*Authenticity not confirmed.*

Happy Krishna jayanthi...

 SRI  PADMANABHASAWMY  TEMPLE,  TRIVANDRUM  And   SIR  THOMAS  MUNRO,
GOVERNOR  of  MADRAS


Hinduism, also called Sanathana Dharma, is universal in application and
does not make any difference between one religion and the other. All the
devotees who believe and follow the tenets of Hinduism are respected and
rewarded alike. The foregoing is a classic example of an Englishman by name
Sir Thomas Munro [1761-1827] who was the Governor of Madras and his
devotional attachment to Sri Padmanabha Swamy Temple at Trivandrum [then
called Travancore].


When India was ruled by the British, there were so many princely states
like Mysore, Rajasthan, Travancore etc which were directly ruled by the
respective Maharajas who owed allegiance to the British throne.  The
erstwhile Maharajas of Travancore ruled the State in the belief that it was
their ‘Divine Right to Rule’. They were simultaneously aware of the fact
that the Right to Rule entirely depended on their ability to rule ‘rightly’
in keeping with the tenets of Hindu Dharma or Raja Dharma as it is called
in Sanskrit. They also knew that it was Divinity that gave them the power
to rule.
In 1750, King Martanda Varma, the most powerful of the Travancore rulers,
pledged that he and his descendents would serve the kingdom as servants of
Lord Padmanabha [Padmanabha Dasa], the Lord being the King. The British had
observed the tradition and honoured the Lord with a 21-gun salute****


When the Indian states were merged, Independent India appointed the
Travancore royal head as the Raj Pramukh; but he preferred to be known as
Padmanabha Dasa, and not as Raja Pramukh. The government had continued to
honour the tradition of 21 gun-salutes to the Lord till 1970 when, along
with the abolition of princely titles, the honour of the Lord was
withdrawn! Sri Padmanabha Swamy Temple, as seen today, was built by
Maharaja Martanda Varma in 1773. Dedicated to Lord Vishnu, the Temple has
an 18 feet long idol and a seven-tier Gopuram.
Sometime in the early 19th century, the State was ruled by Maharaja
Martanda Varma. When he passed away in 1813 he had no male heir to succeed
him to the throne. So, the British Government approved of a provisional
arrangement to rule the State by making his wife Rani Lakshmibai as a
Regent. This was an immediate and temporary arrangement till a final
decision was taken about the successor.  At that time Thomas Munro who was
stationed at Travancore was representing the British Government as Dewan.of
Travancore. After sometime, the Governor General of India asked Munro to
intimate the name of a suitable successor.  Munro could not give an
immediate reply as he knew that at that time Rani Lakshmibai was carrying
and the delivery was expected soon.  If the Rani failed to deliver a male
child, the Travancore State, as per the Doctrine of Succession, would lapse
to the British throne.When a final reminder came from the Governor General
for an immediate reply and the decision could not brook any delay, Munro
was in a real fix. The Queen had not yet delivered. However, as Munro had
great respect to Hinduism and believed in the Divinity of Lord Padmanabha
and as he was also keen on continuing the lineage of the Maharaja, he
prayed to Lord Padmanabha and sent a letter to the Governor General saying
that the Queen had delivered a male child, even though no delivery had
taken place.  He took a great risk of uttering a lie, guided by an inner
voice that divine intervention would prove him true. Munro spent sleepless
nights after sending the letter. One fine morning he went on horseback to
the East Fort at Travancore and facing the Lord murmured “O Lord! I believe
you are omnipotent. I adore you.  Please grant me a boon. Let Her Highness
deliver a male child. There should not be a gap in your Slave Kings. Bless
Her Highness with a male child for the throne”. He further added “if it is
true that you are there, grant me my boon. If it is not granted, I cannot
say what I will do”. After his prayer, Munro returned to the Residency, his
official residence. Within a few minutes, he heard the news that Her
Highness had delivered a male child. The joy of the Resident knew no
bounds. He cried in ecstasy “O Lord Padmanabha! You are a reality. You are
very much there in flesh and blood”****


The male child that was born to Rani Lakshmibai in 1813 was none other than
the most famous ruler of the State who later ascended the throne of
Travancore as Swathi Tirunal Maharaja—one of the greatest  composers of
Carnatic music. Besides music, His Highness was highly learned in Sanskrit,
poetry and other fine arts. Though His Highness died at the young age of 34
years, he ruled the State for nearly 18 years and was a master of 13
languages. Apart from music compositions, he has written a book on “The
Theory of Music” in his own handwriting which is preserved even today in
the Department of Oriental Studies, Trivandrum. Munro became an ardent
devotee of Lord Padmanabha and personally undertook the work of temple
administration. The code he evolved in Temple Administration is even now
followed in several temples of that region.
  As a digression, it may be noted that when Munro first came to India and
took service under the British Government in 1801, he was for some time
looking after the administration of some of the districts in the South,
ceded by the Nizam of Hyderabad. In this capacity, he was once entrusted
with the job of bringing the land on which the famous Sri Raghavendra Swamy
Math is situated in Mantralaya under the control and jurisdiction of the
East India Company under the Permanent Settlement Act. When this order came
to the notice of the local citizens, many natives and devotees of the Math
vehemently opposed the move as they thought it would be a religious
sacrilege for a foreign government to encroach upon the holy premises of
the Math. They approached Munro with their grievance. Munro decided to
visit Mantralaya personally and check about the religious sanctity of the
Math. It is said that when he reached the Math premises, removed his shoes
and was about to enter the Math, Sri Raghavendra Swamy himself appeared
before him in a vision and it is further said that both became involved in
a conversation. However, no one knew about this till the fact was made
known by Munro himself. A subsequent issue of the Madras Government
Gazette, however, bears witness to this strange incident. It is also learnt
that soon after this incident, Munro was promoted as the Governor of Madras
Presidency in which capacity he got cancelled the earlier decision of the
British Government to annex Mantralaya. When the Math sent some consecrated
coloured rice [Mantrakshatha] to Munro as God’s Blessings on the occasion
of his elevation to the post of Governor, he received it with all humility
and reverence.
Sir Thomas Munro, Scottish by birth and Hindu at heart, died of Cholera in
India in 1827 when he was on tour of the Northern Districts.****

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