Kaveri Prasanna Maha Ganapathi Temple …

[image]

Thiruvaiaru is a ‘punya bhoomi’ with 5 rivers flowing through it ( Cauvery, Kudamuruti, Vadavaru, Vennaru and Vettaru ). About 9 km from here is Thirupoonthuruthi and a nearby village is ‘Nadukkaveri’.

It was the year 1942. The house of Chinnaswamy Iyer. He has a son, Ramachandran and his wife is Sita.They have been married for some time and longing for a child. They are of course devotees of Periyava.

The Maha Swamy visited the village and walked through the length of it with His sishyas and devotees.

At Chinnaswamy Iyer’s house, Sita was busy doing a ‘Kolam’. Periyava, walking at a brisk pace, suddenly stopped near Sita . She was completely taken by surprise and was speechless. With tears in her eyes she prostrated before Periyava. Periva asked her, “Where is your Raman?. Saying that He entered the house, looked around and opened a room (which was actually a dumping place) which had been kept closed for a long time, dusted off the floor with a ‘thundu’ and sat down.

By this time Raman and Sita were there. He looked at Raman and said ‘go get milk from the udders of the cow in a sombu’.

Raman did as was told. Then Periva did japa and told Rama, ‘go to Kudamuruti river, pour some milk in it and the rest on the banks of the river. Dig where you poured the milk and you will hit a basement. There, you build a temple for Vinayaga. You will live happily’. So saying, He got up and left.

Raman did as Periva said, and indeed found the basement and built a Ganesha temple there. Soon after, Sita delivered a male child and they named him ‘Ganesan’.

Well, the temple ? It still stands there in Nadukkaveri – ‘Kaveri Prasanna Maha Ganapthi temple’.

source: yahoo groups…and kanchi periva forum

Natarajan

Read more:http://periva.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=expenglish&action=display&thread=3044#ixzz2E36AJPDt

SMS….20 Years Old Today !!!!! …DEC 3 2012….

3 December 2012 ….BBC NEWS SITE…. AN interesting interview thro SMS…. NICE TO READ …..

Natarajan

Texting SMS pioneer Matti Makkonen 20 years on…..

In a world first, on 3 December 1992, an engineer sent the message “Merry Christmas” from a PC to a mobile device using Vodafone’s UK network.

But the origins of the idea date back further to Matti Makkonen. Over a pizza at a telecoms conference in 1984, the former Finnish civil servant put forward the idea of a mobile phone messaging service. This was to become the SMS (short message service) standard.

Dubbed the “father of SMS”- a title he dislikes because of the work others did to develop the technology – Matti Makkonen rarely gives interviews. However, he made an exception for the BBC’s tech team with an interview via SMS.

Following are the highlights of SMS text interview…. Questions of Mr. LEO KELLON from BBC are answered by MR. MATTI MAKKONEN..SMS PIONEER !!!!

Tues 15:24
It’s been estimated 8 trillion test messages were sent last year. 20yrs ago how popular did you think sms would get and what did you think it would be used for?

Tues 15:40
20yrs ago I didn’t see sms as separate issue – it was just a feature in the revolutionary mobile communications system. Very useful for quick business needs.

Tues 15:45
You never got any money for it as you didn’t patent the idea. Is that a regret – or are you glad how things worked out?.

Tues 15:58
I dont think I made a patentable innovation, but was one of the early persons to understand the need and the concept. I’m glad the work was done as part of GSM.

Tues 18:03
You’ve been described as the “reluctant father of SMS” and it took a newspaper investigation to identify you. Why were you so quiet about your achievement?

Weds 06:05
I did not consider sms as personal achievement but as result of joint effort to collect ideas and write the specifications of the services based on them.

Weds 12:22
Cn u txtspk?

Weds 12:26
No! My passion is to write correct language (Finnish), using all 160 characters.

Weds 12:28
What do you think of people who do? Do you hate it?

Weds 12:33
No, I don’t hate them. Actually sms can also be seen as a way for language to develop. More symbols, less characters.

Weds 14:26
What do you make of sexting? A lot of high profile figures have come to regret some of their more explicit messages!?!

Weds 15:18
In my mind private messages of high profile persons should be kept out of public discussion. Privacy belongs to telecommunication as much as to private letters.

Weds 17:08
Do you suffer from text spam? If so what kind?

Weds 17:16
Not at all. Finnish legislation is quite protective. Marketing messages are allowed only if you really allow them. Spam calls are more often problem.

Weds 18:47
Do you prefer typing in a keypad or touchscreen? And how fast are you?

Weds 20:11
I love touchscreen. Slow enough to think and sometimes even edit what I write.

Weds 20:13
Will sms survive another 20 years – of will Facebook, Skype and other instant messaging chat systems take over?

Weds 20:30
20 years is long time… I believe that reliable convenient to use text messaging will stay forever. Is not necessary what we call sms. No more pay per message.

Thurs 10:38
It was 8 years between your idea of SMS and the first text being sent. Were you surprised it took so long?

Thurs 14:26
No. Actually I felt myself as a customer, who had noticed a need. I was happy to see that the development was going on in a gsm working team. The real launch of the service, as I see it, was when Nokia introduced the first phone that enabled easy writing of messages (Nokia 2010 in 1994).

Thurs 14:41
Do you have any other big idea for the future!?!

Thurs 15:06
Not my idea but integration of mobile content display to my eyeglasses would be nice. Maybe someone is working working with it !!!

Talakadu….Forgotten by the Sands of Time…..

Talakadu in Karnataka—a confluence of history and myths.

By    in yahoo life style    

Natarajan

  • The temple at Talakadu

    – The temple at Talakadu

It is the classical Indian story. A tale told by gods and demons, filled with kings and queens, replete with curses and boons. There is a little bit of history here, blended with some geology and topped with legends and myths. Set on the banks of the river Cauvery, this saga dates back to the 4th century and has certain intriguing elements, defying the very laws of nature. This is the tale of Talakadu, the erstwhile capital of the Ganga Dynasty which is now partially buried under sand dunes. Many rulers have reigned over this once flourishing city, but today it is a lost forgotten town, blown over by the sands of time

Talakadu

It was a natural curiosity to unearth the secrets of Talakadu that drove us from Bangalore one Sunday morning. It was one of those beautiful moments. The weather was just right. An eagle scooped down and soared away with the same ease. A herd of goats clamored for attention. Flanked by the verdant greenery, we passed fresh dewy fields, lotuses jostling for space in ponds, flitting butterflies and a few scattered hamlets. We saw glimpses of rustic life as various stages of harvest were in progress. The entire scene was an ode to the countryside. We ambled on for a couple of hours on the Mysore Road and took a detour at Maddur, passed Malavalli en-route to this sacred, historic town.

We were rather unprepared for this.  At the first glance, it was just a prosaic picnic spot, overcrowded with swarms of loud local tourists and besieged by persistent guides. We made our way towards the river bed, where the Cauvery flowed at her own pace. It presented an unusual, yet a stark picture. There were huge mounds of sand by the banks of the river, like a beach. With a canopy of tall eucalyptus trees spread out from the sand, it felt like being in the middle of a forest. The dense shrubbery, some lively birds and monkeys dangling between the branches completed the picture.

The mounds of sand were everywhere, like small hillocks, some as high as even 15 meters. It was a steep climb, as the feet sank in with each step. It was an inexplicable sight; nobody could fathom where the heaps of sand came from. The fertile soils of the Cauvery basin seemed to have become fine particles of soft sand by sheer magic. While the answer may be with a geologist, my local guide narrates this legend.

Urban legend

A curse of a woman he says is the cause of this sand blown town, an erstwhile fertile capital of several dynasties that ruled over Karnataka. A tale filled with greed and lust for power. It was the time when Talakadu and Srirangapatna were under the Vijayanagara Empire. The death of the last Viceroy, Srirangaraya provoked the Wodeyars of Mysore to declare war. As Srirangapatna fell, the Wodeyar ruler sent his soldiers to covet the jewels of the late Viceroy’s widow, Alamelamma. As she fled from her pursuers, she is supposed to have jumped into the Cauvery, uttering the curses. My guide gets all dramatic as he proclaims the curse, “May Talakadu be always covered with sand and may the kings of Mysore always remain without heirs.”  The locals fear the curse as they say that it has come true. Talakadu is mysteriously engulfed with a sea of sand and the family tree of Mysore rulers show a large number of adopted heirs.

The story moves from being a mere myth to some startling historic discoveries as well. Recent excavations have unearthed temples from these mounds of sand and each dynasty has left their architecture stamp on them.  My guide points out that 30 such temples are still buried underneath the sand dunes as we climb our way to the excavated areas

Panchalingas

Talakadu is famous for the Panchalingas – the temples dedicated to Lord Shiva called Pathaleshwara, Maruleshwara, Arkeshwara, Vaidyanatheeshwara and Mallikarjuna .Of these, the first two are the oldest, built by the Ganga kings. The locals here say that the Shivalinga in the former is said to change color according to the time of day – from red in the morning to black in the afternoon and white in the night. To us though, in the cool afternoon, it was simply black.

We paused to give our feet a bit of rest and heard the story of Tala and Kada, the two hunters, after whom my guide says, this town is named. One more story, this time, it fuses a bit of religion as well. A sage, Somadutta and his disciples were killed by wild elephants when they were doing their penance. They were said to be reborn as elephants in the same forest.  Two hunters, Tala and Kada watched the ritual of the elephants offering prayers to a silk cotton tree and out of curiosity, axed the tree down, only to find it bleeding. A voice then instructed them to heal the wound with the leaves and the blood miraculously turned milk which immortalized the hunters and the elephants as well. A temple later was built here around the tree, and the place became known as Talakadu.

We resumed our journey and reached the Vaidyanatheeshwara, the largest of them all, which was built by the Cholas. All these temples are neatly thatched and embedded in pits as we climbed down to visit them. Remnants of the bygone era were seen in some scattered stones, broken pillars, an ancient well and even some idols. The Pancha Linga festival is celebrated with much fanfare once in 12 years during the Kartika season, where the temples are allowed for worshipping. The last festival happened in 1993 and the next scheduled late this year. The lost and forgotten township sees throngs of devotees only during this period, while at the rest of times; it remains a desolate spot, with a few picnickers.

Besides the Panchalingas, another magnificent temple stands out even in the ruins. The Keerthi Narayana temple dedicated to Lord Vishnu, built by the Hoysalas, to celebrate the victory of Talakadu over the Cholas. Scattered stones lie all over the place along with the pillars, stone inscriptions and some carvings are still prevalent. The main temple, intricately carved houses an eight foot tall idol of the deity.

Excavations, they say have unearthed a 12-foot tall stone mandapa along with remnants of Garuda kamba. Work by archaeologists is still in progress here, as we stroll among the many stones, which my guide claims are ‘originals’. It looked like each piece of stone was being numbered and the mantapas were being rebuilt to recreate the splendour of the past.

We had walked for more than a couple of hours, deeply engrossed in the continuous banter of our guide. Our feet caved in many a time, as we scaled the steep sand dunes. In the last two hours, we had traveled back to several centuries. We paused for a moment, taking in the sight. The silence was overwhelming. The voices of the past were buried under the layers of sand. We sat there, trying to build castles, but the wings gently swept them down. This, we realized was the destiny of Talakadu -the confluence of the historic and the holy spirit, where myths and legends merged, but were all completely swept away by the blasts from the past.

Getting there 

Talakadu is just three hours by road from Bangalore, en route to Mysore. It is about 130 km from Bangalore, which is the closest airport. You could drive down from the Kanakpura Road or take the good old Mysore Road upto Maddur, past Mallavalli and proceed on the road towards Kollegal. About 5 km before the detour for Shivanasamudra Falls, there are sign boards indicating Talakadu, 22 km to the right. The road is bad in patches and very often, it is long and winding, without any landmarks or signboards. 

Beyond Apple, 9 Most Valuable Companies in the History!!!!!

source:::: yahoo finance…

Natarajan
For most of the people, the phrase “most valuable company” always reminds of Apple, the Cupertino tech giant who hit $623 billion valuation on August.Many referred to it as the history’s most valuable company. But it ignited a debate over why people don’t consider inflation while evaluating the companies. The fact is, if you look back into history, Apple doesn’t even make it into the top five, as there werecompanies which had hit as high as $7.4 trillion in valuation, when adjusted to inflation.

Here are history’s most valuable companies, compiled by Yahoo Finance.

#9 Exxon-Mobil in 2007
Value then: $513.3 billion
Adjusted to 2012: $572.9 billion

Exxon-Mobil, the American multinational oil and gas corporation was formed on November 30, 1999. It is still the world’s largest company by revenue. At its peak in 2007, Exxon Mobil’s reserves were 72 billion oil-equivalent barrels. With refineries in 21 countries, it is also the largest refiner in the world.

With the subsided oil prices and also the market deflections, the company now stands at a value of $401.77 billion.
#8 Apple in August 2012
Value then: $661.6 billion
Adjusted to 2012: $661.6 billion

The anticipated launch of a new iPhone, coupled with rumors of a smaller iPad and a feature-rich Apple TV had lifted Cupertino tech giant’s stocks and the valuation to $661.6 billion in August this year. The company which was valued at less than $10 billion as in 2004 and at $100 billion just three years ago grew unstoppable with its iPhone business.

The company presently has the highest market capitalization in the world. However, its stock has sunk 15 percent since September and is now valuated at $554 billion.

#7 Microsoft in 1999
Value then: $620.6 billion
Adjusted to 2012: $851 billion

Microsoft might be the one existing tech company which fell from glory to gloom in a matter of 10 years. Microsoft reigned the market from licensing deals with the computing giants especially IBM, where the company earned money for every machine they sold.

But the failure to adapt quickly into a mobile and Smartphone centric world had hurt the software giant and is now hoping for a bright future with its latest OS and debut in hardware.

The company is currently valued at $226.82 Billion.

#6 PetroChina in 2007
Value then: $1 trillion
Adjusted to 2012: $1.12 trillion

PetroChina, founded in 1999 is China’s biggest oil producer. It is the most profitable company in Asia. It entered trading following the announcement of stock issue in Shanghai in November 2007. The first-day valuations of stock fuelled by investor speculations over growth made it world’s first trillion dollar company.

However, the share values later retreated to normal levels and the company is now valuated at $233.68 Billion.

#5 IBM in 1967
Value then: $193 billion
Adjusted to 2012: $1.3 trillion

The International Business Machines Corporation, which always ran ahead of its competitors with innovations, was the first company from tech sector to mark its valuation above trillion dollars in this list. At its peak times, the company had developed deep relations with government organizations including NASA, delivering them cutting edge computing power.

Subsequently the company sold off its PC business and is now focusing more on enterprise and also technology services. It is now valuated at $216 billion.

#4 Saudi Aramco in 2012
Value today: U.S. $3.6 trillion
Adjusted to 2012: $3.6 trillion

It turns out that one of the world’s most valuable company is not even listed on a stock exchange. Saudi Aramco or officially the Saudi Arabian Oil Company owns the world’s largest oil field. The company manages over 100 oil and gas fields in Saudi Arabia. Presently, the company tops all the largest lists in the world. It is estimated to worth $781 billion in 2005 and according to the present estimation by University of Texas finance professor Sheridan Titman, it is worth $3.6 trillion.

#3 The South Sea Company in 1720
Value then: 200 Million British Pound
Adjusted to 2012: $4 trillion

The South Sea Company was a British joint-stock company founded in 1711, created as a public-private partnership to consolidate and reduce the cost of national debt. The company’s share values rose on the speculations over future business growth, which never happened, as the government pulled its strings.

Subsequently, in 1720, investors realized the truth and the share values crashed. The company was later resolved in mid- 19th century.


 

#2 The Mississippi Company in 1720
Value then: 300 million British Pounds
Adjusted to 2012: $6 trillion

The Mississippi Company or the Company of the West was founded in 1684 to facilitate trade with the then-New World. John Law, controller of the French National Bank, was named the Chief Director of this new company, which was granted a trade monopoly of the West Indies and North America by the French government. The company’s stocks shoot up twentyfold, fuelled by the value speculations and an effective marketing scheme.

However, the “bubble” burst at the end of 1720 and the company collapsed. Law was dismissed from his positions and the company was declared bankrupt. He then fled France for Venice.

#1 The Dutch East India Company in 1637
Value then: 78 million Dutch Guilders
Adjusted to 2012: $7.4 trillion

The Dutch East India Company is considered to be the first multinational corporation in the world and the first company to issue stock. It was established as a chartered company in 1602, where it is given the monopoly to carry out colonial activities in Asia.

The company eclipsed all of its rivals in the Asia trade and enjoyed huge profits from its spice monopoly through most of the 17th century.

However, corruptions in the late 18th century combined with turmoil in the trade made the Company go bankrupt and was formally dissolved in 1800.

 

 

மகாபெரியவாளுக்கு முதல் ஸ்ரீபாத பூஜை செய்தது யார் ?

பெரியவாளின் இளமை வாழ்க்கையில்-ஒரு பகுதி.
[ஜாதகமும்,ரேகையும்]

திடீரென்று ஒரு நாள் காலை மகாலட்சுமி [பெரியவாளின் தாயார்]
கண் விழித்தபோது, பக்கத்தில் சுவாமிநாதனைக் காணவில்லை.
வீடெல்லாம் தேடியாகிவிட்டது. ஊர் மூலைகளெல்லாம் துழாவி
வந்தாகிவிட்டது….காணோம் . “ஒருவேளை சிநேகிதன்
கிருஷ்ணஸ்வாமி வீட்டுக்குப் படிக்க சென்றுவிட்டானோ?” என்று
போய்ப் பார்த்தால், முதலுக்கே மோசம்.நண்பனையும் காணோம்!.

இரண்டு குழந்தைகளையும் தேடி ஊரே அல்லோலகல்லோலப்
பட்டது.அந்த சமயத்தில் மடத்திலிருந்து ஒரு ஆள் வந்து,
“குழந்தைகள் மடத்துக்கு வந்தார்கள்.பத்திரம ாக இருக்கிறார்கள்.
சுவாமிகள் உங்களிடம் சொல்லிவிட்டு வரச் சொன்னார். நாலு
நாட்கள் வைத்திருந்து அப்புறம் குழந்தைகளை அனுப்புவதாகச்
சொன்னார்!” என்றார். இதைக் கேட்ட பெற்றோருக்கு எதுவும்
புரியவில்லை. “எதற்காக அத்தனை பெரிய குரு இத்தனை சின்னக்
குழந்தைகளை விடாமல் வைத்துக் கொள்ள வேண்டும்?”
என்பது புதிராக இருந்தது.

உண்மை இதுதான். ஒரு நாள் சுவாமிநாதன், ஜகத்குருவாக
மலர்ந்து காமகோடி பீடத்தை அலங்கரிக்கப் போகிறார்,
தன்னுடைய முடிவும் நெருங்கிவிட்டது.பி ன்னால் இவனுடன்
சில நாட்கள் சேர்ந்திருக்க வாய்ப்பு கிடைக்கப் போவதில்லையே?
அந்த ஆசையை நாலு நாளாவது வைத்துக்கொண்டு தீர்த்துக்
கொள்ளலாம் என்று பரம குருவானவர், தீர்க்க திருஷ்டியுடன்
முடிவு செய்திருக்க வேண்டும். சுவாமிநாதன் அவரை பெருமுக்கலில்
பார்த்ததற்கு அடுத்து அவர் ஸாரம் என்ற இடத்துக்குப் போய்விட்டார்.
இந்தக் குழந்தைக்கோ அவரைப் பார்த்தது முதல் வீட்டில் இருப்பே
கொள்ளவில்லை. உடனே, சொல்லாமல் கொள்ளாமல் துணைக்கு
சிநேகிதனையும் அழைத்துக் கொண்டு அங்கே போய்விட்டான்.

ஆச்சார்யரோ, “முதலில் ஆத்திலே சொல்லிட்டு வந்தாயா?”
என்று கேட்டார். “இல்லை ஸ்வாமி! உங்களைப் பாக்கணும்னு
தோணித்து: உடனே கிளம்பி வந்துட்டேன்” என்கிறான் குழந்தை.
இதற்காக குரு சந்தோஷப்பட்டாராம். ஏனெனில், இப்படி வீட்டையும்
வாசலையும் விட்டு வரவாதானே அவருக்கு வேணும்!

எல்லா தகப்பனாரையும் போல் தன் பிள்ளை டாக்டராக அல்லது
இன்ஜினீயராக வர வேண்டுமென்று தந்தை சுப்ரமண்ய சாஸ்திரிகள்
ஆசைப்பட்டார். இத்தனை சின்ன வயசில் இப்படி மடத்தை நோக்கி
ஓடினால் எந்தத் தந்தைதான் கவலைப்படமாட்டார்?
“இது என்ன தேறுமா…தேறாதா? படிப்பு கிடிப்பு வருமா?”
என்ற பயம் அவரை உலுக்கியது. உடனே சிநேகிதன்
கிருஷ்ணஸ்வாமியினĮ 1; அப்பா வெங்கட்ராமனைத் தேடிப் போனார்.
அவர் ஒரு சிறந்த ஜோதிடர்.மேலும் சுப்ரமண்ய ஐயருக்கு
நெருங்கிய நண்பர்.

“வெங்கட்ராமா! சுவாமிநாதன் ஜாதகத்தைக் கொஞ்சம் பாரு.
இவனுக்கு ஜாதகம் எப்படி இருக்கு?” என்று காட்டினார்.அதைப்
பார்த்ததும் ஜோசியருக்குப் பேச்சே வரவில்லை.சுவாமிநாத ன்
சாட்சாத் ஈஸ்வரன் என்று தெரிந்தது. ஆனால், ஆவலோடு
பார்த்துக் கொண்டிருக்கும் நண்பனுக்கு ஏதாவது சொல்ல
வேண்டும். அதனால், “சுப்ரமண்யா! நீ உன் பிள்ளையைப் பற்றிக்
கவலையேபடாதே. நம்மைப் போன்றவர்கள் வீட்டில் பிறக்கும்
குழந்தையாகத் தெரியவில்லை. இவன் ஜாதகத்தில் பெரிய
ராஜாக்களுக்கு உண்டான யோகமெல்லாம் இருக்கு.
சக்ரவர்த்தியாக உலகமே கொண்டாட வாழப் போகிறான்!”
என்று பெசினார்.

வெறும் ராஜாவாகவா மாறினார்! உலகை உய்விக்க வந்த
யதிராஜராக அல்லவா ஒளி வீசினார்!.

அத்தோடு நிறுத்திக் கொள்ளாமல், ரேகைகளையும் பார்க்க
ஆவல் கொண்ட ஜோசியர்,அங்கிருந்த சுவாமிநாதனிடம்,”போய ;்
கால் அலம்பிண்டு வா” என்று கட்டளையிட்டார். அலம்பிக்
கொண்டு வந்தவனை, நாற்காலி ஒன்றில் அமர்த்தி அழுக்கு ஒட்டிக்
கொண்டிருந்த காலில் தண்ணீர் விட்டுத் தன் கையாலேயே
அலம்பினார்….துடைத்தார் . சற்று தூக்கிப் பார்த்தார்.அப்படிய ே
கெட்டியாய் பிடித்துக் கொண்டு அழுதார். காலை விடவேயில்லை.

“விடுங்கோ மாமா!” என்ற சிறுவனின் குரலோ, “என்ன இது!
குழந்தை காலை பிடிச்சுண்டு…விடு” என்ற சுப்ரமணிய சாஸ்திரியின்
குரலோ ஜோசியர் காதில் விழவேயில்லை.

“அது என்ன விடக்கூடிய காலா! பின்னாலே இதனடியில் விழ
மக்கள் க்யூவிலே நிற்கப்போகிறார்கள் !” என்று நினைத்தார் போலும்.

காலில் உள்ள சங்கு சக்கர ரேகைகள், மகர ரேகை, தனுர் ரேகை,
பத்ம ரேகை எத்தனை உண்டோ, அத்தனையும் ஒரு அவதார புருஷன்
அவர் என்று கட்டியம் கூறிக் கொண்டு பளிச்சென்று அவர் கண்ணுக்குப்
புலப்பட்டன.

முதன் முதலில் பெரியவாளுக்குப் பாத பூஜை பண்ணும் பாக்கியம்
இந்த வெங்கட்ராமய்யருக்கு த்தான் கிடைத்தது.நல்ல கைராசிதான்!
விஷ்ணுவுக்கும் கிடைக்காத பாதத்தை இவர் பார்த்துவிட்டார்
என்றால், இவர் பாக்கியமே பாக்கியம்!.

source: kanchi peivaa forum
Natarajan

Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=exptamil&action=display&thread=3019#ixzz2DfTPbBdk

கந்த சஷ்டி கவசம் பிறந்த தலம் ..சென்னிமலை !!!

 

கந்தசஷ்டி கவசம் பிறந்த தலம்    ..சென்னிமலை !!!

நவ 18 கந்தசஷ்டி 

கந்தசஷ்டி கவசம் அரங்கேறிய தலம், ஈரோடு மாவட்டம் சென்னிமலை சுப்பிரமணிய சுவாமி கோயில். இங்குள்ள முருகனை வணங்கினால் பிறந்த பயனை அடைய முடியும் என்ற நம்பிக்கையுள்ளது.

தல வரலாறு:

நொய்யல் ஆற்றங்கரையிலுள்ள கொடுமணல் கிராமத்தில் “பெரும்வெளிர்’ இனத்தவர் வாழ்ந்தனர். இவர்கள், பண்ணையக்காரர்களிடம் மாடு மேய்க்கும் வேலைபார்த்தனர். ஒரு காராம்பசுவின் மடியில் தினமும் பால் இல்லாமல் இருந்ததை, ஒரு வேலையாள் கவனித்து பண்ணையாரிடம் கூறினார். ஒரு குறிப்பிட்ட இடத்தில், மடியில் இருந்த பால் முழுவதையும் தானாகவே சொரியவிட்டதை பண்ணையார் கவனித்தார். அந்த இடத்தைத் தோண்டியபோது, ஒரு சிலை கிடைத்தது. அதன் முகம் பொலிவுடன் இருந்தாலும், இடுப்புக்கு கீழ் சரியான வேலைப்பாடின்றி இருந்தது. அக்குறையைப்போக்க அந்தப் பகுதியை சிற்பியைக் கொண்டு உளியால் வேலையைத் துவக்கினார். உளிபட்ட இடத்தில் ரத்தம் பீறிட்டது. பணியை நிறுத்திவிட்டனர். “”ஆண்டவர் அப்படியே இருக்க பிரியப்படுகிறார்”, என்று சென்னிமலையின் மேல் பிரதிஷ்டை செய்தனர். இவருக்கு “தண்டாயுதபாணி’ என்ற திருநாமம் இட்டனர். .
தம்பிக்கு முதல் பூஜை: எல்லா கோயில்களிலும் விநாயகருக்கு முதல் பூஜை உண்டு. இங்கோ மூலவர் முருகனுக்கு நைவேத்ய பூஜை முடிந்த பின்பே, சந்நிதி விநாயகருக்கு பூஜை செய்யப்படும்.
முருகன் ஞானப்பழத்தால் கோபித்து வந்து மலைமேல் வீற்றிருப்பதால், அவரை சாந்தப்படுத்தும் வகையில் தொன்று தொட்டு இவ்வாறு நடக்கிறது. பங்குனி உத்திர திருவிழாவுக்கென தனித்தேர் உள்ளது. நொய்யல் ஆறு, சென்னிமலையிலிருந்து 3 கி.மீ., தூரத்தில் ஓடுகிறது. கோயிலின் தென்புறம் உள்ள மாமாங்க தீர்த்தம், கோடையிலும் பொங்கி வழியும்.
அருணகிரிநாதர் திருப்புகழ் பாடி மகிழ்வித்து முருகப்பெருமானிடம் படிக்காசு பெற்ற தலம்.
கந்தசஷ்டி கவசம் அரங்கேற்றம்: “”துதிப்போர்க்கு வல்வினைப்போம், துன்பம்போம், நெஞ்சிற் பதிப்போர்க்குச் செல்வம் பலித்துக் கதித்தோங்கும், நிஷ்டையும் கைகூடும் நிமலன் அருள் கந்தசஷ்டி கவசம் தனை”… என்று முருக பக்தர்கள் மனம் உருகி பாடும் கந்தசஷ்டி கவசத்தை இயற்றிய பாலன் தேவராய சுவாமிகள், காங்கேயத்தை அடுத்த மடவிளாகத்தைச் சேர்ந்தவர். இவர் மைசூர் தேராச உடையாரின் காரியஸ்தர். கவசத்தை அரங்கேற்றம் செய்ய வேண்டிய இடம், சென்னிமலை தான் என்பதை முருகனின் அருளாணையால் உணர்ந்தார். அதன்படி அங்கே அரங்கேற்றினார். “சிரகிரி வேலவன் சீக்கிரம் வருக’ என்ற புகழ்மிக்க வரியை அதில் எழுதியுள்ளார். தந்துள்ளார். “சிரம்’ , “சென்னி’ என்ற வார்த்தைகள் தலையைக் குறிக்கும். மலைகளில் தலையாயது சென்னிமலை என அவர் போற்றியுள்ளார்.
அடிவாரத்திலுள்ள நஞ்சுண்டேஸ்வரர், பட்டாலி பால்வெண்ணீஸ்வரர் கோயில்கள் சிற்பக்கலைக்கு எடுத்துக்காட்டாக உள்ளன.


source:::::DINA MALAR..Tamil daily.

Natarajan

Teddy Bear…..How President Roosevelt is Connected to This Toy!!!!

The name Teddy Bear comes from former United States President Theodore Roosevelt, whose nickname was “Teddy”. The name originated from an incident on a bear hunting trip in Mississippi in November 1902, to which Roosevelt was invited by Mississippi Governor Andrew H. Longino. There were several other hunters competing, and most of them had already killed an animal. A suite of Roosevelt’s attendants, led by Holt Collier, cornered, clubbed, and tied an American Black Bear to a willow tree after a long exhausting chase with hounds. They called Roosevelt to the site and suggested that he should shoot it. He refused to shoot the bear himself, deeming this unsportsmanlike, but instructed that the bear be killed to put it out of its misery, and it became the topic of a political cartoon by Clifford Berryman in The Washington Post on November 16, 1902.While the initial cartoon of an adult black bear lassoed by a handler and a disgusted Roosevelt had symbolic overtones, later issues of that and other Berryman cartoons made the bear smaller and cuter.
Morris Michtom saw the drawing of Roosevelt and the bear cub and was inspired to create a new toy. He created a little stuffed bear cub and put it in his shop window with a sign that read “Teddy’s bear,” after sending a bear to Roosevelt and receiving permission to use his name. The toys were an immediate success and Michtom founded the Ideal Novelty and Toy Co.

At the same time in Germany, the Steiff firm, unaware of Michtom’s bear, produced a stuffed bear from Richard Steiff’s designs. Steiff exhibited the toy at the Leipzig Toy Fair in March 1903, where it was seen by Hermann Berg, a buyer for George Borgfeldt & Company in New York. He ordered 3000 to be sent to the United States. Although Steiff’s records show that the bears were produced, they are not recorded as arriving in America. Although Steiff and Michtom were both making teddy bears at around the same time, neither would have known of the other’s creation due to poor transatlantic communication.
By 1906 manufacturers other than Michtom and Steiff had joined in and the craze for “Roosevelt Bears” was such that ladies carried them everywhere, children were photographed with them, and Roosevelt used one as a mascot in his bid for re-election.
American educator Seymour Eaton wrote the children’s book series The Roosevelt Bears, while composer John Bratton wrote “The Teddy Bear Two Step” which, with the addition of Jimmy Kennedy’s lyrics, became the song “The Teddy Bears’ Picnic”.
Early teddy bears were made to look like real bears, with extended snouts and beady eyes. Today’s teddy bears tend to have larger eyes and foreheads and smaller noses, babylike features that make them more attractive to buyers because they enhance the toy’s cuteness, and may even be pre-dressed.
………courtesy Wikipedia…

Natarajan

Did a Journalist Predict the Doom of Titanic ?

SOURCE:::: THE MIRROR…

Natarajan

Why did he get on board? Victim of the Titanic predicted doomed ship’s fate but went on voyage ?

Journalist William Stead prophesied his death when he wrote short story “How the Mail Steamer went down in the Atlantic, by a survivor”

A rare letter has emerged from a victim of the Titanic who spookily predicted the doomed ship’s fate.

Journalist William Stead prophesied his death when he wrote short story “How the Mail Steamer went down in the Atlantic, by a survivor.”

It is about a ship that collides with a vessel causing great loss of life due to the lack of lifeboats.

A note Mr Stead added to the story in 1886 reads: “This is exactly what will take place if liners are sent to sea short of boats.”

He was also apparently a noted psychic.

But he still got on board the Titanic and wrote a letter to a friend the day the ship left from Southampton on her maiden voyage to New York on April 10, 1912.

On notepaper headed with the ship’s name and logo, he said: “I got off safely and am writing in a room as comfortable as any town.”

Now his letter is set to fetch £40,000 when it goes under the hammer.

Auctioneer Andrew Aldridge said: “Stead wrote the article about the steamer going down and it begs the question: why did he get on board Titanic if he had this premonition?

“He was also a noted psychic so you could argue he went anyway, believing this to be his destiny.”

Mr Stead, 62, was one of the leading newspaper journalists of the 19th century. He was among the 1,514 people who died when the ship hit an iceberg in the Atlantic Ocean.

Only 710 survived due the lack of lifeboats.

Mr Stead’s letter will be auctioned at Henry Aldridge and Son in Devizes, Wilts, on November 24.

Hinduism…. A Way of Life for the Ages, Today and Tomorrow….

Source::::: input from one of my friends.
Natarajan

One has often heard it said that Hinduism isn’t a religion, it’s a state of mind.
In the troubled times of today, with religions too often playing regressive roles
in keeping human beings on the the road to sanity, this is an interesting
reading of what Hinduism means, and is.

Hindu Wisdom…

You don’t even have to be religious to read it and understand its value.

The beauty of being a Hindu lies in your freedom to be who you want to be. Nobody can tell you what to do, or what not to do. There is no central authority, no single leader of the faith. No one can pass an order to excommunicate you, or like in some countries, pass a decree that orders a woman’s death by stoning for walking with a strange man.

We don’t appreciate our freedom because we can’t feel the plight of others who aren’t free. Many religions have a central authority with awesome power over the individual. They have a clear chain of command, from the lowliest local priest to the highest central leader. Hinduism somehow escaped from such central authority and the Hindu has miraculously managed to hold on to his freedom through the ages.

How did this happen?

Vedanta is the answer. When the writers of Vedanta emerged, around 1500 BC, they faced an organised religion of orthodox Hinduism. This was the post-Vedic age, where ritualism was practiced, and the masses had no choice but to follow. It was a coercive atmosphere.

The writers of Vedanta rebelled against this authority and moved away from society into forests. This was how the ‘Aranyakas’, literally ‘writings from the forest’, were written. These later paved the way for the Upanishads, and Vedanta eventually caught the imagination of the masses. It emerged triumphant, bearing with it the clear voice of personal freedom.

This democracy of religious thought, so intrinsic to Vedantic intelligence, sank into the mindset of every Indian. Most couldn’t fathom the deep wisdom it contained, but this much was very clear. They understood that faith was an expression of personal freedom and one could believe at will. That’s why Hinduism saw an explosion of Gods. There was a God for every need and every creed. If you wanted to build your muscles, you worshiped a God with fabulous muscles. If you wanted to pursue education, there was a Goddess of Learning. If it was wealth you were looking for, then you looked up to the Goddess of wealth — with gold coins coming out of her hands. If you wanted to live happily as a family, you worshiped Gods who specially blessed families. When you grew old and faced oncoming death, you spent time in contemplating a God whose business it was to dissolve everything — from an individual to the entire Universe.

Everywhere, divinity appeared in the manner and form you wanted it to appear, and when its use was over, you quietly discarded that form of divinity and looked at new forms of the divine that was currently of use to you. ‘Yad Bhavam, tad Bhavati’… what you choose to believe becomes your personal truth, and freedom to believe is always more important than belief itself.

Behind all this — was the silent Vedantic wisdom that Gods are but figments of human imagination. As the Kena Upanishad says, “Brahma ha devebhyo vijigye…” All Gods are mere subjects of the Self. It implies that it is far better that God serves Man than Men serve God. Because Men never really serve God — they only obey the dictates of a religious head who speaks for that God, who can turn them into slaves in God’s name.

Hindus have therefore never tried to convert anyone. Never waged war in the name of religion. The average Hindu happily makes Gods serve him as per his needs. He discards Gods when he has no use for them. And new Gods emerge all the time — in response to market needs. In this tumult, no central authority could survive. No single prophet could emerge and hold sway, no chain of command could be established.

Vedanta had injected an organised chaos into Hinduism and that’s the way it has been from the last thirty five centuries. Vedanta is also responsible, by default, for sustaining democracy. When the British left India, it was assumed that the nation would soon break up. Nothing of that kind has happened. The pundits of doom forgot that the Indian had been used to religious freedom from thousands of years. When he got political freedom, he grabbed it naturally. After all, when you can discard Gods why can’t you discard leaders? Leaders like Gods are completely expendable to the Indian mindset. They are tolerated as long as they serve the people, and are replaced when needs change. It’s the triumph of people over their leaders, and in this tumult, no dictator can ever take over and rule us. Strange how the thoughts of a few men living in forests, thirty five centuries ago, can still echo inside the hearts of Indians.

Darasuram Musical Steps Temple….

source:::: input from one of my contacts.

Natarajan

 

Darasuram Musical steps temple – Unesco world heritage site, Tamilnadu
Darasuram Musical steps
Each step emits a different tone of the musical scale. At the entrance near the Nandi bull. Kept locked to prevent vandalism.
Darasuram is a small town near Kumbakonam in Tamil Nadu state in southern India. It is known for the Airavatesvara Temple built by Rajaraja Chola II between 1146-63. The temple is constructed as if the whole temple is a chariot encased in a lotus floating on a lake. The vimana is 85 feet high. This along with the Brihadeeswara temple in Thanjavur and the Gangaikonda Cholapuram Temple is part of the Great Living Chola Temple inscribed into the UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

The legend goes to show that Airavata, the white elephant of Indra, worshipped Lord Siva in this temple; so did also the King of Death, Yama. Tradition has it that the presiding deity Airavateswarar cured Yama himself (the God of Death) who was suffering under a Rishi’s curse from a burning sensation all over the body. Yama took bath in the sacred tank and got rid of the burning sensation. Since then the tank is known as Yamateertham. It gets its supply of fresh water from the river Kaveri and is 228 feet in width.

The temple is a treasure trove for art and architecture. The numerous carvings depict not only the gods and their stories but also daily life as witnessed in those days. There are depictions of all the Bharatanatyam poses, and many figures of women in gymnastic poses. At the entrance to the temple are two Dwarapalakas, Sankhanidhi and Padmanidhi. In front of the temple, there is a small mandapa, which can be reached by 3 steps in the form of a ladder. The steps are made of stones, which give different musical sounds when tapped and one can here all the seven swaras can be had at different points.

One needs many hours to truly experience the wonder of this temple and it is good to have a a guide expain the intricasies and the many carvings. Definitely worth a visit and should be on everyone’s itinerary.