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Madurai the temple city

Places of Worship

A visit to Madurai to the famous Meenakshi temple had been on the cards for about 6 months. So we (my mother and I) took the Pandyan Express which leaves Chennai at 19.50 and we reached at 7.25 AM (railway standard time – late, as usual!). A quick check-in at the College House (almost everybody recommended this place, its close to the railway station and the temples) and we left to the temple at 9.45 AM. A 5-minute walk and there we were inside the grand, huge temple complex.

A first time visitor can get confused without a guide (there are enough of them around). There are four huge gopurams (entrances-towers) and you could be all mixed up while wandering inside the awesome proportions of the koil. For someone whose aim is bhakthi, it will take something like 2 hours for a whirlwind tour to visit every little shrine inside the huge temple. But a whole day will not be enough for connoisseurs of art, to admire the intricate and elaborate architecture of this 12th century temple. 

Since we were short of time, we just followed the signboards (mercifully they were there, but still we managed to get mixed-up) and walked briskly to the sanctum sanctorum (you see the Goddess first and then Sundareswarar, her husband). A Rs.10 special ticket ensured us quick and close darshan of the deity (the idol is quite small) and then we moved to the Lord. He is in the linga form with a serpent providing shade to him (darshan can be had as close as 5 ft away here whereas it was earlier the case too with the Goddess, before the bomb threats by Muslim fundamentalists).

The Legend: Once when Indra, the king of the Devas, was burdened with Brahmahathi (killing of a Brahmin), he had to do penance at various shrines to be expiated from the sin. While passing through the Kadamba forest of Madurai, he was suddenly purified. His search for the cause ended with the finding of a swayambu (naturally formed) lingam under a Kadamba tree. He worshipped the deity using golden lotus flowers, built a vimanam and went back to Devaloka.

When Kulasekara Pandyan came to know about this shrine, he built a proper temple and the city of Madurai became the famous capital of the Pandyas. After him, Malayadwaja Pandyan came to the throne. Since he was childless, he performed a yagna in which a 3-year old girl appeared. The girl, Thadathagai (was Parvati herself, consort of Lord Shiva) grew up like a prince and conquered neighbouring kingdoms and went on to Mount Kailash. There she met Shiva and he came down to marry her and they ruled for sometime. After they crowned their son, Ugra Pandyan (incarnation of Muruga) they assumed divine forms as Sundareswarar and Meenakshi.

A little history: The origin of the temple goes back to legendary times. Only a Shiva shrine 

was there in the 7th  century A.D. The Meenakshi shrine was built during the reign of Chadayavarman Sundara Pandyan in the 12th century A.D. The 9-storied towers came up between 13-16th centuries A.D. When Madurai came under the Nayaka rulers for the next 200 years, a number of mandapams were built apart from additions like the Hall of 1000 pillars (985 at present with exquisite carvings, so arranged that from whichever angle one views, they appear in a straight line), Ashta Shakthi Mandapam, Puthu Mandapam (the summer resort of the Goddess and her Lord), Vandiyoor Theppakkulam (an 8-ft. high Vinayaka idol was found here when Thirumalai Nayakar, one of the kings of Madurai was getting this ready), Nayakar Mahal, etc.

The temple as it stands today was built between 12-18th centuries. From 1877, renovations, repairs and restoration of paintings on the ceilings have been going on. Other sites to visit here are the Musical Pillars, Museum and Mangayarkarasi Mandapam.

Other places around: Alagar koil (we had no time to visit) 19 kms. East of Madurai is a beautiful Vishnu temple amidst an enchanting mountain. The deity is bathed with water from a spring, 3 kms. away because any other water blackens the idol.

Thiruparankundram
: Dating back to 2nd century B.C., and located 10 kms. South of Madurai, it is one of the ‘Aarupadaiveedu’, the 6 Muruga temples in the state. It is a cave temple where Muruga married Deivayaanai, after slaying the demon. There are separate shrines in a line for Shiva, Vishnu, Durga and Vinayaka. A hillock is attached to the temple, the rock from which the temple is said to have been built. There are frequent buses plying to and from Madurai though an autowallah can charge you Rs.80 (or more if you are gullible) for a round trip.

Koodal Azhagar Koil: One of the 108 Divyadesams of the Vaishnavites, the idols of Vishnu and Lakshmi are huge and beautiful.

Poets used to meet here and sing the praise of the Lord, hence the name. The temple finds mention in Sangam literature dating back to 2000 years. The tower consists of 3 tiers depicting Vishnu in 3 posture, sitting, standing and reclining. The shadow of the vimanam never falls on the ground. It is one of the few temples in the country built in tiers.

Palzhamudircholai: One of the 6 temples dedicated to Lord Muruga. We did not have time to go there or the Madana Gopal temple, which is close to the Azhagar koil.

Madurai is truly a Temple City, steeped in South Indian culture and rich and colourful history.

The city is well connected by air, train and road from all the districts in Tamilnadu. It is located about 497 kms. from Chennai and has a number of trains passing through.

Padma Subiah


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