- Comprehensive coverage of all that is important in the
temple/ashram town of Tiruvannamalai & Gurus who
currently reside. Read personal experiences of devotees and about Girivalam.
The town of Tiruvannamalai surrounds
Arunachala Hill, a premier place of pilgrimage for Siva worshipers.
Anyone you meet here will recount the
Puranic story that this is where Siva appeared to Brahma and Vishnu as a pillar
of fire. Lord Vishnu and Lord Brahma were disputing which was the greater God,
the story goes, when suddenly a seemingly endless pillar of fire appeared
before them. They agreed that whoever could find its end would be acknowledged
as the greatest. Vishnu took the form of a boar and burrowed into the earth,
while Brahma took the form of a swan and flew upwards. Neither succeeded. Upon
their return, Lord Siva revealed Himself from the pillar of fire, and both Gods
acknowledged Him as supreme. Each fall this event is celebrated during the Karthika
Deepam festival, which attracts over three million devotees. An enormous pot of
ghee is ignited on the hilltop, creating a pillar of fire that can be seen for
miles.
This article was first published in Hinduism Today.
Annamalaiyar Temple, behind is Arunachala Hill.
At the base of the hill sits Annamalaiyar
Temple. Of the five elemental temples to Lord Siva - air, earth, fire, water
and akasha, all located in South India-this is the fire temple. At 25 acres, it
is by one account the sixth-largest temple in India. It was described by the
7th-century saints Sambandar and Appar and was developed extensively from that
time by the Cholas and subsequent dynasties.
From the 17th century onward it suffered
under Muslim and then British rule, but today it stands as a marvelous and
well-kept example of Dravidian architecture, with a full slate of daily worship
and festivals.
In recent times the town gained fame as
the residence of Ramana Maharshi (1879-1950). His ashram remains the most
popular destination in the area. It is a place of profound sadhana, with
thousands of visitors seeking to discover “Who am I?”- the question Ramana
posed to each one who came before him. Other famous saints have lived here too,
including Ramana’s contemporary Seshadri Swami and, more recently, Yogi
Ramsuratkumar. As well, there are popular sadhus among the hundreds who call
this place home, some with established ashrams, and others wandering through
the town, sleeping and eating where they will.
Hundreds of
thousands of devotees assemble here each full-moon day to do girivalam, the
barefoot nine-mile circumambulation of Arunachala Hill. They come from miles
around, including from Chennai, to undertake this penance. A substantial number
are young professionals.
In this
article we cover these main places, people and events, beginning with
girivalam. Our reporting was assisted by local advocate Palani Raj, recommended
by Jayendra Puri Swami of Kailash Ashram, Bengaluru. For imagery, we engaged
local photographer Sundaram Sethu.
Circling the Hill
Our trio arrived
for the full moon of January 30, 2018, which coincided with the Thaipusam
festival. There was also a full eclipse of the moon on the 31st. Most pilgrims
for the girivalam (literally, “around
the mountain”) arrive in the late afternoon. They circle the hill after
sundown, avoiding the heat of the day, then return home. Most come by bus, some
by car or train. Huge temporary bus stands are set up at several points around
the city so as not to interfere with the movement of the pilgrims. Buses arrive
every few minutes to discharge passengers. All are in a festive mood, with the
women dressed in colorful saris. Ila Maram, a senior traffic officer, tells us
the rush is less this time because of the Thaipusam Murugan festival, the lunar
eclipse and the full moon falling on a working day instead of a weekend. The
rapid arrivals and departures explain how this relatively small town of 145,000
can manage many times its population of pilgrims.
Annamalaiyar Temple. Gopuram. Tank built by Vijayanagar’s Krishnadeva Raya.
The
circumambulation begins and ends in front of Annamalaiyar Temple. The girivalam
path is a well-maintained two-lane road with trees along both sides. An attempt
in 2017 to widen the road, which included cutting down these trees, was met by
stiff local resistance. Fortunately, the tree cutting part of the plan was
subsequently abandoned. In places, the road is lined with shops; at others it
is open on both sides. Streetlights have been installed, and with the full
moonlight one can easily walk without the need for a hand-held light. Soon
after sunset, when the road has cooled from the blistering heat, it is packed
with pilgrims, nearly all barefoot.
Along the route are many sacred places.
The most important are the Ashta (eight) Lingam temples, located roughly at the eight compass points
around the hill. Neglected during a century-plus of British rule, these were
renovated by Moopnar Swamigal in the early 1900s. Swamigal believed the
restoration of these shrines was needed to revitalize the fields of energy and
influence that surround Arunachala hill. It is not required to worship inside
all eight temples, and some are a bit off the path, but devotees acknowledge
each as they pass.
It is said that undergoing the walk around
the holy mountain removes sins, fulfills desires and bring spiritual freedom.
Devotees move along the road silently in a meditative state or chanting “Annamalai Haro Hara!” or “Aum Namah Sivaya.” There is little
talking; in fact, it is a bit difficult to get people to stop for an interview,
so strong is their intent.
We encounter a group of five from
Kanjivaram, about 62 miles away, doing girivalam in the daytime. One of them,
Manikandan, explains they came by bus. They started out at 6am, arrived by 10am
and will return the same evening. Agricultural workers, they were not deterred
by the hot pavement: “We do not mind walking barefoot in this heat, as we are
doing this for God. It is our belief that many realized siddhas walk on this
path and do girivalam on auspicious days, and we feel that we will get their
powers and blessings only if we walk here barefooted.”
Manikandan add, “All of us have greatly
benefitted by coming here on auspicious days. We feel peaceful and happy after
performing girivalam. We have benefited more in spiritual terms than material
terms. Our health and well-being have also improved.”
Another pilgrim we meet is Thangavelu, 62,
who says something inside him had told him to wait and talk to us. “I normally
do not speak with anyone and just keep chanting ‘Aum Namah Sivaya’ as I walk on
the path. I do not come with friends, as they indulge in gossip.” He says he
has done girivalam 238 times—monthly for 20 years!
Ramu Subramaniyam is among a group of
young professional men who arrived from Chennai. He explains the motivation:
“There is definitely some higher level of divine energy here which we feel
whenever we come to this area. We all experience certain things, and that is
the reason we come here again and again. If there are any problems that we
face, we find them solved after we have gone through girivalam.”
One of the many sadhus present along the
path tells us pilgrims offer them money without being asked, and this covers
their travel expenses. Various NGOs and religious organizations have organized
feeding programs both for sadhus and pilgrims.
Thousand pillars Mantapam inside Annamalaiyar Temple.
Each of the Ashta Lingam temples is
noted for a particular boon.
The second, the Agni Lingam, is known for blessings of good health; the third,
Yama Lingam, for solving financial problems and granting long life; the fourth,
Niruthi, for childless couples to conceive, and so on. In front of each temple
is a table where one can light a camphor lamp; many pilgrims just do this and
do not go inside.
Roadside shops are numerous. Several,
selling devotional CDs, blare loud music from speakers. This and other disturbances
are an unfortunate side effect of the popularity of girivalam. Long stretches
of the road now have commercial establishments on both sides. There are even
high-rise buildings that block your view of the holy hill as you walk.
Overall, I noticed a marked difference
between the pilgrims I spoke with here and those at the Kumbha Melas. There,
many are rural folk, carrying their luggage on their head as they proceed
through the Mela grounds, where they will stay for the night or longer. Here,
the pilgrims look wealthier and healthier. They are peaceful and calm as they
do this hours-long walking meditation. Since they will soon return home, they
need not worry about accommodations or luggage. At most, they might be carrying
a small bag.
Circling back around to the entrance of
Arunachaleshwara Temple, we come upon a scene of mild chaos as those ending the
girivalam mingle with those just beginning. Men are tossing offerings of
camphor into a huge burning pot in front of the entrance, oblivious to the heat
from the fire. Many of the women are lighting beautifully decorated earthen
lamps on the ground and drawing kolam designs around them. So uplifted is
everyone that few wish to be interviewed. Bhupati, age 30, kindly spoke with
us. He credits his practice of girivalam for his good job, excellent wife and
lovely son. The strong sense of devotion is overwhelming.
Local Ashrams
Samadhi Hall inside Ramana Maharshi Ashram.
Tiruvannamalai is world famous for SRI
RAMANA ASHRAMA, which experiences a constant stream of Indian and international
visitors. As a reporter I have been to many ashrams, temples and pilgrimage
destinations, including Amarnath Cave, and attended all four Kumbha Melas. But
here at Ramana Ashrama the serious level of self-enquiry surpasses all of them.
Everything revolves around the three words, “Who am I?” Devotees meditation
intently in the ashram’s Old Hall, where Ramana Maharshi used to give darshan,
in the Om-shaped Virupaksha cave partway up Arunachala hill where he lived from
1899 to 1916, and at Skandasramam, the nearby tree-shaded hermitage where he
lived from 1916 to 1922.
Ramana himself explained, “The thought
‘Who am I?’ will destroy all other thoughts, and like the stick used for
stirring the burning fire, it will itself in the end get destroyed. Then, there
will arise Self-Realization.” It is the charming custom of this place to always
refer to Ramana in the present tense, to acknowledge that he has not passed on,
but is still living here on a subtle plane.
“This query, ‘Who Am I,’ is the only
guideline which is given to everyone who enters Ramana Ashram,” said ashram
administrator Shri V. S. Mani. “There is no prescribed process for sadhana, no!
Informally, you interact with other senior people, like-minded people.
Informally they will guide you. Nobody sits on a pedestal, talks down to you,
no! If at all instruction is required, Ramana’s small booklet, Who Am I?, gives
all the instruction required for sadhakas to progress.”
When we visited, the main hall was
overflowing with devotees as the students and teachers of the ashram’s priest
school chanted the Vedas at the shrine built over Ramana’s tomb. In addition to
the ashram’s many temples and shrines, there is a large dining hall where
hundreds of sadhus and devotees are fed every day, as well as a well-stocked
library and bookstore.
Nearby and almost equally well known is SESHADRI SWAMIGAL ASHRAM. Seshadri Swami (1870–1929) was a
slightly older contemporary of Ramana and first to recognize him as a great
spiritual being. He spotted the boy meditating in the Patala Lingam cave of
Annamalaiyar temple, convinced him to move to a better location for his
meditations and helped heal the insect bites he had suffered while in samadhi.
Seshadri also protected him from local boys who tried to disturb him.
Seshadri was known as the “Saint with the
Golden Hand.” People say that when he was four years old, he entered a shop and
requested his mother buy him an image of Krishna he had picked out. The shop
owner, charmed by the young boy’s sincerity, gave him the statue, one of many
which had just been delivered. By the end of the day, the shop had sold out all
of the Krishna statues, a most unusual event and one which led the shop keeper
to say the boy had a golden hand.
Seshadri Swamigal Ashram is less crowded
than Ramana Ashram, and very peaceful. There are a number of small shrines and
the samadhi (burial) places of Seshadri Swami and other saints. The ashram
feeds hundreds of people a day, including a large number of sadhus, and has 90
rooms for accommodating ashram devotees.
Priest
performs arati worship at the Agni Lingam temple along the holy path.
A third major ashram is that of YOGI RAMSURATKUMAR (1918-2001). While Ramana and Seshadri
represent an austere, meditative approach to spiritual life, Ramsuratkumar’s
orientation is devotional. Originally from Uttar Pradesh, Yogi was also known
as “Fan Swami” for the palmyra fan he used to carry. He was humble and down to
earth, always referring to himself as a “mad beggar.” For many years he lived on
the streets. In his latter years he oversaw the construction of this ashram.
We visit this
ashram several times, and always it is overflowing with devotees and pilgrims.
A group of pundits from Maharashtra, specialists in Shukla Yajur Veda, are spending several weeks here, and we hear
their Vedic chanting when we visit. The huge main hall, Pradhan Mandir, can
accommodate 4,000 people at a time. In the middle of this is a majestic metal
statue of Ramsuratkumar which he installed himself. There is also a small Vedic
gurukulam at this ashram.
The chant most often heard in this hall is
the Yogi’s name: “Yogi Ramsuratkumar.” The saint gave this to his devotees as
the best way to maintain touch with him. Also heard here is the mantra “Om Sri
Ram Jai Ram Jai Jai Ram.” Yogi’s guru, Papa Ramdas, had initiated him with this
mantra.
Once the ashram was built, Ramsuratkumar
gave darshan to devotees in a small hut located inside this hall. The hut now
houses a life-like statue of him. On the southern side is the samadhi shrine
where lie his mortal remains and along the walls are paintings of scenes from
his life.
This ashram has perhaps the best
infrastructure of any in Tiruvannamalai since it is a modern ashram, recently
constructed. A huge kitchen is adjacent to a very neat and clean dining hall,
where meals are provided free of charge for saints and devotees.
We spoke with two of Yogi’s senior
disciples, Ma Devaki and Ma Vijay Lakshmi, who related three of his key
sayings: “Remembering God is life. Forgetting God is death;” “Remembering God
is dharma. Forgetting God is adharma;” and “My Father alone exists, nothing
else, nobody else.” By “Father,” the two disciples explained, he sometimes
meant his guru, and other times his Supreme God, though to him there was no
difference.
KAILASH ASHRAM here, a branch of Sri Kailash Ashram in
Bengaluru, was founded in 1999 in collaboration with the government of Tamil
Nadu. It runs a full-time music school with 72 students under the direction of
Ravi Shankar, an expert in the nadaswaram
horn. The school offers training in vocal, thavil, devaram, nadaswaram,
Bharatanatyam, violin and mridangam. Its students often perform at the
Annamalaiyar Temple, especially during the Karthika Deepam festival. They are
also invited to other cultural and religious events in the town.
Local Ashram: Swami Raman Swaroopananda in his office.
SRI ARUNACHALA
RAMANA ATMA VIDYA MANDIR is a
new establishment on the outskirts of town, run by Swami Ramana Swaroopananda.
He greets us most warmly, as he just recently visited HINDUISM TODAY’S
headquarters in Kauai, Hawaii. In fact, we repeatedly meet people here who are
familiar with the magazine or have even met its founder, Sivaya
Subramuniyaswami, during one of his several visits here.
Fluent in both Tamil and English, Swami
Swaroopananda has set up this temple/ashram based on the teachings of Ramana
Maharshi. He is especially known for his spiritual discourses, and is a major
proponent of girivalam. He deplores the commercialization of the girivalam
route, which he feels is distracting to the serious pilgrims. He is also
concerned about developments on the hillside itself which, in some places,
already obscure the view of the hill.
Swami explained, “Again and again,
Bhagavan Ramana Maharshi said, ‘Even Mount Kailash is only the abode of Lord
Siva; but here Arunchala is Siva himself.’ That is why our Nandi here faces the
hill. Ramana had seen inside the hill with his inner vision and said it is a
garden with a waterfall and lake where yogis and siddhas are meditating
continuously. He said if you come here and sit at the feet of Arunachala, your
mind just melts and you become one with Siva. Arunachala, which is outside, is
within us as our Self. That is the purpose of this place: self-inquiry—Who am
I?”
He mentioned how the famous musician
Ilayaraja and the even more famous actor Rajinikanth have been instrumental in
promoting the area. Both hold Ramana Maharshi in high regard and often
pilgrimage here.
Saints, Sadhus and Siddhars
Shortly after
arriving in Tiruvannamalai, we are told of Mooku Podi Siddhar, also known as
“snuff swami” for his love of powdered tobacco. He lives at the Bhupati Coffee
Shop and sleeps on a bench under a green cloth which usually completely covered
him. He seldom speaks, and only rarely looks anyone in the eye. Any glance of
acknowledgement from him is considered a great blessing. He is known to shout
at and chase away some people. But for all this, he is considered one of the
most spiritually powerful of all sadhus in the area.
One day we stop at the coffee shop just as
the scruffy holy man is coming out and starting to walk on the main road.
Immediately a large number of people start to follow him, hoping he will offer
them some form of recognition. Traffic on the road nearly comes to a stop as
onlookers salute him with folded hands. He walks about ten minutes to Udupi
Brindhavan restaurant, where he is immediately served food and afterwards
enjoys several packets of snuff devotees left for him.
According to our
guide, Palaniraj, he sleeps and eats wherever he pleases, and none will chase
him away. For me this encounter is an extraordinary experience, his direct glance
alone putting me into a state of bliss. Like Srisiva Jothi Mona Siddhar
(sidebar page 25), Mooku Podi is regarded as a siddhar of the highest caliber,
though certainly his manner is strange. These are people one only hears stories
about from distant places and times; actually meeting one face to face is an
experience not easily forgotten.
By comparison, SADHVI VARALAKSHMI, age 60, is a far more traditional and sedate person. Born in Andhra Pradesh, she was so attracted by Arunachala Hill and Ramana Maharshi during a visit that she decided to settle here permanently. She did girivalam daily for 22 years, and eventually built a temple to Goddess Lalithambigai, a form of Durga. She also founded the Ramana Maharshi Old Age Home. Both are located in her well-appointed ashram where we meet.
She has a charming presence, blissful and
contented. She will chant “Ramana!” or “Arunachala!” periodically as one sits
with her. She doesn’t teach in the sense of giving lectures, does not accept
any disciples, but directs everyone to the Ramana’s teachings.
MADHAVI KANUMURI, 45, is not a sadhvi, but
considers Ramana Maharshi her guru and calls herself a spiritual counselor. She
explains the mission of her Arunachala Ramana Sundara Charitable Trust: “Now
that I am blissful and contented, I want to share my experiences with others,
so that they can also attain this state of blissfulness. I offer spiritual
counselling to around 2,000 people. I hold satsang classes and programs for the
empowerment of women.”
Sadhvi Amba.
In a chance meeting at Kailash Ashram we
were introduced to a young and dynamic sannyasini, SADHVI AMBA, who resides
here while her own ashram, Antakarna Dhyana Nilayam, is being built. She
considers herself a disciple of Bhagwan Nityananda of Ganeshpuri, though he
attained Mahasamadhi before she was born.
Our interview with her is profound. Here
we will share only her views on girivalam, reserving the rest for a future
issue. “The experience during girivalam just calms you intensely, completely
blanks out all your thoughts for the entire three and a half hours, especially
if you are chanting ‘Om Namah Sivaya.’ You can literally feel some layer of
karma getting cleansed, some burden is getting shifted from you, and you can
feel that emptiness within. This is a land of spiritual discipline, of
knowledge. If you want to attain anything spiritually, this is the hub. I have
been to many places in Himalayas. I have circumambulated Mount Kailash. But the feeling, the
energy that I find in Arunachala is something I have not experienced elsewhere.”
Westerner Seekers
We encounter many
foreign seekers in smaller and larger numbers at every ashram and along the
girivalam path. Their sincerity is impressive. Local sources informed us that
on a typical day 50 to 60% of the devotees at Ramana Ashram are non-Indians, a
like number at Seshadri Ashram and perhaps 10% of those participating in
girivalam on any given day. During the hottest season their numbers will be
much less.
Andres Wormull, 45, has been to
Tiruvannamalai nearly twenty times, bringing groups from his home country of
Chile to share the magic of the place. He tells us, “I just explain a little
bit to my group members about Arunachala. The rest they have to feel
themselves. After all, there must be a reason why, over the ages, all the
mystics and saints have given so much importance to this holy place. That is
the difficult part; you have to shut your mind so that your heart opens.”
Meenakshi Ammal, 66, originally from
Ireland, is one of several we meet who were instructed by Satya Sai Baba to
move here. She is a kind and graceful lady who runs a huge website,
www.arunachalasamudra.org. She was most helpful in our research for this
article. Among many insights she shared with us, one on Ramana’s teachings
stood out: “He said that self-inquiry was the only sadhana that has no danger,
because self-inquiry is the only sadhana that attenuates, thins, the mind. When
you do mantra and sutra, you create a powerful mind to destroy the mind. When
you do self-inquiry you are reducing the mind, withdrawing your vasanas
[impressions from the past] and everything else.”
“While our Indians want to go and settle
abroad for gaining material gains,” observes Swami Brahmananda Saraswati,
“foreigners leave their material possessions and settle here so they can live
in blissfulness and peace. There are thousands who have settled here once they
tasted the nectar of Arunachala. ”
In Conclusion
Scriptures clearly
state that one who has had the darshan of Arunachala will be liberated; that
the significance and importance of Arunachala is so great that just by its
remembrance, smaranam, thereafter one will be forever liberated and blessed.
Everyone we met in Tiruvannamalai pointed this out. The place and its people
are quite unlike what one finds in Haridwar/Rishikesh, where pilgrims go to
bathe in the Ganga, worship at some temples and visit a few ashrams, but then
embark on river rafting and other holiday activities.
Here one does not find such duality of
purpose diluting the spiritual efforts. Arunachala’s impact is unique in that
here devotee focus entirely on sadhana—from the pilgrims on girivalam to the
longer-term residents in the area’s many ashrams, and even among many common
folk who happen to live here. All in all, Arunachala Hill and the surrounding
area is an extraordinary place.
This article was first published in Hinduism Today
and Here
eSamskriti has obtained permission from Hinduism Today to share.
Also see albums of
1. Annamalaiyar
Temple
2. Ramana
Maharshi Ashram