Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Tiruvalampozil - I

If you were to take the road that is directly opposite to the Kandeeshwarar temple in Kandiyur, you will hit one of the worst maintained (if there is any maintenance being done at all) roads in Tamilnadu. (If you don’t take it you will obviously not hit one of the worst maintained roads in Tamilnadu – I like making my point clear). It was as we hit this road that my mother proposed a murderous attack on one of cousins. This suggestion was not exactly unrelated to the condition of the road that we had just hit…actually, it was the road that had hit our car and the car had hit back at us; that is hard hitting. The cousin in question had in a moment of over-enthusiasm (perhaps under some alcoholic influence) announced authoritatively that the road to Tiruvalampozhil has been improved – ‘jumnu irukku’ were the exact words he had used. I don’t blame him though – we had forgotten to ask the meaning of what is jum.


So, we reached Tiruvalampozhil with the road testing my father’s driving abilities to the maximum (not to mention the occasional surprise test popped by the drunken cyclist) and my brother now joining in the macabre plot to assault the prevaricating cousin. I did not speak. It was an emotional moment for me (Ok, please add the violins, the chorus humming and other sentimental effects that normally appear in Cheran’s movies.). I was coming to this place during Diwali after a break of two years, the first time after I had got my job (a major portion of which involves typing my BLOG).

It is surprising how little a place changes and how much a person changes in the same given time, especially if the place is a hamlet. The ponniamman temple which has seven ammans carved in the same stone has not changed one in the many years that I’ve seen it. Nor has the well opposite to the temple or the torn trouser clad kids who play in the sand nearby.


The car was parked in the familiar lane opposite to our ancestral house. I don’t remember a single time when the car was parked in a place which kept it safe from the perils of street cricket. And just as we were getting down, our illustrious cousin came with a beaming smile unaware of what perils awaited him as well. After my mother and brother had meted out the planned treatment we entered the house. Once again to my knowledge, we have never entered the house before one of the aunts rebuked one of the cousins – a loving family.

Some facts : Tiruvalampozhil is the abode of athmanathar and gyanambal. It is one among the padal petra thalangal. Appar has sung 10 songs in his thiruthandakam on the deity here. Download the entire thevaram from www.tamil.net/projectmadurai and search for songs 852 to 860. The 10th song has been lost.



5 comments:

Ganesh said...

its shame all old temples are being allowed to be rotten, this can happen only in our country where we dont value art and humanities in general

Gnana Kirukan said...

Man - I always wanted to live in a village..sit near a river under the alamaram tree looking at the sky and looking at the water passing by..or get up in the early morning and watch the sun rise through the green fields..and have tea sitting on a tea kadai bench,reading the news paper listening to the old songs that is being played and sleep in the thinnai and also do some "thinnai arattai" - lol.

Agnibarathi said...

@Ganesh - The problem might be because of too many wonderful temples, maintenance gets difficult. That said, our temple in Tiruvalampozhil is not rotten. It recently celebrated its kumbabhishekam. But maintaining temples would be a good idea for us to take up.
@Arjuna - Nice idea. koodave konjam vayakkaatula eranggi velaiyum panna readya iruntha nalla irukkum!!
@Parvati - Writing in Tamil/English depends upon a whim of my mind. But I'm writing in this piece to plan. So check out the forthcoming installments!!

Anonymous said...

hi u
liked ur blog
wanna keep in contact

luv.....

Agnibarathi said...

@Anon - Glad to know you liked the BLOG! Its difficult to keep in contact or even to decide on keeping contact with the details you have left behind! :-)
And yes, apologies for the late reply.