
 'Aluntharali' - Appears and Blesses
"The Utsava in me known as the embodied form is
of two varieties - the stationery and the mobile"
(Vidyesvarasamhita v 19 - Sivapurana)
The Granite Utsava, a fixed personified image of the Divine, blesses us all and never leaves the temple.
The Aluntharali Utsava, the mobile personified deity, appears from out of the temple to bless us all.
Many years ago, on the final day of Karthigai Deepam, one of the
special holy days of the Hindu calendar, a small child visited the
Temple of Lord Arunachaleswarar. He walked around the vast Temple
watching the ceremony and sat for many hours in front of the holy
Garbagraha Shrine. From that time onwards the child's tender soul grew
in the light and joy of what he had first perceived on that holy day.
Thus, it came to pass, when the child had grown to manhood, he
would sometimes be asked to recall the impressions of his early life. It
was on one such occasion, when he was sitting with his disciples and he
was asked the reason for his great affection for the Maha Ther
Thiruvizha, that I had the great pleasure of sitting nearby and
listening to his words.This is what the wise master told his disciples:
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"One day, as
if by chance, I came to an out-of-the-way room in my parent's house, in
which all sorts of books and papers were piled up. On top of one these
piles there was a large heavy book bound in dark blue velvet with beaten
silver corners and silver clasps. I was very young, about six years old
at the time, but I managed to stand on a stool, stretch up and take the
book. I then took the book into my room, where I gently loosened the
clasps and opened the pages. Those broad, black letters and wonderful
pictures of far away places stared up at me, new and yet not as
strangers to my soul. I tell you, the book was like a deep lake of
memories from which two eyes of the past were looking up at me, begging
me to take a plunge into eternity. I knew then, from that very young
age, that one day I would visit some of the glorious temples and see the
Holy Ther Chariots depicted in that book.
As I
grew older and became more and more inquisitive, my parents, on the
advice of their elders, sent me to my uncle's home in Tiruvannamalai
some distance away from my native place. And, it was there, on one of
our holy Thiruvizha days, that I saw a Ther for the first time in
this earthly life. It brought back those early memories, making a
startling impact on my soul, as if something of great importance had
plunged deep within and was holding it in a vice like grip. I am sure
many devotees feel this inner contact when they hear the inner call.
Since that time I have taken part in many of the Lord's Ther Thiruvizhas, always trying to be there on the first day in time for the Kodi Atham,
the raising of the ceremonial flag. In some temples the festival lasts
for many days and all of them, whether they last for one day or more,
have brought great joy to my heart.
It is not unusual to see many Thers
on the streets at the same time. Always extremely awe-inspiring to see
devotees, sometimes thousands of them, out on the streets taking part,
offering up baskets of flowers, receiving God's blessing, and accepting
holy ash from gurukkals, who continuously repeat holy mantras as the Ther
moves around the holy route. The light in their eyes and the happiness
on their faces as they look at the beauty and the splendour of the
deities being taken around the streets never fails to amaze me.
Thers are rather like palanquins
used many years ago in the east, and also in the west, before the age
of the motor vehicle. They were used for carrying important individuals.
They were ornate covered booths held and supported by strong wooden
poles, carried by two or more men.
Thers
have also been likened to ancient brightly coloured horse driven
chariots. But, although beautiful prancing horses are often seen
sculptured on the front of a Ther, they are more like a palanquin, because even in this modern era the Ther is still moved around our streets by human hands. This is what makes the Maha Thiruvizha - great chariot festival so special.
There are numerous Ther Chariots,
most of them designed and built for a specific deity. There are
extremely ornate and brightly painted versions made of wood, and others,
including the Vahanams (vehicle) of the deities, can also be
made of precious metals and precious stones - garnets and rubies and
some with beautiful cut glass.
Thers
can be small booths which are easy to carry, while others can be
extremely large with massive wooden wheels, often without rubber tyres,
that have to be pushed and pulled up and down hilly roads and over rocks
and stones by devotees. It can often take many hours, sometimes even
days, to propel a large Maha Rahdam Ther around a giripradakshina route of a temple.

The smaller Thers are used within the inner and outer prakarams of the Temple. The larger Thers only in the outer prakaram (streets), where they are kept safely covered, usually near the Raja Gopuram of a temple, where they wait for the next annual Ther Thiruvizha.
Something extremely significant is taking place when the Aluntharali deity is taken from its holy shrine within the Temple and placed into the Ther Chariot for the yearly Thiruvizha. The Divine has given us the opportunity to take His mobile embodied Utsava image out of the temple and move with Him in a giripradakshina route around His temple through the streets of our towns and villages.
The Ther Thiruvizha festival is an active and demanding form of worship. When we walk with the Divine Ther
on the streets we are not sitting back taking a sedentary role, we are
truly taking an interactive social role and acknowledging that the
Divine is amongst us in this world of form. We can actually see the
Divine Aluntharali, image of Divinity, offer our devotion, receive the blessing and understand His commands. This is why the Maha Ther Thiruvizha is important for the spiritual development of the human race.
It is such an
enjoyable experience when we join with other devotees on such an active
holy walk. It is wonderful worshipping the Divine in the temple
and feeling the glowing camaraderie when we join together to lift His
Aluntharali image into the Ther. It's a wonderful sensation
holding onto the ropes and the poles, or even jumping on the back slabs
under the wooden wheels as we to start or halt a gigantic Maha Radham as it makes its slow progress around the giripradakshina
route. It is such a joyful feeling when we string flowers into garlands
ready to be placed around the Divine image, or take an active social
part ensuring the safety of other devotees, cooking mountains of food,
or playing a musical instrument and even dancing along the route. Yes,
we can join in so many joyful activities to make the Ther Thiruvizha a success.
There is no
greater love than when a man mingles with his fellow creatures, talks,
listens, gives and takes with them while at the same time embracing God
in the secrecy of the heart. When we join together for the Ther Thiruvizha we are doing all this. We are playing an active and social role and strengthening the bonds of unity, while
enthusiastically, at the same time, deeply acknowledging the Divine is in everything and is everywhere.
Of course, taking part in the Ther Thiruvizha
is extremely important, but it is not simply taking part in the
festival because it is the practice in our country of birth, or because
we are told that according to special traditions and rites we should do
so. It is much more than this.
Saiva Siddhantam
is a wonderful spiritual philosophical religious system, where
traditions and rites have always been essential for the progress of the
soul. Most of us love and value these holy traditions and we have
specially trained Gurukkals (priests) to ensure this correctness. It is because Saiva Siddhantam
also teaches that the conscious soul is not limited or bound to this
worldly life of time and space being self-giving to Sivan, that we must
comprehend that the Maha Ther Thiruvizha is more than just
ritual. Yes, the festival is a much more than this. It is a very special
time for the alienation from the egoism of the self and the development
of full realisation of God, where from the first to the last moment
Divine grace is needed, and will also be lavishly given to the earnest
devotee.
"Of what use, the agamas and the six religious sects?
Of what avail the yogas and their knowledge,
Who can know His supreme Form,
If He Himself does not possess me by the grace-form,
In Him".
(Uyyavanta - Tirukkalirruppatiyar)
The Ther Thiruvizha gives us the opportunity to walk with the
embodied image of God. It gives us the opportunity to walk with God in
this world of form while we are in the company of others. It vanquishes
error by giving us the opportunity to cleave to God and bind things of
this world to their roots in Divinity.
This is what the Ther Thiruvizha Festival
is about. And, what is more, it actually gives us the opportunity to
worship and hold onto the Divine. Not just in mere words, but actually
doing so. This comprehension may not offer the final end to our
suffering, but it is the finality of thraldom (enslavement). It is the
shaking of the Atma so that we can become free from the fetters. It is
the release that comes from the dismal of all that is worldly.
When the
conscious soul is self-giving to the Divine the ardour of ecstasy
appears within and fills the soul with joy. Have no doubt this will
happen. God's love, the cup of Divine grace (arul-catti), can be seen all around us during the Maha Ther Thiruvizha. All we need to do is look.
When the Divine decreed that His Utsava Aluntharali
mobile embodied image could be moved to bless us all, the Divine
removed the barriers that block our soul from seeing. The God's blessing
removes all that is corporeal and turns it into spirit so that the
world will no more be a troublesome place.
The Maha Ther Thiruvizha
has this uniqueness. The festival is special because it reveals itself
in our actions, which it consecrates, filling the soul with holy
significance. It allows us to walk the path of ascent step by step,
actually holding onto the rope of life. It allows us to become aflame
with fervour of Divinity. And, it allows us take command over our lives,
so that no outward event can intrude into this sanctity.
Yes, I tell you that the Maha Ther Thiruvizha
can do all this. But, we must become consciously faithful to all its
precepts. To just walk with bare feet, carry on our shoulders, or even
hold the Ther rope with our hands, cannot fully represent all the
conditions that were faithfully preserved for us by the ancients. We
have to learn to step beyond the ordinary, look deeply within and make
the day of the Festival ours forever, so that we continue to walk with
God all the days of this earthly life of ours".
[Iswari Kamalabaskaran]
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