| |
|
The
colorful mosaic of Kerala festivals and fairs is as diverse as the land,
is an expression of the spirit of celebration, that is an essential part
of the State. Observed with enthusiasm and gaiety, festivals are like gems,
ornamenting the crown of Kerala tradition and culture. Round the year the
fests keep Kerala life vibrant and interludes in the mundane affairs of
life.
|
|
| |
|
Every
season turns up new festivals, each a true celebration of the bounties of
nature. The festivals exhibits an eternal harmony of spirit. Packed with
fun and excitement, festivals are occasions to clean and decorate houses,
to get together with friends and relatives and to exchange gifts.
|
|
| |
|
New
attire, dance, music and ritual, all add to their joyful rhythm. It is a
time for prayer, for pageantry and processions.....a time to rejoice. |
|
| |
| |
Chittur
Konganpada (War Festival) |
|
| |
Kerala,
once a land of small kingdoms, had witnessed several pitched battles. Few
in the state commemorate the war victories of their forefathers. However,
people of Chittor in Palakkad district had assimilated a story of triumph
into their cultural veins and in every February (on first Monday after the
dark lunar in Kumbam, Malayalam calendar) they remember a war they had fought
and won; Konganpada, the only war festival in the state. The history of
this festival is interwoven with myths. |
|
| |
Konganpada
recollects a war the Chittor Nairs fought against King Rajadhi Raja of Kong
dynast from Coimbathore in which the former won. Chittorians believe that
Goddess Bhagavathy saved them from the Chola King. |
|
| |
(According
to historical version Kings of Kongu attacked Palakkad and the King of Kochin
with the help of Zamorins defeated them. and Konganpada is being celebrated
to keep alive that great victory. The festival begins with chilambu; recalling
Konganpadas declaration of the war and a perturbed Chittor people
thronging the Goddess Bhagavathy pleading to save them from the ordeal.
Next morning a flag is hoisted indicating their readiness for the war. |
|
| |
When
dusk falls, people gather near the temple premise ands after three popgun
shots march to a place supposed to be the battleground. Oracle leads the
procession while others hold torches. At midnight the procession returns
from the battleground. |
|
| |
Next
morning procession resumes from a nearby kavu, this time with colour and
festivity. Girls are being paraded in mens wear (kolam) on the ground
that the Goddess encountered the Konganpada in mans robs. Cultural
programmes are also staged in the pageant. In the evening the procession
encircles the temple and a messenger from Konganpada reads scroll declaring
the war. |
|
| |
About
10pm Kongan appears and the symbolic war begins. Rival groups run the horses
to and fro to recreate a battlefield- like situation. After this Kongan
team retreats. A few persons feign death whose bodies are being taken back
to their wailing relatives. Later the festival ends with an hour-long percussion.
This may be one of the bizarre festivals in the state. |
|
| |
Thiruvaathira
Festival |
|
| |
The
festival falls on the asterism Thiruvathira in the Malayalam month of Dhanu
(December-January). On thiruvathira morning, devotees throng Shiva temples
for an early worship which is reckoned as highly auspicious. |
|
| |
Tradition
says thiruvathira is celebrating the death of Kamadeva, the mythological
God of Love. According to another version, Thiruvathira is the birthday
of Lord Shiva. The festival has similarities to adra darshan celebrated
in Tamil Nadu. |
|
| |
On
the festival day, women discard rice meal, but only take preparations of
chama (panicum miliaceum) or wheat. The day's menu include plantain fruits
and tender coconuts. They chew betel and redden their lips. A custom that
women should chew 108 betel on the day had prevailed among Namboodiris,
Ambalavasis (temple-servants) and Nairs ( all Hindu communities). The first
thiruvathira after the marriage of a girl is known as puthenthiruvathira
or poothiruvathira( new thiruvathira). Oonjalattom, (swinging on an oonjal
(swing) is another amusement women engage themselves with. During the chilly
night, women keep vigil for God Shiva and stage Thiruvathirakali, a bewitching
dance form. |
|
| |
Pretty
girls in traditional attire circle around a lighted brass lamp, and step
to the rhythm of the songs they sing, clapping their hands. |
|
| |
Pathirappoochoodal,(
wearing of flowers at midnight) is still prevalent among women belonging
to Namboodiri, Ambalavasis (temple servants) and Nair communities. |
|
| |
That
thiruvathira is still being celebrated with pomp vouch for the enviable
position Kerala women enjoyed in the society. The status she occupied at
home and in the society had influenced the state's social structure, customs
and religious practices. |
|
| |
| |
Kalapathy
Chariot Festival ( Ratholsav ) |
|
| |
Conquer
the depths of the ocean. One of the finest dive sites in the world. If deep
is too scary, then snorkeling is your option. If underwater is daunting,
then ride the waves with a surfboard or a water scooter. |
|
| |
Celebrated
in the second week of every November. During the festival season, the Vishwanatha
temple and the agraharas (traditional houses) of settler Tamil Brahmins
at Kalpathy village will submerge in a sea of devotees. The religious fervour
will reach its crescendo when the Brahmins carry the rathams to the temple
premise, an age-old ritual that is gaining popularity with every passing
year. Five major rathams (car, chariot) are being dragged in the flamboyant
procession accompanied by caparisoned elephants and percussion. The script
chanting Vedic scholars maintain the religious tempo of the festival. Residents
of each agrahara here have their own rathams. |
|
| |
Historians
reason that the festival is older than Thirssure pooram, initiated by Sakthan
Thampuran. Myths are woven around the history of the festival. One among
them say, a Palakkad lady, who had sacrificed material pleasures for worshipping
Lord Shiva, left for Kasi Vishwanatha temple. She, it is believed, returned
years later with an idol of God Shiva and met the then Palakkad King and
requested him to install the idol at the Vishwanatha temple at Kalpathy. |
|
| |
She
also believed to have given gold coins to the King to meet the expense of
daily poojas, and requested to celebrate the temple festival every year
on the lines of the car festival at Mayuram temples in Tamil Nadu. |
|
| |
Ratham,
mad of wood, is a tower having the height of a three-storied building. Carved
rathams have sculptures reminiscent of the Shivaleelas and Vishnuleelas,
depicted on the walls of the Chidambarum and Avinashi temples of Tamil Nadu.
The festival is also seen an attempt of the Tamil Brahmins to preserve their
cultural identity. |
|