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- Newsgroups: misc.test
- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!ucla-cs!ucla-mic!ucla-physics!ramachan
- From: ramachan@physics.ucla.edu ('Sathyadev Ramachandran')
- Subject: this a t4est only you may read
- Message-ID: <1993Jan6.232624.21349@physics.ucla.edu>
- Organization: UCLA Department of Physics
- Distribution: ca
- Date: Wed, 6 Jan 93 23:26:24 GMT
- Lines: 116
-
-
- MEMORIES OF A TALAPOLI EVENING
-
-
-
- It was getting very late in the evening as the bus
- which I had taken from Triprayaar to Kodungallur slowly
- inched its way through the festive and crowded streets.
- The journey all the way from Kunnamkulam was tiring.
- The feeling of numbness, being constantly tossed at the
- whims of the bus driver at each sharp curve and his
- skillful manoeuvres in avoiding the most ominous looking
- pot-holes had its effect in a sense of nausea. Added to
- that was the constant thought that someone might want
- to pick up a conversation spoting a ten year old kid
- travelling all by himself. The questions were always the
- same mundane things one would normally ask a kid. Yet,it
- bothered me all the more as it took effort on my part to
- hide the fact that my Malayalam was at the most broken or
- as my cousins often reminded me that I spoke like a chettiar.
- Even as a kid I was no less conscious of my surroundings
- though I did not let it come in the way of enjoying such
- exchanges.
-
-
-
- As I alighted from the bus ,the surging crowds into the
- poorapamaba swept me along, with little choice I moved on
- anxiously. It was not until later that I realised that I had
- circumambulated the temple premises and was back where I had
- begun. All directional senses were lost on me and I quite
- reluctantly asked for help to get to Thekke Nada. The direction
- offered me required cutting across Ambalaparamba into a walkway
- lined on one side with ambassadors with the word "TOURIST"
- written in bold, and on the opposite an assortment of stores
- mostly clothes & textiles. A few yards down I could spot the
- vertical board reading "Nalanda" in malayalam which I had
- pictorially committed to memory and was my destination. As I
- heaved a sigh of relief, the thunder of the 'kathina' from
- temple yard jerked me .However hard I may try this was
- something I could never avoid and to this day I find it hard
- to forgive whoever had invented this form of offering to the
- lords. Even when one is given enough prior notice ,the absence
- of any form of spark or fire except the smoke and the upturned
- shell after the explosion keeps you in suspension which I find
- hard to accept.
-
- At Nalanda my uncle was waiting quite worried till he saw
- me doddering with the heavy bag I had over my shoulders . He
- mentioned that he had sent somebody to scout for me,a difficult
- task for talapoli day but for my blue & white uniform and maroon
- tie making me more conspicuous in the crowd. He said that the
- procession wouuld begin in another hour and that if I was hungry
- he could get me something to eat. I devoured the rava dosa from
- 'Arathi' which was delivered at my uncle's shop. Having regained
- some energy I set about pestering Panickerettan with questions
- about the procession. He was in his mid thirties, a jolly good
- fellow who singlehandedly took care of the printing press that
- my uncle owned,and foremost of all was easily accessible with a
- constant smile which seemed plastered on his face and eyes deep
- and bright. He would answer almost invariably in a few words or
- sentences any query teasing me into believing his narration
- which I did in any case with childlike faith.
-
- Far away the din of excitement and the feverish beats of the
- chenda could be heard. The light from the petromaxes relected of
- the the glistening metal bedecked on the forehead of the
- caparisoned jumbos. I counted nine in the distance as I waited
- anxiously for them to come closer to where I was perched. The
- panchavadyam got louder and my heart beat faster with music in
- my ears as I felt almost lifted to another world. I had earlier
- heard stories from my mother about the talapoli. Some infact
- pretty scary. There were incidents when in the past some elephant
- had run amok in town destroyed property and even killed it's
- brave and valiant mahout when he tried to calm the beast.
- Stories about one which had to be shot at the kottapuram kadavu
- after repeated attempts to get him back to the fold. I also
- believed that a panicky "madampottiya aana" elephant would never
- run forward, hence it was always safer to be in the front than the
- rear of a procession in case the worst happened. I wonder how I
- convinced myself of this simple safety precaution but it seemed
- assuring enough then.
-
- Bare chested the maraars had their chenda slung over their
- neck with thick white cloth twisted into rope and the mundu^ half
- a feet shy of their feet which probably gave them freedom to move
- quickly. Their hands playing the stretched leather in ectasy and
- their bodies gyrated to the beats of their drums.There were also
- people playing the long flute 'nadaswaram'. But what got my most
- attention as a child was the 'nettipattam'. That gold plated
- ornament on an otherwise spartan body seemed an amazing piece of
- art. The bulbous decoration along the rim of the nettipattam in
- regularity and the central grooves and more minor work which
- escaped my eyes looked quite surreal. There must be more to it
- than met my eye. At each stop of the procession there would be
- a show of gilt edged and multicolored 'kuda' and swift displays
- of white plume by the entourage atop the elephants. The synch-
- ronisation and variations thereof gave a visual effect pleasing
- to the eye. The elephant at the centre carried the deity with
- the priest holding on to it, offerings being made at each stop
- along the 'ezhunnullippu'.
-
- As the procession moved forward and was almost out of my
- sight I realised that my eyelids were drooping, having roamed
- around in guruvayur the entire afternoon with my Bethany seniors
- had taken its toll. I fell asleep on my chair and the colour and
- festivities continued in my dreams.
-
-
-
-
- --
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
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