Malayankulam, Kaisiki Ekadashi and Sri Parankusa Jiyar
Couple of days ago we were at Malayankulam, a small village
near Uttiramerur, Kanchipuram, one of those rare visits to my paternal
ancestors’ village and temple. It brings cheer and also sorrow in equal
measure. Happy that at least we still have a connection with our roots, and sad
because not a single one of the 60-70 odd Sri Vaishnava families from the
village live there anymore. In my own family they had migrated out even during
my grandfather’s time and we never even heard him talk about his village or even
think of visiting it. We sincerely carried it in our initials, but had no idea
what the village was like. All our families had left the village, letting the
family deity Veetrirundha Narayanan temple lie in ruins.
It must have been in the late 90s when we heard from Parthasarathi
mama, a familiar face to us who used to go to Kanchipuram to buy silk sarees,
came looking for Malayankulam families about reconstructing the temple. It was a
story of miraculous call that sent Parthasarathi mama from town to town trying
to bring people of his village together to get the temple up and running again.
He saw a man come and sit on this thinnai and complain of hunger and then
disappear, giving him the hint that Veetrirundha Narayanan and Kamalavalli
Thaayar were going hungry and uncared for.
Stone by stone the small temple was reconstructed. With no
one living in the village who could do Nitya Pujas, a bhattar was appointed to
go from Kanchipuram every day. I have been going to the village for 15-years
now, and luckily it gets support for regular pujas and devotees visiting on
special occasions. A separate Thayar sannidhi has been built, a small nandavanam
created out of the land that was encroached upon, recovered. Lucikly Balaji, our archaka swami recovered
from cancer and continues to serve Malayankulam temple.
This time around I was taking a few photos as the children
were singing, and as we waited for the prasadam. It is a small temple and there
aren’t any sculptures or ornate mantapas so it was the Ramar darbar on the
right side wall I first noticed. What was hiding it before I don’t know, but it
felt as if I was seeing it for the first time. Then I was standing and looking
around, noticed a part of some sculpture behind the steel cupboards. I asked
what is it, and in a noisy disruption the cupboards were moved by Ranganathan
mama who looks after the temple now. It looked different. I couldn’t figure out
who they were in the single block of granite.
Ranganathan mama said they are moonaam pattam Azhagiya
Singar and his family, the third pontiff of the Ahobila Mutt and his family. I was
thrilled as if it was my own archaeological discovery. How thrilled would one
be to find his or her ancestors engraved on stone, from 500-odd years ago. I looked
at with disbelief, mama understood my looks and told us that Andavan Swamigal
had seen it and confirmed it to be the purvashrama family of Moonravadhu Pattam
Azhagiya Singar. If a great acharyan like Andavan Swamigal has said, there was
no room to further go on questioning it for me – he had spent in his
purvashrama days many years at Malayankulam and knew the place, its people very
well.
Among the Sri Vaishnava families at Sri Rangam, Kanchipuram,
Srivilliputhur, Azhwar Tirunagari and many more to find families that can trace
their lineage to Alwars, Acharyas and running to over a 1000 years. It gives
goosebumps to think of a tradition that has lasted so long, and families
steeped in them, following the footsteps of ancestors even today.
For us at Malayankulam, the temple and the connection to the
Ahobila Mutt gives at least 600-700 years of continuity. Who knows for how long
they were there before that, for Uttiramerur nearby has an older and a greater
inscriptional history, and the land must have been blessed by the waters of the
rivers and rule of Pallavas and Cholas. That such a small village could perform Vajapeya and Atiratra yagnas in the old days comes as a surprise now. But, it must have been prosperous and full of learned Vaidikas. Even today families trace their ancestry to streams that did either of the Yagnas.
Some months before the present trip to Malayankulam, I was
reading K.V.Raman’s book ‘Sri Varadarajaswami Temple, Kanchi’. Interesting to
find the epigraphic record he quotes from the temple: “Narayana Jiyar lived
almost to the end of Krishnadeva Raya’s reign while his successor Parankusa
Jiyar was a contemporary of Krishnadeva and Achyuta Raya. There are two records
at Varadarajaswami temple, Kanchi dated 1452 & 1461 corresponding
respectively to 1530 AD & 1539 AD which mention the Parankusa Jiyar’s
offering to this temple during auspicious occasions like the Chaturmasa-Ekadasi
days and on the Kausikidvadasi days. He also made provision for reading the
Kausika purana on the Kausikadvadasi days. Three villages in Damarkottam were
donated by him for meeting the expenses of 15 Ekadasi days. The items of
expenditure included the presentation of cloth to one who recited the
Kausika-purana”.
Kanchi Perumal Kaisiki Ekadasi Purappadu photo sent by friend even as the blog was being compiled |
(Now I know where my father’s and my love for Krishnadeva
Raya comes from J )
Ahobila Mutt’s history of Jiyar’s says: “Sri Parankusa
Yatheendra Mahadesika was the third Jeeyar in line of succession. He spent his
days in teaching Sribhashya and Srimath Rahasyathrayasara to numerous disciples
at Kancheepuram. His contribution was the creation of villages like Neeralur,
Uragadam, Nemmily, Kadankarai, Pilaaputh and Kalathur. By a divine command, he
went to Srimushna where he was instantly attracted to the Lord there as al Sri
Ramanuja whose grace he immensely derived and breathed his last there in
tranquil”. For long we have been
enquiring if his Brindavanam can be found, established at Sri Mushnam. All
hopes dashed as Ranganathan mama said, it can’t be done because highway expansion
has covered up that place.
P.S. Pardon me if I
have made any mistakes in my enthusiasm to write, and share this. In August 2019 during our visit to Srimushnam we were able to find a small Brindavanam on the side if the highway. Editing the blog to add that photograph here.
Comments
Like Ranganathan mama, we have Bhashyam, fondly calling him Anna, to revive our
temple in Buderi - (Pullavakkam), between sirunguttur & perunguttur -
Doosi-Cheyyar road.
Apart from visiting once in a year for pavitrotsavams,
we are not doing anything.
HH Andavan Swamigal & Sri Narayana Yatheendra Mahadesikan, 45th Azhagiyasingar of Sri Ahobila Mutt, had done mangalasasanam in Our Aadhi Kesava Perumal with Komalavalli Thaayar.
Our only SELFISH prayer to God is to give Bhashyam anna
healthy life who is very active despite two bypass surgeries.
But good to know, old village temples are getting
revivied from native people thanks to His grace.
But finding Bhattacharyas is difficult,
Luckily for us we have Bhattacharyas from Cheyyar temple
visiting daily for nityaanusanthanam.
On Kaisiga ekadesi/dwadesi
Last few years, i have been hearing more people are visiting
thirukurungudi.
Dravidanadu is now full of veda sagaram
KS BADRI NARAYANAN