Monday, April 11, 2011

Unique Vedic ritual starts in Kerala today -- the pioneer – 4.4.11


PNS | Thrissur

The air of Panjal in Kerala’s Thrissur district, a tiny village that values its agrarian traditions even in this modern era, will reverberate with the chanting of the Suktas from the 4,000-year-old Vedas for 12 days starting Monday with the beginning of Athirathram, a Vedic ritual.

Athirathram will be performed in Panjal from Monday to April 15, the auspicious Vishu day, in the same way it used to be performed by the ancestors four millennia ago. All articles, implements, pots, platforms and the venue itself would conform to those used in by the Vedic performers of that era.

Panjal had hosted an Athirathram before this in 1975 in the presence of scholars and scientists from several countries including the US. Since then only two other Athirathrams had been held in Kerala. A Yaga was held in Kundoor in Thrissur district in 1990 and the other was at Kizhakkanchery in Palakkad district in 2006.

The goal of Athirathram 2011 is promotion of universal harmony, peace, prosperity and spiritual enlightenment, according to organisers Varthathe Trust based in Ottapalam, Palakkad. The Yaga cuts through the barriers of caste, religion, race, colour and sex thus making it a union of humanity literally though it is performed by Kerala Brahmins.

The Yagasala, the venue of the Athirathram, has already been prepared in the paddy fields adjacent to the Lakshmi Narayana Temple at Panjal. This is the same place where Athirathram 1975 was performed. Eighteen Brahmin priests and their 25 associates would participate the Yaga.

Puthilathu Ramanujan Somayajippadu, who had headed a Soma Yaga in 2003, would adorn the position of Yajamanan (head of the Yaga) at the Athirathram and Dhanya Pathanadi will be Yajamana Patni. Experts from various fields have already reached Thrissur to study the influence of Athirathram on Nature and organisms.

During the Yaga, a team of scientists will conduct research into the impact of the Vedic chants and the fire ritual on the atmosphere. The Yaga would present the opportunity to explore the scientific implications on Nature, mankind and all other organisms, said Dr Sivakaran Namboothiri, a trustee of Varthathe and a participant in the Athirathram.

The preparations for the Yaga, which the Varthathe Trust expects to cost `15 million, had started almost a year back. The tedious tasks of making earthen pots and wooden implements – metal is not at all used in any of the Yaga-associated rituals – were completed well in advance.

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