Attukal Pongal Festival (Attukal
Ponkala) is a world famous annual festival celebrated at Attukal Bhagavathy
Temple in Trivandrum, Kerala. Attukal Pongala is a 10 day festival which starts
from the Bharani day on the Karthika nakshatra of the Malayalam month of
Makaram - Kumbham (February - March) and ends with the sacrificial offering
known as Kuruthitharpanam at night. Attukala Pongala Mahotsavam, is an exclusive
women’s only festival, which has entered the Guinness Book of World Records for
being the World’s largest religious gathering of women. Attukal Bhagavathy
Temple is called as the ‘Sabarimala of Women’.
Attukal Pongala
Celebrations
The 9th day of the ten day festival
is the Pongala day. 'Pongala' literally means “to boil over” and is an offering
of boiled rice in earthern pot to Attukal Amma, an incarnation of Goddess
Parvathi Devi, the presiding deity of Attukal Bhagawathy Temple. Women prepare
Pongala Payasam, a sweet offering of boiled rice with jaggery, coconut gratings, nuts and raisins in earthen pots.
Some people also prepare other sweet dishes like therali appam, elayappam,
panchamrutam, and mandaputtu (prepared with rice powder and jaggery).
Every year more than a million women
from different parts of India and world gather at the temple premises and in
the temple vicinity to offer Pongala to Attukal Amma. Devotees who gather to
offer Pongala to Attukal devi increases in numbers every year. The rush is so
intense that the entire Trivandrum City, about 5 km radius around the Attukal
temple, becomes the holy grounds for women to offer Pongala nivedyam to
Goddess. From temple grounds to courtyards of houses, to bus station and
railway station to public roads one can see only devotees offering Pongala to
Attukal Devi.
The Pongala cooking rituals starts
around 10.30 in the morning and by noon the ponkala would be ready. The
ceremony concludes at around 2.30 PM when the temple priests starts sprinkling
of holy water (theertham) on the Pongala payasam offered by devotees. The
Flying Club of Thiruvananthapuram sends a helicopter around the area to shower
flowers to the honour of the Goddess.
Let us all pray for the blessings of
Attukal Amma
"Sarva Mangala
Mangalie Sive Sarvardha Sadhike
Saraneye Thryambake
Devi Narayani Namo Sthuthe"
Attukal
Pongala ritual held at
the Attukal Bhagavathy Temple inTrivandrum, Kerala, is
noted for the largest gathering of women in a single place on a single day in
the world. Attukal Pongala 2013 date is February 26. Attukal Bhagavathy
is an incarnation of Goddess Shakti and the Attukal Temple is
known as the Sabarimala of women.
The
Pongala festival will commence when the idol of the Devi will be embellished
with ‘kappu.’
The world
famous Attukal Pongala is on February 26, 2013. Pongala ritual commences at
10:30 AM on February 25. Pongala will be offered to Goddess at 14:30
hrs.
A
unique Hindu festival, Attukal Pongala is an annual congregation of more than a
million women to offer Pongala to Attukal Devi, an incarnation of Shakti, the
Mother Goddess in Hinduism. Pongala, or Ponkala, is an offering of boiled rice
in earthern pot.
Attukala Pongala has entered the Guinness Book of World Records as the
largest gathering of women in the world.Attukal Temple is located
in Trivandrum, Kerala, and the deity is popularly referred as Attukal Amma.
Attukal Pongala takes place during the Malayam month of Kumbham (February-March). Millions of women gather on the day to cook Pongala. They arrive from different parts of India and from around the world. Each woman makes a hearth and cooks Pongala. Women also cook sweet dishes made out of jaggery and rice powder like – mandaputtu, appam and therali. The cooking ritual begins around 10.30 in morning and is completed with the sprinkling of theertham (sacred water from the temple) around 1530 hrs.
Attukal Pongala takes place during the Malayam month of Kumbham (February-March). Millions of women gather on the day to cook Pongala. They arrive from different parts of India and from around the world. Each woman makes a hearth and cooks Pongala. Women also cook sweet dishes made out of jaggery and rice powder like – mandaputtu, appam and therali. The cooking ritual begins around 10.30 in morning and is completed with the sprinkling of theertham (sacred water from the temple) around 1530 hrs.
Every Hindu festival has the backing of a myth and Attuka Devi’s is
associated with the Shakti cult particularly the story of Kannaki.
Significance of Attukal Pongala
Without any persuasion or advertisement, more than a million women assemble
in the Indian southern city of Trivandrum in Kerala on the day when Pooram
Nakshatram and Poornima coincides in the Malayalam month of Kumbham (February -
March). In 2013, Attukal Pongala is on February 26. Their sole aim is
to cook rice with jaggery and coconut for Attukal Amma and seek the blessings
of the Goddess who is the incarnation of Kannagi.
Attukal Pongala is held on the ninth day of the 10-day festival at
theAttukal Bhagavathy Temple. The goddess worshipped at Attukal
temple is Kannagi who is an incarnation of Goddess Parvati, the consort of Lord
Shiva.
Kannagi is the heroine of famous Tamil poem Silappathikaram - the Epic of
the Anklet. The story has it that Kannagi’s husband Kovalan was unjustly put to
death by the ruler of Madurai for stealing the anklet of the queen.
Kannagi proves the innocence of her husband at the court and in anger sets the
entire Madurai city on fire. She then leaves the city and on her way
to Kodungalloor shrine stops at Attukal.
It is said that the Goddess appeared as a child before an elderly man who
was performing his evening oblations at the Killi River. The child
wanted to cross the river but the old man was surprised to see a small girl at
that odd time. So, he helped her in crossing the river and decided to take her
home. Couple of minutes after reaching home, the young girl was not to be seen.
During that night, Goddess appeared in the dream of the old man and told him
that she had drawn three lines in a sacred grove nearby and she would like to
reside there. Next morning, the old man went to the place and to his surprise
found three marks at the suggested place. He built a small temple there and as
time passed the Goddess brought prosperity to the region and the local people
renovated the shrine to the present status.
People believe that the Goddess showers her blessings on women and
children. She suffered injustice and her suffering symbolizes the suffering of
women in all
ages. The goddess providesstrength to overcome the numerous impediments.
Children like her because she appeared in the form of a child and the
Goddess has a special place for children in her mind.
Record books have been rewritten by this unique gathering of women. Some
people call it the Kumbh Mela of South India and for some the temple
is the Sabarimala of women. Words often fail to catch true spirit of the
thousands of women who sit on the roads of Trivandrum city making
porridge for the Goddess.
Why do women gather in such large numbers? Most of the women make pongala to receive the blessings of Amma. Some do it for
the welfare of her family. Some do it for favors received. Some do it for
material gains. Some do it routinely. Each woman has a reason of her own. It is
said that Attukal Amma never disappoints her devotees.
From a temple ritual, Attukal Pongala has now transformed
into a celebration of womanhood. It is the celebration of Shakti – the one
Mother, creator of all things or the primeval energy of the Universe that
derives all divine and cosmic evolution. From her everything that exists was
born to her all things will return. All animate and inanimate are her creations
and she sustains them. She has a myriad forms - loving mother, girl, lover,
sister, wife and the terrible that can annihilate. It is this Shakti, the great
Mother goddess known by countless names, that is worshipped by millions of her
representatives on the Earth on Attukal Pongala.
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