Posts

Showing posts from 2018

"This is the God, this is the God of humans"

Image
“Kannan ennum karum deivam” “karumanikkam en kannuladaagume’ “Roopa saavala sundara” “Saavale sundara roopa manohara” The Alvar poetry, very many verses, time and again dwell on the beauty of the “black God”, the beautiful black Krishna. The idea of looking at the Gods housed in the south Indian temples as black Gods never occurred till one saw the flawless white marble idols in the north. Then came the Panduranga Vittala, a black God who again gets specifically invoked as the beautiful black deity. Many have gone into analysis of the “white” and “black” and the colours of our Gods.  Coming from where I am the black God was just what He or She was, there was no big thought process behind the worship. The familiarity with the granite or the saligrama moolavar murtis, and the bronze utsavar murtis were something not “researched” upon. Very few moolavr murtis one sees, the “sudhai” stucco creations painted in vibrant colours like the Tiruthankal Appan or the Vatap...

"Tuka mhane taisa otalaase thhasa Anubhaw sarisa mukha ala"

Image
I thought life as a work from home professional would give me lot of time and enable reading and writing on my favourite subjects, religion, history, heritage etc., So, with great enthusiasm in 2010 I thought I will attempt blogging live my experience reading Mahipati's 'Bhakta Vijaya'. Neither did I complete reading the book nor could continue blogging. Here is a compilation of the few days of jotting down on blog what I felt as I read through a few chapters. May be some day, I will complete reading as well writing on it. Till then .... Bhaktavijayam I remember reading Mahabhaktavijaya in Tamil published by Lifco with stories of Saint poets of India, especially the Maharashtrian Saints Jnaneshwar, Tukaram and Namdev when I was still in school. I gave the book to my maternal grandmother with whom I was spending my vacation at that time as she was interested in reading it and forgot all about it. At the time I had no clue about the greatness of the work and i...

Porivilangaya, the mystery sweet

Image
Visnuchitta goes to Dakshina Mathura ….and others carried arisalu and other sweets in a kavadi for the king, Visnuchitta proceeded towards Mathura in great pomp and gaiety! Out of affection, his devoted wife packed in a sack, Porivilangayas ……. -             Krishnadevaraya’s Amuktamalyada Krishnadevaraya must have been a hardcore foodie. Not only did he write extensive grants to Tirupati temple for various prasadams, he writes many a culinary details in his epic ‘Amuktamalyada’. One of the interesting references therein is a porivilangaya. As interesting as the item mentioned is the debate it gets into while being translated from the original Telugu text to English. Srinivas Sistla who has translated the text into English in his introduction talks a little about the confusion over the word  porivilangaya which is identified as a Tamil word, and on the other explained as wood apple. Luckily for the tra...

Sun dry vegetables and get your kitchen monsoon ready

Image
These aren’t instagrammable pictures right? Definitely not as food pictures, black and boring right? Yet, these are things that are pretty useful. One, we are prepared for the rains, stocking up for days vegetable supplies may be low, difficult to get out in the rains and shop and such circumstances. It may also help farmers if we are going to buy up produce when the demand is low, make use of more than abundant sunshine sun dry them and store for the rainy day. I am not saying anything new or not known. These are the annual rituals, seasonal rituals our mothers and grandmothers followed. I am only reiterating it – instead of complaining about high prices of vegetables at times, and about farmers throwing away their produce some other times, these age old practices may help even in urban area with a small balcony or a sunlight window. I have also   been guilty of not doing much all these years, though occasional dried amlas made for Dwadashi pachadis, pickles in sea...

Save Tirumala, the sacred and ancient treasure

Image
 “ à®’à®´ிவில் காலமெல்லாà®®் உடனாய் மன்னி , வழுவிலா அடிà®®ை செய்ய வேண்டுà®®்நாà®®் , தெà®´ிகு ரல்à®…à®°ு வித்திà®°ு வேà®™்கடத்து , எழில்கொள் சோதி எந்தைதந்தை தந்தைக்கே ” “At all times and forever by his side, we Must perform stintless service, to the Radiant lord of Venkatam, the hill with Streams. He is my father’s father”  - Nammalvar (Translation Srirama Bharati) It is this attitude of service every Sri Vaishnava devotee yearns for at the feet Sri Venkatesa, or the Lord of Thiruvenkatam. If one Azhwar echoes the devotion to the Lord, another sings about how he yearns to be born as something on Tirumala hills. Tirumala is very special to Sri Vaishnavas, and to all the devotees of Sri Venkatesa. He is a family deity to millions, and every auspicious occasion in the family prayers to him, offerings to him and pilgrimage to Tirumala is undertaken. Unlike the pilgrimage to other divya desams, Tirumala has always been different. May be because of the terrain in...

Water Dharma II - Queens who created exquisite step wells

Image
"Vishnu is the primary deity of the stepwell, and the sculptures are depictions of one of his many forms. This well had seven terraces, each on a separate level, along with a large torana or ceremonial gateway that welcomed the visitor and looked beautiful in its time" -Kirit Mankodi  Sri Vishnu as a Seshasayi is the most remarkable and central iconic deity visible through the winding stairways at various levels of Rani Ki Vav, the most ornate stepwells built in 11th century by Queen Udayamati in memory of her husband and Solanki ruler King Bimadeva I. The technological aspects of the well have been praised by experts and endorsed by UNESCO in its recognition of the site as a World Heritage Site in 2014. It combines the utilitarian with the spiritual, as the 24 forms of Vishnu, Gauris, Bhairava and other deities are seen beautifully etches all around the inner niches of the well. Vishnu as a Seshasayi, we recently heard an expert on stepwells, A.S.Pathak s...

Water dharma

Image
"Neerinri amayaadhu ulagenin yaaryaarkkum  vaaninru amayaadhu ozhukku" - Thirukkural  There can be no life without water  Lack of rains may even derail Dharma (Virtuousness) We were discussing the topic of Water Management in Ancient India as a seminar topic under the predominantly Indology centric department few days back. “There will be no water as sacred, elixir of life etc., it will be purely on water management as the emphasis is on science,” told our professor. The precursor to the day-long seminar was an expert talk on the same topic. The talk was an inspiration, as it was seamless in its approach to the subject from the emotional point of view, invoking instances from the Ramayana and Mahabharata and the practical ways of conservation and management of water in ancient India. I was a bit perplexed – why should the seminar papers be only science and why not include the spiritual. The ancient Indians never separated them into different ...

Lepakshi

Image
Shiva & Parvati playing dice  "The ceiling paintings of the Virabhadra temple at Lepakshi are justly celebrated as being among the best preserved examples of southern Indian murals. In 1936, C.Sivaramamurti was the first to propose that the Lepakshi to propose that the Lepakshi paintings be recognized as the finest examples of Vijayanagara pictorial art." - Anna L.Dallapiccola  Laugh at me, but the truth is that for most of my adult life Lepakshi to me was the Andhra Pradesh state emporium that sells the state’s arts, crafts, textiles etc., Even with all the admiration I had for the Vijayanagara Empire, Krishnadevaraya, the Nayaka temples and art, little did I know of the grand Virabhadra temple at Lepakshi, not very far from one of the Nayaka capital Penukonda in Andhra Pradesh. Today to visit the temple at Lepakshi is a breeze, with a super smooth and clear highway that connects Bengaluru to Hyderabad. Hindupur station has far long been the railway connectio...