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Large turnout at Dharbaranyeswarar Temple car festival

Large turnout at Dharbaranyeswarar Temple car festival

The Hindua day ago

A large number of devotees pulled the car of the renowned Dharbaranyeswarar Temple in Thirunallar on Friday.
The Dharbaranyeswarar Temple, dedicated to Lord Shiva and his consort Pranambigai, is one of the famous temples in Karaikal district. The temple houses a prominent shrine for Lord Saneeswaran (Saturn).
The annual Brahmotsavam festival, which began with the ceremonial flag hoisting last month, has been marked by a series of religious events, including daily processions of the deities on various vahanas (divine mounts).
Minister for Adi Dravidar Welfare A.K. Sai J Saravanan Kumar, Thirunallar MLA P.R. Siva, Puducherry DIG R. Sathiya Sundaram, Karaikal SSP M.V.N.V. Lakshmi Soujanya, Temple Executive Officer Arunagirinathan, and Dharumapuram Aadheenam Sri Masilamani Desika Gnanasambanda Paramacharya Swamigal ceremonially initiated the chariot festival.
The car passed through the four main streets surrounding the temple.

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View: Active detachment for secured attachments
View: Active detachment for secured attachments

Time of India

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View: Active detachment for secured attachments

Before we grasp the art of detachment, we must confront a more immediate question: what is attachment? Is it a virtue to be nurtured or a vulnerability we ought to regard with caution? From molecular cohesion to cosmic gravitation, the universe manifests in a beautiful design of bonds. Human life too echoes this design—we're bound to people, roles, identities, aspirations and ideals. Some ties are consciously chosen; others are simply assimilated as we tread on. They shape our emotional and social worlds. Even the gods, it seems, are not always beyond such bonds of attachment. Recall the story when Sati died, and Shiva - the supreme ascetic swept into the abyss of bereavement that erupted in the form of Tandava—a cosmic dance so fierce it threatened existence itself. Here was the lord of Time himself, momentarily consumed by an intense moment of personal loss. Moment that even eclipsed his transcendence. The parable holds a deeper message: Is sorrow born of loss itself, or of our attachment to a form or feeling whose absence becomes the axis of our grief? Play Video Pause Skip Backward Skip Forward Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration 0:00 Loaded : 0% 0:00 Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 1x Playback Rate Chapters Chapters Descriptions descriptions off , selected Captions captions settings , opens captions settings dialog captions off , selected Audio Track default , selected Picture-in-Picture Fullscreen This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Text Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Caption Area Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Drop shadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like War Thunder - Register now for free and play against over 75 Million real Players War Thunder Play Now Undo Attachment is alluring — it disguises itself as love, purpose or duty. When left unchecked, it clouds truth, breeds illusion and binds us things that must inevitably change, decay or depart. Detachment is not renunciation, but a deeper embrace of life - knowing when to hold and when to release. Our ancient texts echo this wisdom i.e. to live well is to love deeply, yet let go lightly. We inhabit a world that glorifies unbreakable bonds, everlasting unions and their endless pursuit — where attachment is exalted and detachment mistaken for apathy. Yet life, in its silent ways, teaches while one binds, the other liberates. Discourse on detachment is often exiled to realms of spirituality or philosophy, when it is meant to be practiced. Sooner or later, fate ( Niyati ) compels us to let go of what we once deemed indispensable. And when it does, grief overwhelms — not because loss is rare, but because detachment was never lived, only preached. Live Events The question, then, is: how do we practice detachment—not as indifference, but as life's necessary rhythm? Detachment is not withdrawal from the world, nor a retreat from duty or love. It does not ask us to renounce, but to reframe—our roles, our bonds, our ambitions—in light of higher purpose. Active detachment is to engage fully, yet remain unpossessed. Like a masterful actor lost in a role yet mindful of the stage, we are called to immerse without being consumed. Nature offers the clearest lessons on this: planets hold their orbit through a tension of counterforces; molecules bond and break - transforming the forms of our observable world. Life thrives in this balance. Detachment, then, is not the absence of connection, but it is a way to renew/reshape the connections better. It is knowing when to hold with grace and when to let go in equanimity. A closer look at Nature reveals a beautiful manifestation of this art of detachment. 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800-year-old Shiva temple of later Pandya period unearthed near Melur
800-year-old Shiva temple of later Pandya period unearthed near Melur

The Hindu

timea day ago

  • The Hindu

800-year-old Shiva temple of later Pandya period unearthed near Melur

An 800-year-old Shiva temple of the later Pandya period has been unearthed at Udampatti, a village in Melur taluk. Professor P. Devi Arivu Selvam, temple architect and sculpture researcher, says that though only the foundation of the temple remains, the inscriptions on the culvert are significant as they reveal how the temple had been financially independent. While documents published by the Tamil Nadu State Department of Archaeology in 1974-75 had described the existence of ancient temples in this belt, most of them are in ruins and some have almost disappeared. So, it came as a surprise to historians when recently boys playing in an open ground at Udampatti in the Malampatti panchayat stumbled upon a broken stone structure covered in mud. The villagers alerted the Village Adminsitrative Officer (VAO) and Ms. Devi. With the VAO's permission, the area was cleared. What emerged was the foundation of a temple with the stone base on the northern and southern sides intact. With the help of the engravings on the foundation stone and Silpa Sastram as reference, the temple was found to have been dedicated to Lord Shiva. C. Santhalingam, archaeologist and secretary of the Pandya Nadu Centre for Historical Research, who deciphered the two Tamil inscriptions found on the stone base, says they can be dated to 1217-1218 CE, during the reign of Maravarman Sundara Pandya. The inscriptions say the name of the village was Attur and the temple was called Thennavanisvaram. 'It is pertinent to note that Thennavan is actually a title used by the Pandyas,' says Ms. Devi. The inscriptions are a sale deed of a waterbody by one Alagaperumal, chieftain of Kalavalinadu, to one Nambi Perambala Kuthan alias Kangeyan. The waterbody, called Nagankudi, along with wet and dry land, was sold for 64 kasu (coins). The four boundaries of the land and the waterbody that had been sold have been defined in the inscriptions. It has also been mentioned that the tax due to the land should be given to the God of Thennavaniswaram of Attur for its day-to-day expenses. For historians, these inscriptions reveal the ancient name of Udampatti, which was then called Attur, and also the socio-economic dynamics that were at play during the later Pandya period.

Large turnout at Dharbaranyeswarar Temple car festival
Large turnout at Dharbaranyeswarar Temple car festival

The Hindu

timea day ago

  • The Hindu

Large turnout at Dharbaranyeswarar Temple car festival

A large number of devotees pulled the car of the renowned Dharbaranyeswarar Temple in Thirunallar on Friday. The Dharbaranyeswarar Temple, dedicated to Lord Shiva and his consort Pranambigai, is one of the famous temples in Karaikal district. The temple houses a prominent shrine for Lord Saneeswaran (Saturn). The annual Brahmotsavam festival, which began with the ceremonial flag hoisting last month, has been marked by a series of religious events, including daily processions of the deities on various vahanas (divine mounts). Minister for Adi Dravidar Welfare A.K. Sai J Saravanan Kumar, Thirunallar MLA P.R. Siva, Puducherry DIG R. Sathiya Sundaram, Karaikal SSP M.V.N.V. Lakshmi Soujanya, Temple Executive Officer Arunagirinathan, and Dharumapuram Aadheenam Sri Masilamani Desika Gnanasambanda Paramacharya Swamigal ceremonially initiated the chariot festival. The car passed through the four main streets surrounding the temple.

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