Wednesday, 31 January 2024
NOT ME ALONE IN MY TRANCE
Tuesday, 30 January 2024
THE QUEEN MOTHER
Monday, 29 January 2024
RE-INCARNATION
Sunday, 28 January 2024
AS WE TOOK OUR VOWS
Saturday, 27 January 2024
BHAVAM BHAVANI SAHITAM NAMAMI
Friday, 26 January 2024
Thursday, 25 January 2024
THAIPUSAM FESTIVAL AT SRI SUBRAMANIAR TEMPLE, LADANG SERKAM, MERLIMAU, MELAKA, MALAYSIA THIS AFTERNOON (25 JANUARY 2024)
Our Payyan family member attended and offered his prayers at the Thaipusam Festival, Sri Subramaniar Temple, Ladang Serkam, Merlimau, Melaka this afternoon.
Photos and videos of the Temple Festival:
Wednesday, 24 January 2024
Thaipusam 2024 - Batu Caves, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Chariot Procession today (24 January 2024)
Tuesday, 23 January 2024
Ram Mandir: Ayodhya to join Mecca, Vatican City as global pilgrim destinations after $10-billion makeover: Jefferies
Pran Pratishtha: The consecration ceremony of Ram Temple is scheduled to start at 12:20 pm by PM Modi on January 22 in Ayodhya. With over $10 billion in investments made in new airports, revamped railway stations, townships, and improved roads, the city is expected to attract around 50 million to 10 million footfall every year, according to a report by Jefferies. Ram Mandir, Ayodhya, is seen as India's answer to the Vatican City and Mecca.
Religious tourism is a cornerstone of India's tourism sector, projected to reach $443 billion by FY33 with an 8 per cent CAGR. Ayodhya's Ram temple is built at an estimated cost of USD 225 million, with the cost being funded through contributions and donations. The city is expected to see a jump in pilgrims to around 100-150k per day.
How is Ayodhya prepared?
Ayodhya has witnessed a surge in hotel construction and development. Currently, the city has approximately 17 hotels with around 590 rooms. To meet the anticipated increase in tourist arrivals, 73 new hotels are in the pipeline, with 40 of them already under construction, as per the report.
Several renowned hotel chains and hospitality companies, including IHCL (Indian Hotels Company Limited), Marriott International, Wyndham, and OYO Rooms, are planning on creating more hotels in Ayodhya.
The hospitality projects are expected to add significant room capacity to accommodate the growing number of tourists and pilgrims visiting Ayodhya.
Ayodhya's Phase I of the new airport is operational, becoming a milestone in facilitating air travel to and from the city.
The airport's Phase I, built at a cost of approximately approximately $175 million, has an annual handling capacity of 1 million passengers, the report added. Meanwhile, Ayodhya's international terminal is expected to be operational by 2025. Once operational, Phase II of the airport is expected to handle around 6 million passengers annually.
However, tourism in India has a lot to catch up. Tourism's contribution to India's GDP is around 6.8 per cent. India is positioned below most of the emerging and developed economies, the report further added.
In the broader context, India's Union Budget of 2023-24 allocated ₹2400 crore to the tourism sector. The central government started initiatives, including, the Swadesh Darshan Scheme, PRASHAD Scheme, and Adarsh Smarak Scheme are actively promoting integrated development, pilgrimage sites, and monument revitalization, became the additional driver.
Rise of Medical Tourism in India
Medical tourism in India is on the rise, the report added. Leading hospitals and healthcare facilities, such as Apollo Hospitals, Max Healthcare, Fortis Healthcare, and Medanta, are expected to benefit from the influx of international patients seeking specialized medical treatments, according to the report.
Additionally, the Government's initiatives like “Heal in India" and the allowance of 100% Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in the wellness and medical tourism segment have further supported the growth of medical tourism.
- https://www.livemint.com/
Malaysia’s Batu Caves to have escalator built after Thaipusam
An escalator will be built at the popular tourist attraction just north of Kuala Lumpur in 2024.
It is intended to make the Sri Subramaniar cave temple more accessible to the disabled and elderly visitors, said temple committee chairman R. Nadarajah at a press conference on Jan 19, Bernama reported.
Construction of the escalator and a new multipurpose hall will begin after Thaipusam, which falls on Jan 25.
While the hall is estimated to cost around RM35 million (S$9.9 million), Mr Nadarajah did not say how much the escalator will cost.
“We hope the government would assist us since this will allow the disabled and elderly who are unable to climb the steps to reach the main temple,” he said.
Batu Caves in Gombak is home to one of the more popular shrines outside India and is dedicated to the Hindu god of war Murugan. A 42.7m-tall statue of the deity greets visitors at the entrance of the attraction.
Thousands of tourists and Hindu devotees visit the cave and temple every day, with numbers rising to an estimated 1.6 million over the four-day Thaipusam period in 2023.
The 272 steps leading to the limestone caves were the subject of viral photos on social media after they were painted in bright shades of blue, red and orange in 2018. - NST
Monday, 22 January 2024
Deeper meaning to Thaipusam
Thaipusam, which falls on the month of the Tamil calendar Thai, is an auspicious event for Tamils, the descendants of the Dravidian race.
It falls either in January or February, according to the English calendar.
Thaipusam is essentially a celebration to pay homage to the Tamil god Lord Murugan, and not confined to just sacrifices and rituals.
These are important and give form and meaning to Tamils across the globe, but the meaning of Thaipusam goes beyond the rituals and sacrifices.
The fever and passion linked to Thaipusam is all about remembering the glorious past of the Tamils, harking back 3,000 to 4,000 years ago, long before the advent of the Indo-European migration to parts of the Indian subcontinent.
The traditional Tamil gods, Lord Muruga and Siva, are closely identified with the beginnings of Dravidian/Tamil civilisation.
Much later, these gods came to be included within Hinduism as propagated by the Brahminical religious order.
While it is difficult to differentiate between the elements of Dravidian worship and the present Brahminical ideology of Hinduism, the Tamils think and act on grounds that their culture, language and religion predate the arrival of the Indo-European, sometimes referred to as the Aryans.
The pride in Thaipusam, both conscious and unconscious, is predicated on the thought that the worship of Lord Muruga is something immemorial.
It goes beyond the Brahmincal cultural and religious order that was superimposed much later.
Essentially, the worship of Lord Muruga is about remembering the Tamil past, the originality of their god and, most importantly, the phenomenon that gives them meaning and identity in the present world.
Thaipusam outwardly might have the appearance of past rituals in worship, the nature of human sacrifices and others.
However, in particular societies where Tamils are an ethnic and discriminated minority, Thaipusam holds a special significance.
It is about asserting their cultural and religious rights in an environment that might not be friendly or cordial to the propagation of their culture, language and religion.
Thaipusam is seen through the rituals and sacrifices to Lord Muruga as something needed to dignify the community.
Thaipusam is as much about the past as it is about the present.
In a sense, Thaipusam provides the Tamils the room and space otherwise not available to exert their cultural and religious rights.
Lord Muruga with his vel (spear) is seen as the epitome of the sacrifice required by the Tamils to propagate themselves as a race guided and protected by their supreme God.
The sound of chants Vetri Vel Muruganku represent the loyalty and devotion of Tamils to their supreme being, Lord Muruga.
When all else fails, Lord Muruga with his omnipresence is there to guide the Tamils, in both the spiritual or material sense.
Equating Thaipusam merely to the mundanity of rituals and the forms of sacrifices misses the powerful meaning that the celebration has for the Tamils, their survival against the odds, and most importantly, their existence in the world today. - MalaysiaNow.
P Ramasamy is Penang deputy chief minister II and the assemblyman for Perai.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of MMKtT..