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Thrissur of Kerala
Thrissur
- Kerala
General
Information
| District
Head Quarters |
: |
Thrissur |
| Area |
: |
3,032
Km |
| Population |
: |
29,75,440 |
| Literacy |
: |
92.56
% |
Thrissur
Pooram - The spectacular
festival of light and colour, percussion and elephants
'Pooram
of Poorams'
Thrissur
Pooram - considered to be the mother of all poorams, is
a cultural highlight par
excellence, celebrated in the Malayalam month Medam (April/May).
The two century old
festival of spectacular procession of caparisoned elephants and
enthralling percussion performances in a never ending succession is
an 36 hours marathon event of incredible beauty, a feast for the eye
and the ear, unfolding between 6 am to 12 noon the other day.
Different from the usual temple festival, Thrissur Pooram is
participated and conducted by people across all barriers of religion
and caste.
This is explained with the genesis of the festival
Historical
Background
Before
the advent of Thrissur Pooram, the largest temple festival during
summer in central
Kerala was the one-day festival held
at Aarattupuzha, 12 km south of the town. Temples in and around
Thrissur were regular participants of this religious exercise until
they were once denied entry by the responsible chief of the
Peruvanam area of Cherpu, known for its Namboodiri supremacy.
As an act of reprisal and also in a bid to assuage their wounded
feelings, Prince Rama Varma (1751-1805), also known as Sakthan
Thampuran and enthroned as the ruler of the erstwhile Cochin state
invited all these temples to bring their deities to Thrissur where
they could pay obeiance to Lord (Sri) Vakunnathan, the deity of the
Vadakunnathan temple. Further he directed the main temples of
Thrissur, Thruvambadi and Pamamekkavu, to extend all help and
support to these temples. It is this historical background that
determines the course of the Pooram program and it is specifically
the ruler's antipathy to the brahmin aristocracy to open Thrissur
pooram for the common man.
Religious
Background
Adhering
to the medieval Peruvanam tradition, the festival is confined to the
temples of Devi
(goddess) and Sastha (divine combination of Shiva and Vishnu).
Ten deities from the neighboring temples pay obeisance to the
presiding deiety of Thrissur and only spectator of the Pooram
events, Lord Siva at the Sree Vadakkunnathan temple, situated
in the heart of the town.
Principle participants are Paramekkavu and Tiruvambadi, close to the
Vadakunnathan temple.
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