[The author, Prof Gurukkal, an eminent historian and social scientist, is a
former vice-chancellor of MG University, Kottayam.

《*Invented Rituals:* The ban on the entry of women between the ages of 10
and 50 was introduced in 1991 through a court verdict, presuming that
menstruation precluded the possibility of their observance of purity for 41
days, and that Ayyappa, a celibate, would not like young women. But there
is neither ritual sanctity nor scientific justification for this
restriction. It’s true that Savarna households observed menstrual pollution
and abstained from entering holy places during their periods. But
menstruation was auspicious and symbolic of fertility for the tribals, who
had flocked the temple with their women and children of all age groups till
the ’60s. There is also archival evidence of young savarna women from the
Travancore region entering the temple till the ’80s.
...
The fact that Sabarimala is open to people of all castes, creeds and
religions is being systematically revamped through the imposition of new
rules and ‘conventions’. During the pilgrimage, Ayyappa devotees en route
to Sabarimala pay homage to the Vavar mosque at Erumely. Many go to the
Arthunkal church as well during their pilgrimage.》]

https://www.outlookindia.com/magazine/story/yes-sabarimala-is-in-peril-but-not-the-way-you-think/300818?utm_source=amp&utm_medium=fb&utm_campaign=amp&fbclid=IwAR2WPM5AbZ2pkBb6kbbIdqznHo31jHfowk24OFT5-Dy0DlvV3xiu0BTQEEg

Yes, Sabarimala Is In Peril, But Not The Way You Think
For one, the pilgrimage has become a billionaire enterprise that ravages
the ecology -- feeding off a phenomenal surge of middle-class piety.
Equally crucially, it also kills the real tradition of ritual openness and
social flexibility.

RAJAN GURUKKAL

FLORAL
Ayyappa idol at a Kannur temple

Sabarimala, named after Sabari, an epic vestal known for her austere
penance to attain Lord Rama’s blessings, and now world-renowned for the
Ayyappa temple perched on it, is a beautiful hillock of the Periyar Tiger
Reserve on the Kerala side of the Western Ghats. Originally a cult spot of
the local forest-dwellers’ protector deity, Ayyanar, it became a small
shrine of Ayyappa around the 15th century.

Legend says Ayyappa was a prince of the nearby ruling house and had done
penance until he was dissolved into the tutelary deity, worshipped by the
local avarna castes. An insignificant shrine inside deep forest, obviously
with no daily rituals, it used to be visited only annually during the
Makara Sankramana (January-February), by tribal people like Malampantaram,
Ullatar, Mannan, Narikkuravar etc, a few avarnas settled along the fringes,
and some pilgrims from Tamil Nadu. A temple priest (Potti) engaged by the
Panthalam ruling house officiated the ritual on the day. Subsequently
surrendered to the Travancore ruling family, the shrine came under the
management of the Travancore Royal Devasvom Commisssion (TRDC), constituted
in 1810 by Rani Lakshmi Bai (1810-1815) on Col Munro’s advice, primarily
for revenue interest.

The Flood of Pilgrims: In June 1950, some poachers set ablaze the shrine at
Sabarimala and broke the idol of Ayyappa. The shrine remained ruined for
over a decade, though the pilgrimage continued as usual. A new temple was
erected under the Travancore Devasvom Board (TDB), which was formed in 1950
after dissolving the TRDC. Ever since, there has been a steady rise in the
number of pilgrims. It rose from around a thousand to several thousands in
the ’70s and ’80s. In the ’90s, it surpassed a lakh, and it’s a bit above
50 lakh today, though the TDB estimate goes to crores, indeed a hyperbole.
Corresponding with the growth of the pilgrim population, the number of
occasions of worship in a year multiplied. As of now, the temple is open
for 133 days in a year, providing a total of 1,431 hours for darshan. At a
time if 10 devotees secure darshan per second—it’s hard to let the pilgrims
linger too long before the sanctum—the pilgrims would total just 51,51,600.

Sabarimala, thus, now sees a phenomenal flow of middle-class pilgrims from
all over south India, and hence a huge influx of votive donations by way of
cash and gold. In the process, a temple and pilgrimage once dominated by
tribals and avarnas became completely dominated by savarna beliefs,
institutions, customs and practices. Far more than a pilgrimage, it is a
state-controlled billionaire enterprise today.

Invented Rituals: The ban on the entry of women between the ages of 10 and
50 was introduced in 1991 through a court verdict, presuming that
menstruation precluded the possibility of their observance of purity for 41
days, and that Ayyappa, a celibate, would not like young women. But there
is neither ritual sanctity nor scientific justification for this
restriction. It’s true that Savarna households observed menstrual pollution
and abstained from entering holy places during their periods. But
menstruation was auspicious and symbolic of fertility for the tribals, who
had flocked the temple with their women and children of all age groups till
the ’60s. There is also archival evidence of young savarna women from the
Travancore region entering the temple till the ’80s.

Thazhamon, a clan from Karnataka with little tradition of agamic rites,
gained authority over the temple.
Till recent times, the Sabarimala temple hardly followed the agamic
prescriptions (adapted from Vedic brahmana rites) common to other temples
maintaining purity under the ritual auth­ority of the Namboodiri Brahmins.
Therefore, the Namboodiri tantri (ritual authority) families of Vedic
tradition never bothered about this  temple in the forest with inferior
deities like Ayyan and Karuppaswamy, as not qualified for installation with
ashtabandha (eight ritual bonding objects) or amenable to purification
through agamic rites. Any of them would wonder whether an aut­hority in
agamic texts could dare to undertake the responsibility of sustaining the
purity of the Ayyappa temple with 18 hills as its boundary (prasada). It is
not accidental that Thazhamon, a migrant Potti family of south Karnataka
with little or no tradition of Vedic or agamic rites, was given ritual
aut­hority over the Ayyappa temple. Most legends and traditions about the
temple are fabrications of recent times. There is nothing permanent about
the tradition of rituals, for every tradition undergoes changes through
contingent reinterpretations or new inven­tions, although we celebrate it
as age-old. The Sabarimala tradition is no exception to this universally
ack­nowledged sociological phenomenon.

Savarna Domination: The defining trend in the process of the making of new
traditions was that of the systematic induction of savrana values of
exclusion and differentiation. This has been imp­airing the passion for
oneness and universal fraternity among pilgrims during their hazardous
journey to Sabarimala. There are now attempts through the same process to
upset the secular identity and religious symbiosis that Ayyappa’s
association with Vavar, a Muslim, and with the Arthunkal church
represented. They seek to destroy the flexibility and freedom involved in
the pilgrimage that facilitates convergence and transcendence of multiple
castes and religious identities.

The fact that Sabarimala is open to people of all castes, creeds and
religions is being systematically revamped through the imposition of new
rules and ‘conventions’. During the pilgrimage, Ayyappa devotees en route
to Sabarimala pay homage to the Vavar mosque at Erumely. Many go to the
Arthunkal church as well during their pilgrimage.

This universality, and a few other traits, are often taken to be indicative
of the Ayyappa cult having Buddhist antecedents. It makes little sense,
however, to make a Buddhist case based on the observance of celibacy, the
expression ‘Dharma Sasta’ and the chanting of ‘saranam.’ Dharma asta is
only a recent coinage, and the chanting of saranam has nothing to do with
the Buddhist charanam that denotes the vow for being a monk in the sangha.
Nor is there any archaeological indication at the site to support the
presumption. Further, Buddhist monastic establishments are found on rocky
terrain and are invariably along trade routes. Based on the tradition that
Nilakantha, one of the Avalokiteswaras of Buddhist mythology, was
consecrated on the Sahya mountain, some scholars have tried in vain to
identify Ayyappa with Nilakantha. Further, there is no trace of Buddhist
iconographic influence on the image of Ayyappa.

The Court Verdict: The TDB, under the pretext of yearning to meet the
urgent needs of pilgrims, has been pushing urban development right into the
core of the tiger reserve, totally forgetful of the forest environment and
regulations thereof. This has involved deforestation and diversion of
forest land, and utter violation of the Kerala Forest Act 1961, Wildlife
Protection Act 1972, and Forest Conservation Act 1980. Violation of Supreme
Court verdicts is not new to Sabarimala. In fact, it is the site of a whole
series of violations—of a corresponding series of court judgements,
including those of the Supreme Court.

There are several court judgements against illegal constructions at the
Sannidhanam (main temple complex). Apex court orders in WP(C) No. 202/95,
WP(C) 212/2001 and Letter no. F. No. 8-70/2005-FC dated October 24, 2005,
of the Central Government and GO (Rt) 594/05/F7WLD dt. 31-10-2005 of the
State Government and Supreme Court Order I.A. No. 1373 in WP (C) No. 202 of
1995 have banned the diversion of forest land. It was in the wake of the
TDB’s reckless development plans that the Union ministry of environment and
forests got the master plan prepared and done. The Supreme Court enforces
it. In fact, the court has ordered that all guest houses, donated
structures and other accommodations at the Sannidhanam be closed down and
demolished in due course. The court orders have also disallowed any more
constructions in the enclave.

There is gross distributive injustice in the land use at the Sannidhanam as
well as in the leased land. Of the total leased land, 14.6 per cent is
privatised for the use of just 9.5 per cent of the total pilgrims, and 3.4
per cent is extremely privatised for the use of only 0.1 per cent! The
granting of permission to build donated houses at the Sannidhanam is not
only a major violation of the lease contract but also a most unjust use of
public land. VIPs and elite pilgrims have appropriated public space for
satisfying their personal needs—at the expense of ordinary people. This
does violence to the original ethos of Sabarimala—one of its striking
features had been its egalitarianism, natural to people moving through a
jungle, completely forgetting social differences and hierarchies.

And now, the Supreme Court judgment allowing women’s entry irrespective of
age is facing outright violation. People of the Panthalam house, ignorant
of the history of their custodianship transfer to Travancore, and the
Thazhamon tantri, equally ignorant of the implications of the judgment, are
making sub-judice statements. So are other priests of the temple.
Politicians, with one eye on votes, are stooping to the same level of
constitutional ignorance. Sabarimala is encountering a phase of increasing
rigidity, depriving it of its past tradition of ritual flexibility and
social freedom.

(Prof Gurukkal, an eminent historian and social scientist, is a former
vice-chancellor of MG University, Kottayam)


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Peace Is Doable

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