal high and tall above the huge Eastern wall built by Thiru Mangai Azhvaar so he was visible to the Araiyars through the entire stretch of the Keezha Uthira Veethi. It was also an expression from Namperumal to showcase his special flower garland to the Araiyars and ask them if they liked the ‘Garland of the evening’ as praised by Periyazhvaar."

Araiyar Barathwajan and his appa Krishnan Araiyar presented Periyazhvaar Poochudal verses on the evening at the manal veli.
A heavily weighing ‘Dhindu Thaavadam, Pushpa Duppatti’ and a fragrant Panneer on Lord Namperumal on the occasion of the annual ‘Festival of Flowers’ made it a colourful and devotional evening for the devotees. Sripatham carrying Namperumal with the heavy flower garland for well over an over at the Poochatru Mandapam was a remarkable effort and a display of their unflinching devotion. 

It was almost 8.30pm when the Sripatham presented another special walk from North to South end of Manal Veli providing another darshan to devotees of the Pushpa Duppati before he made his way back to the Santanu mandapam through the Nazhi Keettan Gopura Vaasal bringing to end the Veli Kodai Utsavam.

Well past 9pm and at the end of the day's events, scores of devotees head back to the Chera Kula Valli Nachiyar Sannidhi for one last glimpse of Kulasekara Azhvaar's daughter on this celebratory evening. 
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