Showing posts with label 108 Divya Desams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 108 Divya Desams. Show all posts

Monday, June 4, 2018

Thiruvananthapuram of Tamil Nadu!

Inside the Aavarani Anantha Narayana Temple
Thousands throng the temple of Lord Ananthapadmanabha Swamy, at Thiruvananthapuram, despite strict security and dress regulations to worship the 18 feet Lord, reclining on a five headed Anantha (Adhisesha) witnessed through three entrances, whereby his Thirumukam (face), Thiruvudal (Body) and Thirupadam (feet) are visible.

Come to lesser known Aavarani, in Nagapattinam district of Tamil Nadu, where Lord Vishnu is seen as Anantha Narayana, also known as Aabharanadhari, his gigantic 21 feet form reclining on a seven- headed Anantha. This Lord, even larger than Ananthapadmanabhaswamy can also only be viewed through three entrances through which his Thirumukham, Nabhi (navel with Brahma rising from it) and Thirupaadham are visible. The only difference here, is that this temple is relatively unknown and one can spend minutes or even hours before the Lord, without any disruption.


Legend 

The Lord Aabharanadhari reclining on the seven hooded Adisesha

The village Aavarani, was originally named Aabharanadhari after the Lord. It is an extension of Thirukkannangudi, one of the 108 Divya Desams. It is believed that Lord Rama on his return to Ayodhya from Sri Lanka, passed through here and on the request of Brigu Maharishi and Veda Vyasa rested here in the form of Mahavishnu. 

The legend of this temple is associated with the life and times of Thirumangai Alwar. According to the Sthala Puranam,  the Alwar, desirous of raising resources for the Srirangam temple, came to Nagapattinam to steal the Golden idol of Buddha at the Vihara . He collected some banana stems from a place called Vazhakarai, stole the Golden idol, hid it among the banana stems during the day, and travelled over night towards Srirangam. The place where he hid the statue during day has come to be known as Porulvaithacheri (now called Poravacheri near Sikkal). He then visited Aavarani and worshipped the gigantic Ananthanarayana Perumal. Seeing the huge Lord, he adorned his body with Tulsi garlands which are said to have turned into different jewels. He then called him "Aabharanadhari Narayana". Because of this, the place came to be known as Aabharanadhari. 

From here, he went to the Thirukannangudi Damodhara Narayana Perumal temple and worshipped the Ninraan and Irundhaan (Veetrirundha Perumal) forms of the Lord.  In his mangalasasanam of the Thirukkanangudi temple, the stanza beginning with "Vangama munneer", according to Vaishnavaite scholars, describes the Ananthanarayana Perumal of Aavarani who is reclined on the Anantha ("sangamaarangai thadamalarundhi samameniyen") and hence it is inferred that this sthalam must have been part of the Thirukkannangudi Divya desam originally. Government records also mention Aavarani village as Thirukkannangudi Agaram which reemphasises the fact that Aavarani was a Brahmadeyam (tax free land provided to Brahmin scholars) of Thirukkanangudi.

The Lord

Lord Ananthanarayana at Aavarani
The gigantic form of Lord Ananthanarayana Perumal completely fills the sanctum. Reclining on  seven hooded Adisesha, with a Marakkal (measuring utensil) as headrest,  his head is placed in the Southern direction and feet towards North. He has a right hand supporting his head, and a left hand extended upto his knee.  He wears a number of ornaments on his body true to the name of Aabharanadhari. On his head, he wears a crown, kundalams in his ears, katakas on his arms, a beautiful Nalankilar Haram on his broad chest, sacred thread, and anklets on his feet. Brahma raising from his navel, and Sridevi and Bhudevi found by his side, are also wearing ornaments. Apart from them, Sage Bhrigu and Veda Vyasa are found at the head and foot of the Lord respectively as he gave vision to them at this site. 

Other Deities
Goddess Alankaravalli
On entering the temple, one can see the Pakshiraja Garudalwar facing the Lord. He is seen with snakes as ornaments on his body. He is flanked by a beautiful Hanuman, known as Padma Hanuman. Goddess Alankaravalli is found in a separate shrine . The temple well is very special as the water is said to be extremely sweet. The temple tank is called Ananthapushkarani and bathing here and chanting Achutha, Anantha, Govindha thrice, rids one of all problems and turns them towards liberation.

Inscriptions:

The beautiful well at the Aavarani Temple
A total of eleven inscriptions have been read at this temple. Out of which nine are from the Chola period, one from the Pandya period and another from the Vijayanagara Period. The oldest among them is from the time of Raja Raja Chola II from 1150 AD. This inscription calls Aavarani as Aabharanadari Chaturvedimangalam. The inscription also mentions a Siva temple known as Thiruvirameswaram which probably existed in Aavarani.

There are six inscriptions belonging to the period of Kulothunga Chola III, and one of Jatavarman Kulasekhara Pandyan.  A 1474 AD inscription of Thippayya Devamaharaya refers to the village as Aabharanadhari yaana Uttaranandapuram and the Lord as Pallikonda Perumal.

The rest of the inscriptions talk about temples nearby. One of the inscriptions refer to Simmavishnu Chaturvedimangalam and a deity called Parvatheeswara mudaiyar and about grants given to the temple. This inscription also mentions the villagers of Ranajaya Chaturvedi mangalam giving grants to Parvatheeswara mudaiyar. This probably was another temple near Aavarani.  Another inscription mentions Chitralekha Perumpalli which probably was a Buddha Vihara nearby. There have been exchange of land between the Parvatheeswara mudaiyar temple and the Chitralekha Perumpalli.

Other significance:

Padma Anjaneya at the Aavarani Temple
This temple is one of the Pancha Narayana Kshetrams referred to in the Garuda Puranam as Pancha Badra. The others being the Damodara Narayana Perumal in Thirukannangudi, Yadava Narayana Perumal in Keevalur, Deva Narayana Perumal in Devur and  Varada Narayana Perumal in North Alandhur.

How to reach here:

This temple is found on the Nagapattinam - Thiruvarur route, about four kilometres from the famous Sikkal Murugan temple.  GPS Coordinates : (10.74561792, 79.77533913)

Contact: S Kumar Bhattar - 97885 17247

Temple Timings: 9-11 am, 5-7 pm

Updated on 04 June 2018:

Inspired by the Lord Anantha Narayana, Poet Diwakara Tanujaha (Mr Sudharshanam) has composed a beautiful verse on him which he has also rendered as an audio file for our listening pleasure:

ஆவரணி ஆபரணம்
–--------------------------------

(எண்சீர் விருத்தம் – விளம் காய் மும்முறை இரட்டித்தது)

இடதுகை நீளவல(து) எழுதலை வாங்கக்கைக்
...கடகமும் குண்டலமும் கால்களில் தண்டையுமாய்ப்
படியணைந் தாவரணி படுத்துளான் பார்க்கிலனே!
...பணிலமா ரம்பொலிதோள் பொன்முகம் ஒருவாசல்
படைமல ரன்முகிழ்கொப் பூழ்நலங் கிளராரம்
...பாதுகம் இருவாசல் முப்படக் கிடக்குமணி
நெடுவடி மூவேழாய் நீண்டநல் ஆபரணம்
...நிறைமலர் நகையாக்கி நெகிழ்ந்தவன் காணாமோ?

(கடகம் – கையில் கட்டும் கங்கணம்; படி – தானியங்களை அளக்கும் மரக்கால்; பணிலம் – சங்கு; ஆரம் – சக்கரம்; படைமலரன் – படைக்கும், மலரில் இருக்கும் பிரமன்; கொப்பூழ் – தொப்புள்; நலங்கிளர் ஆரம் – பெருமான் அணிந்திருக்கும் நலங்கிளர் எனப்படும் ஆரம்; பாதுகம் – கால்கள்; நிறைமலர் – நிறைந்த மலர், இங்கு துளசி இதழ்)

பொருள்:
----------------
இடது கையை நீட்டி வைத்து, வலது கையை, உயர்த்திய தலைக்கு முட்டுக் கொடுத்து, கையில் கங்கணமும், காதில் குண்டலமும், கால்களில் தண்டையும் அணிந்துகொண்டு, தானியங்கள் அளக்கும் படியைத் தலைக்கு அணை கொடுத்து, ஆவரணி என்னும் ஊரில் படுத்துக் கொண்டிருப்பவனை நான் இன்னும் பார்க்கவில்லையே!

சங்கும் சக்கரமும் தாங்கிய பொலிகின்ற தோளும், பொன்போல் ஒளிர்கின்ற திருமுகமும் ஒரு வாசல் வழியே, நாம் காணுமாறும், நலங்கிளர் என்னும் ஆரத்தைத் தாங்கும் மார்பையும், படைக்கும் தொழிலைச் செய்கின்ற பிரமன் முளைத்த நாபியையும் நமக்கு இன்னொரு வாசலில் காட்டியபடியும், மூன்றால் வாசலில் தனது பாதங்களைக் காட்டியும், முப்பகுதியாகக் கிடக்கும் மணி அவன்;

நிறைவு பெற்ற மலரான துளசியை, தனக்கு இட்டவரின் பக்தியில் நெகிழ்ந்தவனாய், நீண்ட உருவமாய், இருபத்தொரு அடி நீளத்தில், ஆபரணமாகவே விளங்குகின்ற அவனை நாம் காண வேண்டாமா?

(திருமங்கை ஆழ்வார் இட்ட துளசி மாலை, அவனுக்கு மணிகளாக மாறி அலங்க்கரித்ததால், அவனை ஆபரணதாரி என்றே அழைக்கிறார்கள். மேல் விவரங்களுக்கு வலைப்பூவைப் படிக்கவும்.)

Audio Link to the verse


Saturday, September 17, 2011

Sri Prasanna Venkatesa Perumal and Ranganathar Temples, Tiruparkadal

A couple of weeks ago, I was going to Vellore on official work. Just before getting into the car, I remembered the bottle of ghee and oil that Sri.Rajendran (Raju's Temple Visits)had given me to hand over to a temple during our recent meeting and what better place to hand it over than Thirupparkadal near Kaveripakkam.


Thiruparkadal Temple - Then and Now!
I was also curious to find out how the temple looked now since my last visit. My previous visit was while the renovation work was going on because of which I could not have a comprehensive view of all the specialities of the temple.

Thirupparkadal is off the Chennai - Bangalore Highway, about three kms from Kaveripakkam. There is a board available on the Highway indicating the turning to the left as we proceed from Chennai. From the main road, to the twin temples of Prasanna Venkatesa Perumal and Athi Ranganatha Perumal there are adequate number of prominent signages enabling us to reach without any difficulty. 

The temple tank - water is filled through hose pipes as and when
required!
The temple was freshly painted in bright colours and in contrast to how it was when I had last seen it. The prototype of the moolavar stood out brightly signifying the uniqueness of the temple. The temple tank had also been cleaned up and filled with minimum water - which in a way was way better than the Thiruputkuzhi temple a few kilometres away where the temple tank is so pathetically maintained, its steps are a potential triptrap for those who step in wanting to sprinkle the water of the Jatayu Theertham on their head.

So what is so special about Thirupparkadal and why is it called so? Here is the story for those who already do not know it!
Lord Venkatesa standing on the Avudaiyar
"Hariyum Shivanum Onnu ....Ariyaadhavan Vaayila Mannu" (Lord Vishnu and Shiva are one and the same)is a famous tamil proverb. This can be visually observed at Thirupparkadal where Lord Venkateswara stands on a Shivalinga. How did this come to happen?

Sage Pundareeka, a staunch Vishnu devotee, was in the habit of visiting "Thirupparkadal" to worship Lord Vishnu everyday. He was on his way one Vaikunda Ekadesi day when he got delayed. Therefore he decided to worship the Lord at the nearby village temple before the "Ekadesi naazhigai " was over. He saw a small temple and Pushkarni at this village which was then called Avani Narayana Chaturvedi Mangalam. After quickly bathing in the pond, he went into the temple only to find a Shivalinga (Dooseshwara) at the Sanctum Sanctorum. Disappointed that he had not got a glimpse of Lord Vishnu as he had expected, and worried that he would not be able to worship him before the auspicious time was over, he walked out of the temple.

An old man appeared before him and asked him why he was so sad. When Sage Pundareeka narrated what had happened, the old man told him that what he had seen was indeed Lord Vishnu's shrine and invited him to go along with him inside the temple. On reaching the Sanctum Sanctorum, the old man disappeared and Lord Vishnu gave darshan to the Sage as Venkatesa Perumal standing over the Shivalinga. From that day, the Lord is called Pundareeka Varadhan and the Pushkarni is called Pundareeka Pushkarni.

I took the Oil/Ghee bottle from the car and entered the temple, observing the brightly "tiled" thinnais on either side of the entrance where people sat. This temple had become like many others that had fallen prey to modernization - the marriage of the ancient sculptures on the pillars with the glazed tiles on the platform and walls was quite jarring to the eyes!
Glazed Tile Thinnai
We went into the temple and reached the Dwajasthambam. One of the several unique features of this temple apart from the Moolavar himself is the Garudalwar. Here the Garudalwar wears nine serpents as ornaments. This Nagabaranabhooshana Garudalwar when worshipped on Aadi Swathi (his birthday) is said to grant boon of childbirth.

After worshipping the Garudalwar, we walk over the wooden platform that has newly been installed to go into the Sanctum Sanctorum. The Lord Venkateswara stands in all his magnificence, a sight that cannot be witnessed in any other temple, on the "Avudaiyaar".


File:Thiruparkadal.jpg
Moolavar picture courtesy: Wikipedia
The bhattar, Mr. Vengatrangan, is very cordial and devoted. He accepts the offering of ghee and oil which is special in this temple, and adds them to the lamps in the sanctum sanctorum. We stand in awe and gratitude, watching the Lord as the archanai is performed. Vengatrangan, also explains the significance of "Pradhosham" in this temple. As the Lord manifests himself with features of both Shiva and Vishnu, Pradhosha pooja is performed specially in this temple. Thirumanjanam (Abhishekam) is done to the feet of the Lord that stands on the base of the Shivalingam, and Archana is performed with both Tulasi and Bilwa leaves, something that is unique to this temple.

I observed two sets of utsavar idols in the sanctum sanctorum and enquired about them. Mr, Vengatrangan explained that one was the "Selvar" and that utsavar stayed inside the sanctum sanctorum accepting thirumanjanams on behalf of the moolavar as and when necessary while the other was the utsavar that was taken out in procession and on festival days.

We requested him to open the Kalinga Nardhana Krishna Shrine. He asked us to worship at the other shrines and come there by which time he would cater to the other devotees who were waiting. We thanked him and moved out towards the Alarmelmangai Thayar shrine. While doing so the Vimanam of the temple caught our attention. Recently painted in bright gold colour, the Vimanam is called Pundareeka Vimanam or Ananda Nilaya Vimanam. It has

1. Gajendra Varadhar ( Lord Vishnu sitting on an elephant) towards the east;
2. Sri Dhakshinamoorthy towards the South;
3. Sri Lakshmi Narasimha towards the west; and
4. Brahma towards the North.
The four faces of the Ananda Nilaya Vimanam
After worshipping the Vimanam, we proceeded towards the Alarmelmangai Thaayar Shrine. The Goddess, looked compassionate and welcoming with lotus flower in hand and a huge Srichakram installed at her feet. Girls seeking good alliance make garlands of turmeric sticks and offer to the Goddess on fridays.

Alarmelmangai Thaayar amidst the glittering tiles
After praying at the Thaayar shrine, we moved next to the Andal shrine. The Andal looks extremely regal in very simple attire and as usual is found to the left of the Perumal shrine.
Beautiful Andal
We next moved to the Nagaraja shrine. Here seven serpent statues are found on a pedestal and there is a statue of Lord Krishna dancing on Kalinga over them. This shrine is specially frequented by young girls seeking good alliance who light nine lamps with lemon peel on tuesday and make nine circumambulations around the shrine.
Nagaraja Shrine
By this time, the Navaneetha Krishnan shrine had been opened by Shri. Vengatrangan. We went in to see an extremely charming Navaneetha Krishna. With a ball of butter in one hand, and one leg raised to dance he was gloriously decorated in "Vennai Kaapu" (butter). Since we were visiting just after Krishna Jayanthi, we offered our special and sincere prayers to him and also partook the delicious butter that was offered as prasad.
  

After worshipping Lord Anjaneya who is found here in a seperate shrine we moved towards the Ranganatha Perumal Temple.
The Prasanna Venkatesa Perumal temple is open from 7.30 a.m to 12 noon 4.30 p.m to 7.30 p.m.
Contact Details: R.Vengatrangan - 94868 77896

The Ranganatha Perumal Temple is still under renovation. It is one of the temples that take an additional step in educating devotees on how to worship in a temple. As one enters the temple, there is a board which clearly states how one must go about worshipping at the temple.

As the Board mentioned, we went around the temple once. Our attention was drawn to the very powerful Sapthaka Vimanam. The Sarathsaaranga Bheejaksharam is said to reverberate very strongly in "Athi Maram" (Fig tree Board). Since the Moolavar in this shrine is a Swayambu Moorthy formed in Athi maram the Sapthaka Vimaanam is said to powerfully reverberate the Sarathsaaranga Bheejaksharam. This is said to have rescued seven rishis (Saptharishis) from a cyclone which is why the ancient name of Tiruparkadal was Thirukaraikanda Puram.


The temple is simple with just one one Artha Mandapam with 24 pillars, and one Mahamandapam which includes the Sanctum Sanctorum. We first stop at the Ranganayaki Thaayar Shrine. The Goddess looks very mature and motherly waiting to take care of all the prayers of those who worship at her feet. Girls seeking alliance perform abhishekham with honey and offer garland of 116 lemons to have their prayers fulfulled.

We then move to the Athi Ranganatha Perumal Shrine. The Lord is absolutely awesome. A swayambu moorthy of over nine feet long and 3 feet high manifested in "Athi Maram" he lies on Adhi Seshan with Sridevi and Bhoodevi at his feet, and Brahma arising out of his navel on a lotus. The measure(Marakkaal) under his head signifies that he is the one that feeds the Universe. Because he is a Swayambu Moorthy, there is no Thirumanjanam performed but only Thaila Kaapu.

Significance of the Athi Ranganathar:

Once Chitragupta, the accountant of Sins and Virtues became frustrated and depressed counting the Sins of innumerable people in Bhoolokha. He sought a solution from Brahma who asked him to worship the Athi Rangar at Thiruparkadal by performing a Homa with Athi (fig) tree sticks. When Chitragupta worshipped Athi Rangar and applied the Fig Oil (Athi Thailam) on his forehead he was cured of his stress and depression. Pleased that he was relieved of his ailment, Chitragupta agreed to reduce the burden of sins of those who worshipped Athi Ranganathar here.
The dilapidated Thulasi Madam at the Ranganatha Swamy Shrine

It is also believed that Maharaja Harischandra worshipped Athi Rangar to strengthen the determination to speak only the truth due to which this place is also called Satyavratham.

The Bhattar patiently explains the Sthala Puranam and offers Harathi, clearly showing the Pathathi Kesa darisanam of a Lord so exquisite. It was really nice to see that the Bhattar was spending time in educating the devotees on the right way to receive theertham and Sadaari, also telling them not to step on the main step to the temple (Vasapadi) and houses, as Mahalakshmi is said to reside there.

The Sthala Vriksham here is a combination of Vanni and Pinna Marams growing together. Going around the Sthala Vriksham seven times is said to protect one from evil spirits.

The temple is a private temple being renovated and therefore in need of funds.Contact Details: Shri. Nandakumar - 04177-254442/ 9442313789

Significance of the twin temples at Thiruparkadal:
1. The Prasanna Venkatesa Perumal Temple has both Shiva and Vishnu and the Ranganatha Swamy Temple has Vishnu and Brahma - therefore it is a Trimurthi Kshetram.
2. It is said to be equivalent to the 107th Divya Desam - Thirupparkadal which cannot be seen in the material world. Therefore, along with the Divya desams one could also worship at this shrine as an Abhimaana Kshetram.
3. Lord Vishnu gave darshan to Pundareeka Maharishi on the Aavudaiyaar on Thiruvona Nakshatram Vaikunda Ekadasi day. Therefore this is a thiruvona nakshatra shrine.
4. Pradhosham is special here when Thirumanjanam is performed to the feet of the Lord that stands on the Aavudaiyaar.
5. Donating ghee and oil mixed at this temple is said to reduce the burden of sins as per the promise of Chitragupta.
6. Athi Ranganathar is a naturally formed moorthi in fig wood. Worshipping him is possible only if it is destined so.
7. Both temples are Kalyana Parihara Sthalams.

If you happen to be travelling in this part of the world, do make it a point to visit these unique shrines!



Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Ennai Petra Thaayar!

Bhakthavatsala Perumal Temple, Thiruninravur

Bhakthavatsala Perumal Temple at Thiruninravur, near Chennai is one of the 108 Divya Desams. Here the Goddess has a unique name" Ennai Petra Thaayar" (mother who gave birth to me)! How did she get that name?

Lord Samudrarajan (King of the Ocean) was longing for a child and his deep desire was that Goddess Mahalakshmi should be born as his daughter. He prayed to her for many years after which the Goddess appeared before him and granted his wish.

On one fine day, he found a beautiful girl child in the middle of a lotus flower in the ocean. Ecstatic he exclaimed " Ennai Petra Thaaye" (Mother who gave birth to me!). The child was named Ennai Petra Thaayar by which she is known till date.

The place itself derives its name from Goddess Mahalakshmi - Thiru means Lakshmi and Ninravur is the place where she stays forever.

The little girl grew up into a beautiful young lady and it was time to get her married. But Samudrarajan was not willing to part with his daughter whom he had got after praying for so many years and so when Sriman Narayana came asking for her hand in marriage, he laid a condition that he should become "Veetoda Mappillai" (Ghar Jamaai) and stay in the in-laws house for which the Lord agreed. As it is her house, the Goddess gets all the pooja and Saathupadi first, after which it is the Lord's turn.

The seven feet Bhaktavatsala perumal is a delight to watch. In Kalyana Thirukolam (wedding attire), and with the words " Maam Ekam Charanam Vraja" (Take refuge in me alone) written on his right hand (Incidentally the only other lord who has this inscription on his hand is Lord Uppiliappan in Kumbakonam), and a welcoming smile, you can keep looking at him all day long.

The Divya Desams are those where the Azhwars visited and sung hymns in praise of the Lord. When Tirumangaiazhwar came to Tiruninravur he did not sing any paasuram about Bhakthavatsala perumal. He then went to Tirukkadalmallai (Mamallapuram) to worship Sthalasayana Perumal.

Bhakthavatsala, anxious for his devotee to sing about him, appeared to the Azhwar in Tirukkadalmallai as Bhakthavatsala Perumal and it is there that the pasuram about Tiruninravur was sung! Such was the relationship between the Lord and his beloved devotee !!


Coming to the picture above, this is a unique feature of the Tiruninravur temple. As the name suggests, this is the temple for wealth, prosperity and all the Aishwaryams in the world. There is a matrix drawn in front of the Ennai Petra Thaayar Sannathi as you see in the picture, which has specific numbers. By drawing this matrix in your pooja room and placing one rupee coins on each of the squares, and praying for nine days, your wishes are granted.



Procedure for Pooja:

The Yantra is drawn in the pooja room on a flat surface using Kolam Powder. Stickers are also available in the temple if one wishes to use it. Pooja is done for nine days by placing one rupee coins in each of the boxes, applying sandal paste and Kumkum on them, and flowers as well. The coins of the previous day are then removed and stored safely and new one rupee coins are used the next day. Once the nine days of pooja
is complete, (it is preferable to start the pooja on a friday or new moon day) the 81 coins along with Thambulam for nine sumangalis is taken to the temple. The battar places the coins at the Thaayaar's feet and performs archana. The first Thambulam is then give to the Goddess. After that, he gives the coins back to the devotee who then deposits the coins in the Hundi outside the shrine. The remaining thambulams are given to other women in the temple.

I have tried it myself and it really works:)