THRISSUR POORAM-2013
Sea of humanity at Pooram
22-04-2013
What is
Pooram all about? It marks the procession of deities of the Thiruvambadi and
Paramekkavu temples to the premises of the Sree Vadakkunnathan temple. It
offers the best traditional music (Chembada Melam, Pandi Melam, and
Panchavadyam).Experts Annamanada Parameswara Marar, Peruvanam Kuttan Marar, and
Kizhakoottu Marar, who helm the ensembles, are cult heroes in Thrissur.The only
others who enjoy a similar following at Pooram are elephants, 30 of which add a
touch of grandeur to the main parade in the evening and to the ‘Kudamattom’
(display of colourful umbrellas). The city blushed as the rays of the sun
knifed through huge crowds flowing into the venues for ‘Madathil Varavu,’ a
procession, and ‘Ilanjithara Melam,’ an ensemble staged under an Ilanji tree. Those
who come in late need not be pampered with a recap. All that rolls from dawn to
dusk goes for a repeat at night. The drummers would re-enter, their hair
tousled by the grind under the sun now slicked back and their sweat wiped off.
The elephants trundle back, accoutrements in place, after chewing up mountains
of watermelon, foliage, and sugarcane. Holding cages with parakeets that turn
cards, fortune-tellers buttonhole visitors. The answers are predictable
(“Goddess Mahalakshmi will call on you!” or “You will meet your true love
soon”).
Wayside
hawkers sweat it out to cater to revellers making a beeline for peanuts, chilli
baji, scoops of ice-cream, plateful of fruits and cucumber, and for a new
arrival on carnival grounds, Kulukki Sarbath, the good old lemonade in a bubbly
new avatar.The wait for the early morning fireworks, fighting sleep and
mosquitoes, would test your patience. Yawn. Blink. Stare. And there would be a
loud boom in the horizon. A staccato crackle of small explosion rocks the sky.
The festival is now complete.
Prof. John Kurakar
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Prof John Kurakar