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Spring:
The season to celebrate
Kerala wakes up to some festival or the other every day of the year.
But the spring months bring along a special air of festivities.
Over a hundred festivals are celebrated in Kerala across the Malayalam
months of Kunibham. (Aquarius), Meenam (Pisces) and Medam (Aries).
Apart from world renowned events like the Thrissur Pooram, Kerala
celebrates scores of festivals which are equally Important and exotic.
This brochure features five of the major spring festivals that showcase
the spectacular elephant pageants of Kerala: Thaipooya Mabotsavam
at Koorkancherry, Pooram at Sree Chinakathoor Bhagavathy Temple,
Uthralikavu Pooram at Sree Ruthira Mahakalikavu Temple, Arattupuzha
Pooram and Nenara-Vallangi Vela.
The glossary of the Malayalam terms used, given at the end of the
brochure, will help you get a more colourful picture of the festivities.
Pooram:
When the gods meet
The legends and myths behind each festival of Kerala are many, varied
and equally interesting. Since
the word pooram literally means a group or a meeting, it was believed
that every year the dynastic gods and goddesses of neighbouring
provinces met together for a day of celebrations. This usually happened
on the pooram asterism of one of the spring months.
The
gods and their entourage arrived for the meeting on colourfully
decorated tuskers. Even today, the converging of these divine processions
at the festival venue is an awe inspiring sight. The pooram draws
to a close with mindblowing Fireworks displays In the evening and
In the wee hours of the next morning.
Some of the main pooram celebrations are at Arattupuzha, Thrissur,
Uthrallkavu, Cheerarnkulangara, Pariyanampetta, Mannarkad, Perumanam,
Aryankavu, Mangottu, Medarnkulangara, Kodikal, Thirumandhamkunnu
etc.
Vela: To please the Mother Goddess
Vela is usually celebrated in the temples of the Devi (Mother Goddess
also known as Durga, Kali or Bhagavathy). In addition to all the
festivities of pooram, this event features a velakali (a ritual
martial art) performance by the local people. Two of the more popular
vela celebrations are at Nenmmara-Vallangi and Kannambra.
The
elephant pageant. Kerala's very own spectacle
No
celebration in Kerala is complete without an elephant pageant. The
gentle giant has been revered like divinity and accorded the privilege
of escorting the numerous gods and goddesses of this land. Until
a few years ago many well-to-do families In Kerala owned an elephant
which was considered a member of the household.
Most festivals of Kerala feature spectacular elephant processions.
The pooram and (,Pln1 festivals are the best occasions to watch
the majestic tuskers in all their caparisoned splendour. Colourfully
decked up elephants numbering fifteen to hundred or more line up
on the temple premises. With mahouts atop them, holding high tinselled
silk parasols (muthukuda) and swaying white tufts (venchamaram)
and peacock feather fans (aalavattom) to the rhythm of the temple
orchestra.
An elephant pageant is usually accompanied by the panchavadyam (the
traditional five instrument musical ensemble) which works up to
a frenzy as the kudamattam ritual (the synchronised changing of
the parasols atop the tuskers) gathers speed.
Koorrkancherry Thaipoova Mahotsavam
Venue : Sree Maheswara Temple, Koorkancherry, Thrissur Access : The temple is just a two km drive from
Thrissur town. Regular bus / taxi services are available. Nearest
airport: Cochin International Airport, Nedumbassery, 58 km from
Thrissur.
This annual seven day festival, also referred to as Thaipooya Kavadiyattam,
paints the town in a riot of colours. Festivities on the pooram
day begins with the devotional rites at four o'clock in the morning.
Later, processions of devotees from various neighbouring regions,
carrying the exotic kavadi on their shoulders, stream into the temple
courtyard. Each group then dances with the kavadis. The kavadiyattam
goes on until late afternoon. This is followed by the ceremonial
procession of the deity escorted by majestically caparisoned elephants,
to the accompaniment of the nadaswaram (the long horn typical of
Kerala). Folk arts like karakkattom and mayilattam are presented
on the temple premises in the evenings.
Chinakathoor
Pooram
Venue
: Sree Chinakathoor Bhagavathy Temple Palappuram, Palakkad Access : The temple is only 5 km from Ottappalam
town in Palakkad. Frequent buses and taxi services are available.
Nearest airport : Coimbatore, 55 km from Palakkad.
The ceremonial procession at the festival features 55 tuskers. Festival
evenings come alive with the presentation of traditional music and
art forms like panchava panchavadyan, vellattu, theyyam/thira, pootham,
kaalavela, kuthiravela, karivela, andi velan etc. An interesting
feature of the celebrations here is the evening tholpavakoothu (puppet
show) performance which begins 17 days prior to the festival.
Utharalikavu Pooram
Venue: Sree Ruthira Mahakalikavu Temple, Parithipray, Vadakancherry,
Thrissur
Access : The temple is 2 km from Vadakancherry on the way to Shornur.
Nearest airport: Cochin International Airport, Nedumbassery, 58
km from Thrissur.
This is on of the most important festivals in central Kerala. Colourful
elephant processions accompanied by panchavadyam and pandimelam,
during the (day and at night, mark the eight day long celebrations.
Evenings are eventful with ritual and folk art performances that
go on until dawn. The highlight of the festival is the all night
pooram pageant on the concluding day. The rituals are conducted
In the glow of the traditional temple torches.
Arattupuzha
Pooram
Venue : Arattupuzha Temple, Thrissur Access : The temple is 14 km from Thrissur town.
There are frequent buses and taxi services to the temple. Nearest
airport: Cochin International Airport, Nedumbassery, 58 km from
Thrissur.
Arattupuzha Pooram is the oldest and the most spectacular of the
pooram festivals of Kerala. It is believed that on this day a hundred
and one gods and goddesses of the neighbouring villages visited
Sree Ayyappan, the presiding deity of the Arattupuzha Temple. Even
today, 61 elephants feature in the pooram procession on the sixth
day of the seven day festival. Panchavadyam, nadaswaram, pancharimelam
and pandimelan add to the festive tempo. The arattu (holy bath of
the idol of the deity) ritual is performed with great pomp and gaiety
in Arattupuzha river on the following day.
Nenmara - Vallangi Vela
Venue : Sree Nellikulangara Bhagavathy Temple,
Kodakara, Palakkad Access : 48 km from Thrissur. Nearest airport :
Cochin International Airport, Nedumbassery, 58km from Thrissur.
The Nenmara-Vallangi Vela, the greatest vela festival in Kerala,
is a 20 day celebration. Kodiyettam (the ceremonial flag hoisting)
marks the beginning of the festival. The concluding day, the most
auspicious day of the festival, features an unparalleled spectacle.
Legends say that on this day the patron deities of the two villages
- Nenmara and Vallangi - visit each other.
Thirty bejewelled tuskers from the two villages assemble under brightly
decorated canopies on the premises of the Nellikulangara Bhagavathy
Temple, to mark the great occasion. The pageant is accompanied by
panchavadyam, pandimelan and folk arts. The all night celebrations
draw to a close with a splendid fireworks display in the small hours
of the morning.