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- Sadagopan

sgopan (AT) computer (DOT) net

Friday, September 24, 2004 8:03 AM

Emailing: 2004092402780600.htm

 

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Gorgeous outfit for deity

The deity adorned with the Ratnangi.

ONE OF the more popular Divyadesas in the South is

Thiru-aheendrapuram, situated 3 km west of Cuddalore on the banks of

the holy Garudanadi (now called Gadilam) and at the foot of the

Oushadhadri Hill. It has been praised by Thirumangai Azhwar in one

decad in Periya Thirumozhi (III-1). The Sthalapurana is in 14

chapters. It presaged the arrival of a great sage as a human

incarnation of the Lord's Ghanta (bell) who would attain fulfilment

in his penance carried out on the Hill (it implies Sri Vedanta

Desika). When he was about 20 years old and had mastered all Sastras,

he came to this place, worshipped Sri Nrisimha at the hill, prayed to

Garuda who appeared before him and initiated him in Hayagriva Upasana

which helped Desika attain religious knowledge to its greatest depths.

A golden moment of glory arrived on September 16 at

Thiru-aheendrapuram, when the presiding Deity, Sri Devanatha was

adorned with Ratnangi crafted embedding precious gems in gold, thanks

to the devotional fervour of Bhaktas all over the country as well as

from across the seas. The divine form of the Lord had captivated Sri

Vedanta Desika (1268-1369) so much so that he composed three works in

praise and honour of the Lord. He says in Verse 14 of Sri Devanayaka

Panchasat, "the effulgence, radiated by your Form and Divine Limbs,

highly pleasing to the Devis, who would envision you without a wink,

confers on the jewels and the weapons an additional charm; indeed

they cannot enhance your charm by any stretch of imagination. I can

never experience a sense of satiation even by perennially looking at

your charming Form." Who will ever attempt to decorate what is a

personification of charm already? The Lords of the places like

Tirumalai, Kanchipuram, Thiru-aheendrapuram and Srirangam are dear to

those who reside in these places. Swami Desikan's compositions in

praise of these deities are well-known but devotees of every holy

place delight in fancying that Swami Desikan was preferentially

attached only to the Lord of their place. Of the many deities, Lord

Devanatha is the only one who has been the subject of Sri Vedanta

Desika's devotional compassion in three languages — Sanskrit, Prakrit

(a dialect of Sanskrit) and Tamil. Sri Devanayaka Panchasat dwells on

the greatness of the Lord as creator and protector and also describes

His charming form from head to toe. Sri Achyuta Satakam of 101 verses

in Prakrit takes the form of an effusion in the character of a

Nayaki-Nayaka bhava and yet reveals profound Vedic truths and

declares the basic doctrines of the Visishtadvaita philosophy. Sri

Desika who has the particular ornament for himself and sports it

during his festivals, rightly reputed for their pomp and

paraphernalia, commensurate with his greatness and services to the

divine cause, would have had indeed wished for a similar outfit for

His much-loved favourite deity as well. Services rendered in this

connection by the two office-bearers of Sri Devanthan Ratnangi

Kainkaryam Committee deserve special mention. They are Dr. V.

Sadagopan, a patron of religious causes and a discerning scholar on

spirituality, religion, music and temple culture and his sister,

Padma Veeraraghavan, who has organised women groups in choral singing

in the Lord's service and has accomplished services to deities in

Srivilliputhur, Oppiliappan Koil and Nanganallur. As the devotee

worships Sri Devanayaka decked up in the radiant Ratnangi , reciting

the mellifluous Prakrit verses of Achyuta Satakam, he would find

himself engulfed by the power of Sri Desika's utter simplicity,

austere detachment and abiding devotion to the auspicious form of the

Lord. NEDUNTHERU S. KANNAN

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