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Sivamayam
Sri Mahadeva Jayam
AN IDEAL TEMPLE-PRIEST
(A short story by Sri K. G. Mallya)
சிவஞான பூஜா மலர் குரோதன ஆண்டு - (1985)
பிரசுரம்: ஆங்கீரஸ S. வேங்கடேச சர்மா, மேலமாம்பலம், சென்னை – 600 033]
After
offering a collective prayer, the trustees of the temple went to the conference
chamber to chalk out the program during the forthcoming car festival spread
over five days.
As
soon as everyone sat down comfortably, Venkanna, one of the trustees, stood up
and said, “Friends, as usual the first day’s pooja to the deity will be offered
by me and I will bear all the expenses!” Before he finished his last word, from
the opposite seat, suddenly Ramanna, another trustee, stood up and said,
“Friends, this time, the first day’s pooja should be mine. Why should Venkanna
have that privilege every year? When all of us are trustees of equal standing
it should be the privilege of everyone to have it by turn!”
“But,
“Venkanna said, “you know, ever since the temple is here it has been the
tradition of our family to bear the expenses of the first day’s pooja. My
grandfather did it. My father followed it and I have been carrying on the
tradition for years. Please don’t come in the way! If you kike, offer the pooja
on the next day as usual!”
But
Ramanna seemed adamant. Raising his voice, he shouted: “A temple is a public
institution. Nobody should have any right or monopoly here!” The other trustees
looked at each other, surprised.
“Why!”
An elderly person among them asked, “why should there be so much of
competition?”
But…I
don’t allow him to have it this time!” a stubborn Ramanna said.
“I
too will not allow you to have it!” an equally stubborn Venkanna returned.
A few
joined Ramanna’ s side and the remaining trustees Venkanna’ s. For the first
time a split came to surface and trying to avoid it, the elderly trustees
Ranganna advised, “Brothers, this is a temple – the sacred place of worship.
There should not be any rivalry or ‘politics’ here. You must know God is
someone above all these petty-mindedness!” But his words were drowned in their
shouts. With tears in his eyes, Ranganna said again, “Brothers, Shiva came and
dwelt in this temple listening to the prayers of our forefathers. When you
quarrel like this I am afraid he may even leave this place for ever. Pray don’t
quarrel! God blesses peace-loving people and curses the quarrelsome….!”
“But,
the first day’s pooja is the right of my family! I don’t want to renounce it!”
“Let
me see how you’ll exercise your right!” Again a challenge! After some time, the
exchange of hot words, turned into personal abuses and the meeting was wound up
abruptly with an announcement form both the sides, “There will not be any car
festival this year!”
Ranganna
went to the priest and said, “Bhattre, this time there will be no car
festival!”
“Why!”
Priest Keshava Bhatta asked greatly astonished.
“You
know, these trustees, Venkanna and Ramanna, are rivals in their trade. They
brought personal rivalry into the temple, barked like dogs and made a mess!”
“But
how can you stop the car festival!” Keshava Bhatta asked innocently: “It is an
annual feature and people from all the nearby villages come in hundreds. Will
they not become unhappy and go back disappointed if there is no festival?”
“But,
Bhattre,” Ranganna said, “You know both of them are giants. All these years
they are the two persons who have been sharing all the expenses equally! When
they are quarrelling among themselves who can bear the expense and have the
festival?”
“But
the festival cannot stop!” Looking fixedly at the Shivalinga the priest
declared: “My Shiva will have the festival as usual. I want this village should
prosper and I want more and more people should visit the temple and win His grace…!”
Ranganna
asked, “How are you going to have it?”
“He
will guide if He desires! After all we are only instruments in His hands!”
To
Ranganna it seemed a mystery.
Waving
camphor Keshava Bhatta finished the afternoon pooja and in a dejected mood returned
home.
“Why
do you look so sad today?” his wife, Saraswati asked.
“What
can I say?” Keshava Bhatta told in a voice full of agony: “The trustees
quarreled among themselves and decided not to have the annual car festival!”
“What?”
she gaped unbelievingly; “No car festival? How can they treat God like that?”
“That’s
what I am telling! Everybody knows all about Lord Shiva’s prowess. If He opens
His third eyes out of anger all the three worlds will be reduced to ashes in a
moment. Because of their wealth those merchants must have become blind to this
very fact…”
“But,
you know, “Keshava Bhatta slowly said, after sometime “I have challenged that
we are going to have the festival at all cost!”
“That
is a good decision!”
“Yes!
But we must have money – at least Rs. 2,500 for flowers, festoons, fireworks
and feasts!”
“Why
do you worry! God is always great! He may give us latter in a different form.
Come on, take this!” Saying so without any delay Saraswati took out her gold
bangles, ear rings, chain and even the sacred ‘thali.’
Keeping
them before him, she said, “Kindly sell and from the sale proceeds organize the
car festival!”
Keshava
Bhatta did not believe his eyes! He looked at his wife fixedly and then putting
them together in his shawl went straight to the goldsmith.
As
usual, the car festival – the annual event in the village – drew huge crowds
but none of the trustees except Ranganna participated.
The
decorated idol of Lord Shiva was taken out in a grand procession and at night
it was seated on the tall “Brahma Ratha” and hundreds of villagers drew the
‘ratha’ around the temple. Clay lamps adorned the temple ‘gopuram’ and the fireworks
were a big attraction. In a jovial mood everyone invoked the blessings of Lord
Shiva. After the night-long program, the idol was taken back to the Sanctum
sanctorum and kept back on the usual pedestal below the Shivalinga. To mark
the end of the celebrations when camphor was waved in the early morning.
Keshava Bhatta’s eyes became wet. He prostrated before the deity and said,
“Lord, you have done it! But what about the next year if these trustees behave
like this? Why can’t you grant them wisdom?”
The
month of Vaishakha fled away and with it the summer, too. In Ashadha the rainy
season set in. In the beginning there were light showers and after a week,
without any pause it started raining heavily, with frequent thunder and
lightning. The sky remained overcast and there was no trace of the sun. Braving
the rain, however, Keshava Bhatta was going to the temple regularly to offer
pooja three times a day.
After
four days suddenly the villagers found that the river bordering the village had
swollen, and in all its fury the flood waters had started entering the village.
As they watched, minute by minute the water level rose and before long there
was water everywhere.
To
save their lives, the villagers ran to a nearby hill leaving behind everything.
Next
three days there was torrential rain. And from the top of the hill the
villagers could see their entire village looking like a vast lake. Everything
was under water except the Gopuram of the temple!
At
that moment of crisis everybody remembered Shiva and Keshava Bhatta looking
fixedly at the Gopuram offered prayer after prayer invoking Shiva’s grace but
the rain seemed unrelenting.
An
elderly person openly declared that it was Shiva’s fury that had brought in so
much of calamity to them. The two trustees Venkanna and Ramanna remembered that
fateful day when they quarreled in the temple. “Oh God, forgive us this time!
We shall never repeat it again! They repented!
On
the tenth day the rains receded and so also the flood waters. By evening the
tide had rolled back and the villagers climbing down the hill slowly entered
the village. Though the entire village was under water, they were amazed to see
that the flood had not caused much damage and almost everything was intact! “All
this could be possible only because of Shiva’s grace!” they thought and to
offer Him prayers collectively the villagers enthusiastically walked towards
the temple led by Keshava Bhatta. But when they reached the temple square, all
their enthusiasm vanished as, to their sight came only the ‘gopuram’ of the
temple standing on four robust pillars and everything else – the Shiva linga,
the idol of Shiva, lamps, candelabras – had been washed away, beyond anybody’s
imagination!
“Shiva!
Shiva! What is this!” Keshava Bhatta was about to swoon away when all others bowed
down their head knowing not what to do!
“Shiva,
I never thought that you would do it!”, Keshava Bhatta lamented, “What made you
leave all of us? Did you observe that we are not sincere and earnest in our
devotion to you?”
Ranganna
came forward and consoled, Bhattre, Shiva’s kindness has no limit. See, how he
spared everybody’s home while allowing His own to be washed away! Let all of us
join together, rebuild His temple and install another Shiva linga!”
“Yes!
Yes! We will do it! Hara! Hara! Mahadeva!” Everybody cheered. But Keshava
Bhatta felt that he had lost his heart. For a while he spoke not a word. After
some time in a feeble tone he said, “Saraswati, without Shiva I can’t live. The
villagers have banished and rendered Him homeless…!” One by one the villagers
left the place but Bhatta thought of staying on there.
A
month elapsed. The trustees thought of reconstructing the temple. Cart-loads of
sand, granite, lime, timber and other things were brought and stored. In the
meantime, Keshava Bhatta was spending sleepless nights.
It
was a full moon’s day and the sky was clear and the full moon was shining in
all splendor. Bhatta sat watching the moon and when the moon had crossed the
middle of the sky he developed a strange urge: “Without Shiva I must not live
on and let me commit suicide!” He stood up and thought of plunging into the river:
“Yes! Let me jump into the same river that swallowed my Shiva!”
He
decided and ran to the river! On reaching the bank full of trees and shrubs he
stood there for a while looking at the water flowing gently reflecting
thousands of moons. He got down the bank chanting “Shiva! Shiva!” and his feet
touched warm water. Chanting he waded further and further into the water
getting deeper and deeper and when the water touched his shoulder, suddenly his
right leg touched something beneath. With his fingers he held his nose tightly
lest water should enter his nostrils and went down in the water to find out
what it was. His fingers ran on a smooth object and before long Keshava Bhatta
could feel and recognize what it was!
He
stood erect jubilantly and shouted cheerfully; “How fortunate I am to find out
my Shiva secretly hiding here! Shiva, are you really angry with us?”
With
both of his arms he devoutly pulled the large Shiva linga to the bank and,
sending high joyous shouts about the find, he ran to the village!
[Editor’s Note: We
have great pleasure in reproducing here, for the benefit of our readers, this
story from Bhavan’s Journal, VOL. XXIV. No. 13, Jan. 29, 1973, with grateful acknowledgements,
original title of this story is “THE DELUGE”. -
ANGIRASAN]
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