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Kerala - The Festivals

Onam - A Bountiful Feast

By Bala Menon

It is 4.00 am on Thiruonam Day. Chingam, the first month of the Malayalam calendar has dawned. After the build-up of excitement and preparation of nine thrilling days, there is a rush to wake up....This is one of the enchanting images of Onam for every Keralite.

The sky is brighter and air has been fragrant for the past ten days because the monsoon months have just ended; flowers are abundant everywhere...There is food in plenty and new clothes are a must. Beautiful floral decorations are laid out in front of every house, with white thumba and yellow mukutee flowers - auspicious symbols of purity and peace.

Demon King

On the actual day, rice pancakes are kept ready for a revered guest from the netherworld, a brigand demon king who ruled the land once upon a time and flowers are strewn on the pathway of every house.

Massive swings hang from the tallest branches of the tamarind or the mango tree, there are games of football in every village and young girls dance the kaitottikalli to hypnotic rhythm around gleaming brass oil lamps late into the night.



A Chundan snakeboat getting ready for a big race

There are pullikalli (tiger dances), kumattikalli and boat racing with its energising songs, depending on the area where you live and other games and events in which the entire community participates. The festivities go on for two days after the onset of Onam, the fabled harvest festival of the people of Kerala (the small south-western state of India.) Wherever there are Keralites today, the spirit of Onam lives and thrives. Ask any Malayalee (as the people from Kerala are called). His eyes will light up with the memory of a celebration that is part of his genes since time immemorial. Although there is another world...

Aeons ago - so the legend goes - the fierce warrior Parashurama during his many wanderings in search for a place fit to be an abode for celestial beings, crossed the Vindhya Mountains (in central India) and arrived in present-day southern Karnataka.

He stood atop the Gokarna Hill and gazed outwards at the azure blue and green of the Indian Ocean, then flung his weapon, a silver axe - commanding the waters to make way.

From the Ocean

The ocean foamed and frothed and decked in rich green, with its beautiful valleys and mist-covered mountains, its beaches and lagoons, its meandering rivers, its lush rice paddies and rainforests, flowers and animals and its unique fruits and spices, Kerala rose and nestled closed to the mainland- from Gokarna to Kanya Kumari (the southermost tip of India where the Indian Ocean, the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal meet in a riotous colour of sand and water.

Parashurama named the land 'Kairali' (for a maiden who was the daughter of Jaambavan, one of the monkey-heroes of Indian mythology) - which is today's Kerala, comprising the erstwhile states of Malabar, Cochin and Travancore - home of the Malayalam-speaking people, the Malayalees.

Kerala is one of the smallest states in the Indian Union, with only one per cent of its landmass, but its influence over the Indian subcontinent has been wide-ranging and far-reaching over the centuries. From colourful people's theatre and the flourishing Ayurvedic system of medicine to literature, films and folk arts, Kerala has remained a torch-bearer. The list is almost endless.

Uniqueness

Insulated as it was from the rest of India by the Western Ghats (mountain range), and open to the wide ocean and influences of distant civilizations, the land and its people developed its own uniqueness and own way of life along with distinct traditions and festivals.

Christianity came to Kerala first, brought by Apostle St. Thomas, and was soon entrenched. And unlike the northern part of India, where foreign Islamic armies battled and defeated local rulers, Islam came to Kerala through trade - by Arab merchant-princes who still have a fascination for Kerala.

The central Kerala city of Cochin has one of the oldest synagogues in the country and Jews have always been a sucucessful community in Kerala.

One of the unique festivals that developed outside of religious influences, Onam is now becoming an international festival, celebrated with great joy and community participation throuhgout the Malayali diaspora.

And the legend continues...

Children in nursery schools throughout Kerala even today sing along with their teachers the verse-story of the demon-king Mahabali who once reigned over a land sumptous with milk and honey, where every human being was equal and no one told a lie...The ditty goes like this:

When Mahabali was the supreme king, All humankind were alike (in their material needs), There was no thievery, no cheating, And no one told a lie even the size of a sesame seed....

Mahabali was an emperor who ruled the three worlds from his throne in Kerala. The land was prosperous and his subjects revered him for his benevolence, his sense of ideals and justice (which are invoked in day-to-day conversations even today).

The gods above couldn't tolerate this and plotted to banish him from this earth. They then sent a divine emissary - Vamana - just three feet high, who asked the king for three-foot lengths of territory.

Although King Mababali could see deep into the future, it was not in his nature to say no to those who ask. With the first foot-length, Vamana - for he was the Supreme Lord Vishnu himself (one of the trinity of the Hindu pantheon along with Shiva and Brahma) took the entire earth, with his second the heavens and the netherworld and waited...

Mahabali knelt with bowed head and said:"Sire, you can place your foot here...." and he was slowly pushed gently into the darkness of deep and everlasting oblivion. As a gesture to his grief-stricken subjects, Vishnu told Mahabali that he could visit his people once a year ...on a full moon day, just after the thunderous south-west monsoon abates.

It is to welcome King Mahabali that Malayalees arrange the floral decorations and keep rice pancakes for his repast, although on the actual Onam day, there are no decorations done. Up to 24-course vegetarian dishes are readied so that the King sees it and returns happy - with the knowledge that his subjects are still prosperous.

This is the legend.

The traditional festivities, including the great dances,have been handed down from generation to generation, and there are few Malayalees who do not know several lilting Onam festival songs.

Today, Onam has also been adopted by the Kerala state government which has made it a popular tourist event. The grand snake boat races - with at least 80 oarsmen on each vessel - take place during the Onam season. These include the famous Champakulam (in July), the Nehru Trophy (on August 14), the Payippad, near Harippad in Alleppey district famous for its canals, and the fabulous Aranmulla race on the fourth day after Thiruvonam.

After the sumptuous meals and the four days of celebrations, the come-down to the real world is generally an anti-climax for all Malayalees. The realities of life beckon but with the greetings that have been exchanged and the general goodwill, another year quickly passes, for both King Mahabali and his subjects ...until everybody gets together again.

Happy Onam!!!!

Bala Menon is a journalist/artist in Toronto, Canada. He was born in Kerala on a bright Onam day!!

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