Koneswaram Temple, Trincomalee – Festivals
The Koneswaram temple is well known for its celebration
of the traditional Ther chariot festival, the Navaratri and Shivarathri functions. The Ther Chariot Festival lasts for twenty-two
days in April and focuses on preparing the deities and the community for
Puthandu, the Tamil New Year. Navaratri lasts for nine days and is dedicated to
various aspects of the presiding goddess, whereas Shivarathri is dedicated to
Siva. Devotees visit the temple to attend the daily pujas and make their offerings. Booths are erected
outside for the sale of food, drink, brassware, pottery, cloth and holy images.
These functions primarily attract Hindus to the temple.
The main Tirukoneswaram Ther Thiruvila Festival,
the twenty-two-day annual chariot festival begins with the hoisting of the
temple Nandi flag. This is followed by temple processions of Lord Konesar and
his consort Mathumai Ambal, installed and pulled in an ornate chariot temple
car while deities Pillaiyar and Murugan with his two
consorts Valli and Deivayanai are taken ahead in two other decorated chariots.
This is conducted throughout Trincomalee district, and follows Kulakottan's
stone scriptures detailing how Hindus in Tamil villages like Sambaltivu, lands
which historically belonged to the temple, are entitled to hold poojas as their
Upayam during the annual festival period.
Until April 1624 the Koneswaram Ther Festival occurred
around Puthandu in April annually
with five chariots and this tradition was reintroduced in April 2003, three
hundred and seventy-nine years later. The water-cutting Theertham Thiruvila festival
(holy bath) takes place annually in the centuries-old Papanasachunai holy well
(Papanasam Theertham) on Swami Rock during the Ther festival period. The deity
and other holy artefacts are bathed in the water of the well in the complex's
sacred precincts. Devotees are sprayed with the holy water following the
Theertham.
The Theppa Thiruvila Boat Festival consists of
Lord Konesar and goddess Mathumai Ambal taken in a boat around the temple from
Swami Rock via the Back Bay Sea to the Dutch Bay Sea. Religious discourses and
cultural items take place throughout the night before Puthandu at the Dutch Bay
Sea beach. Thereafter the deities are taken to the temple early morning the
next day on Puthandu by road through the Fort Frederick entrance. The
Trincomalee Bhadrakali Amman Temple and other Hindu temples have held their
water-cutting Theertham festivals in the Back-Bay Sea (Theertha
Kadatkarai) for several centuries.
The Koneswaram Poongavanam Festival– the Temple
Garden Festival is held during this twenty-two-day festival period. An annual
three-day procession follows Maha Shivarathri Day, observed every year since
1951 following the rediscovery of the bronze idols in 1950. Occurring in three
stages, on each day of the festival, the images of the chief deity Konesar, the
presiding consort goddess Mathumai Amman, Ganesha and Murugan are brought from
Swami Rock to the entrance of Fort Fredrick in decorated Ther temple cars
before being paraded through the whole Periyakadai of the Trincomalee town.
The chariot cars are pulled by devotees through a
decorated route while singing hymns. Devotees hold Poorna
Kumbham outside their houses along
the route and worship as the procession moves. On the second day of the
festival there is a procession to the Patharakali Ambal Temple where the images
are kept for the evening. On the final day of the festival, the large chariots
are pulled back to Koneswaram along a route through Trincomalee, accompanied by
traditional Nadeswaram and Tavil musicians.
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