Padmanabhaswamy Temple, Thiruvananthapuram – Temple
Assets & Treasures
The temple and its assets belong to Lord
Padmanabhaswamy, and were for a long time controlled by a trust, headed by
the Travancore Royal family. However, for the present, the Supreme Court of India
has divested the Travancore Royal Family from leading the management of the
temple. T P Sundararajan's litigations changed the way the world looked at the
Temple. In June 2011, the Supreme Court directed the authorities from the
archaeology department and the fire services, to open the secret chambers of
the temple for inspection of the items kept inside.
The temple has six hitherto known vaults (Kallaras),
labeled as A to F, for book keeping purpose by the Court (Since, however, an
Amicus Curie Report by Justice Gopal Subramaniam, in April 2014, has reportedly
found two more further subterranean vaults that have been named G and H). While
vault B has been unopened over centuries, A was possibly opened in the 1930s,
and vaults C to F have been opened from time to time over recent years.
The two priests of the temple, the 'Periya Nambi' and
the 'Thekkedathu Nambi', are the custodians of the four vaults, C to F, which
are opened periodically. The Supreme Court had directed that "the existing
practices, procedures, and rituals" of the temple be followed while
opening vaults C to F and using the articles inside, while Vaults A and B would
be opened only for the purpose of making an inventory of the articles and then
closed. The review of the temple's underground vaults was undertaken by a
seven-member panel appointed by the Supreme Court of India to generate an inventory, leading to the
enumeration of a vast collection of articles that are traditionally kept under
lock and key.
A detailed inventory of the temple assets, consisting of
gold, jewels, and other valuables is yet to be made. While vault B remains
unopened, vaults A, C, D, E and F were opened along with some of their
antechambers. Among the reported findings, are a three-and-a-half feet tall
solid pure golden idol of Mahavishnu, studded with hundreds of diamonds and rubies and other
precious stones. Also found were an 18-foot-long pure gold chain, a gold
sheaf weighing 500 kg (1,100 lb.), a 36 kg (79 lb.) golden
veil, 1200 'Sarappalli' gold coin-chains that are encrusted with precious
stones, and several sacks filled with golden artifacts, necklaces, diadems,
diamonds, rubies, sapphires, emeralds, gemstones, and objects made of other
precious metals.
Ceremonial attire for adorning the deity in the form of
16-part gold Anki weighing almost 30 kilograms (66 lb.), gold coconut
shells studded with rubies and emeralds, and several 18th century Napoleonic
era coins were found amongst many other objects. In early 2012, an expert
committee had been appointed to investigate these objects, which include lakhs
of golden coins of the Roman
Empire, that were found in Kottayam, in
Kannur District. According to Vinod Rai, the former
Comptroller-and-Auditor-General (CAG) of India, who had audited some of the
Temple records from 1990, in August 2014, in the already opened vault A, there
is an 800 kg (1,800 lb.) hoard of gold coins dating to around 200
B.C, each coin priced at over Rs 2.7 crore (US$390,000).
Also found was a pure Golden Throne, studded with
hundreds of diamonds and other fully precious stones, meant for the
18-foot-long Deity. According to varying reports, at least three, if
not more, solid gold crowns have been found, studded with diamonds and other
precious stones. Some other media reports also mention hundreds of pure
gold chairs, thousands of gold pots and jars, among the articles recovered from
Vault A and its antechambers. This revelation has solidified the status of the
Padmanabhaswamy Temple as the wealthiest place of worship in the world. It is
conservatively estimated that the value of the monumental items is close
to Rs 1.2 lakh crore or Rs 1.2
trillion (US$17 billion). If the antique and
cultural value were taken into account these assets could be worth ten times
the current market price.
These estimates were on the basis of the revelations
since July 2011, when five vaults were opened, with the at least one remaining
vault (B), which is the largest, still closed. One of the oldest existing
estimates regarding Vault B, which can be considered to be at least as reliable
as any other made since the discovery of the hidden treasure (or assets) of the
Temple in 2011, was by the Travancore Royal Family itself in the 1880s (when an
older existing estimate was updated). According to it, the gold and precious
stones contained in Vault B, which is by far the largest and the only vault (of
the reported six) that is unopened so far, since the discovery of the treasure,
were worth Rs 12,000 crore (US$1.7 billion).
Considering the subsequent inflation of the rupee, and
the increase in the prices of gold and precious metals and precious stones
since in general, the treasure in the unopened vault B alone, would be worth at
least Rs 50 trillion (US$730 billion) in present-day terms, without the cultural
value being factored in. As a reference, the entire GDP (revenues in all
forms) of the Mughal Empire at its very zenith under Aurangzeb (in 1690), was a comparatively meagre US$90
billion in modern-day terms. In fact, at its richest, the Mughal
"treasury" (in Akbar's and Jahangir's and Shah Jahan's periods) consisted
of seven tonnes of gold, along with eighty pounds of uncut diamonds, a hundred
pounds each of rubies and emeralds and six hundred pounds of pearls.
Also, in contrast, the wealthiest Nizam of Hyderabad, Osman Ali Khan, Asaf Jah VII, was worth a relatively minuscule Rs 600 crore (US$87 million)
(all his conceivable assets combined) in the 1940s, while his entire treasure
of jewels, would be worth between US$150 Million and US$500 million variously
in today's terms. The hitherto-uncovered treasure itself is worth millions
of times that of the so-called British crown jewels. Even with only the five
smaller of the reported eight vaults being opened (the larger three vaults and
all their ante-chambers still remaining closed), the treasure found so far, is
considered to be by far the largest collection of items of gold and fully
precious stones in the recorded history of the world.
The valuables are believed to have been accumulated in
the temple over several thousands of years, having been donated to the Deity
(and subsequently stored there), by various Dynasties like the Cheras, the Pandyas, the Travancore Royal Family, the Kolathiris, the Pallavas, the Cholas and many other
Kings in the recorded history of both South India and beyond, and from the
rulers and traders of Mesopotamia, Jerusalem, Greece, Rome, and later, the various
colonial powers from Europe, and other countries as well. Some people have
suggested that a part of the stored riches reached the Travancore kings in the
later years in the form of tax as well as conquered wealth of other South
Indian kingdoms.
Most scholars however believe that this was accumulated
over thousands of years, given the mention of the Deity and the Temple in
several extant Hindu Texts, the Sangam Tamil literature (500 BC to 300 AD
wherein it was referred to as the "Golden Temple" on account of its
then unimaginable wealth), and the treasures consist of countless artifacts
dating back to the Chera, Pandya and Greek and Roman epochs. The ancient
late-Tamil-Sangam epic Silapathikaram (c 100 AD to 300 AD at the latest) speaks of the
then Chera King Chenkuttuvan receiving gifts of gold and precious stones from a
certain 'Golden Temple' (Arituyil-Amardon) which is believed to be the Padmanabhaswamy
Temple.
Gold had been panned from rivers as well as mined in
Thiruvananthapuram, Kannur, Wayanad, Mallappuram, Palakkad and Kollam districts
for thousands of years. The Malabar region (as a part of the
"Tamilakam" region of recorded history) had several centers of trade
and commerce since the Sumerian Period ranging from Vizhinjam in the South to
Mangalore in the North. Also, at times like the invasion by Tipu Sultan, the
other then related royal families (of the Travancore Royal Family) in Kerala
and the extreme Southern region (like the Kolathiris), took refuge in
Thiruvananthapuram, and stored their temple-wealth for safekeeping in the
Padmanabhaswamy Temple.
Also, much of the treasures housed in the much larger
and as-yet-unopened vaults, as well as in the much smaller cellars that have
been opened, date back to long before the institution of the so-called
Travancore Kingdom, e.g. the 800 kg (1,800 lb.) hoard of gold coins
from 200 B.C that was mentioned by Vinod
Rai. Noted archaeologist and historian R.
Nagaswamy has also stated that several
records exist in Kerala, of offerings made to the Deity, from several parts of
Kerala. Lastly, it has to be remembered that in the Travancore Kingdom, a
distinction was always made between the Government (State) Treasury
(Karuvelam), the Royal Family Treasury (Chellam), and the Temple Treasury
(Thiruvara Bhandaram or Sri Bhandaram).
During the reign of Maharani Gowri Lakshmi Bayi, hundreds of temples that were mismanaged in the Kerala
region, were brought under the Government. The excess ornaments in these
temples were also transferred to the Vaults of the Padmanabhaswamy Temple.
Instead the funds of the Padmanabhaswamy Temple were utilized for the daily
upkeep of these temples. On 4 July 2011 the seven-member expert team tasked
with taking stock of the temple assets decided to postpone opening of Chamber
'B'. This chamber is sealed with an iron door with the image of a cobra on it
and it has not been opened, due to the belief opening it would result in much
misfortune.
The royal family said that many legends were attached to
the temple and that chamber B has a model of a snake on the main door and
opening it could be a bad omen. The seven-member team will consult with
some more experts on 8 July 2011 and then they may take the final decision on
opening of chamber 'B'. An Ashtamangala Devaprasnam conducted in the
Temple to discern the will of the Lord revealed that any attempts to open
Chamber 'B' would cause Divine displeasure and that the holy articles in the
other chambers were defiled in the inventorying process. The original
petitioner whose court action led to the inventory taking, T.P. Sundarajan,
died in July 2011, adding credence to those who believe in the folklore around
the temple.
Prior to this now-famous incident in July 2011, one of
the several vaults in the Temple which was not any of the Vaults B (untouched
after the 1880s) or G or H (both rediscovered supposedly by the Amicus Curie
only in mid-2014), was opened in 1931. This was possibly an antechamber of any
of the Vaults A or C or D or E or F that may not have been opened yet. This was
necessitated due to the severe economic depression that India was going through
as was the entire world. The Palace and State Treasuries had run almost dry.
The small group of people including the King and the priests found a
granary-sized structure almost full of mostly gold and some silver coins and
jewels.
Surmounted on top of it were hundreds of pure gold pots.
There were four coffers filled with gold coins as well. Also found was a larger
chest fixed to the ground with six sections in it. They were full of gold
jewelry encrusted with diamonds, rubies, sapphires and emeralds. Besides these,
were four more chests of old coins (not of gold), and they were carried back to
the Palace and State Treasuries for counting from.
Mythology
behind Vault B:
The southwest part of the Chuttuambalam
(circumambulatory path around the sanctum over ground) was constructed at the
holy spot where Lord Balarama is believed to have donated cows to holy men. This
portion is now known as Mahabharatakonam. The Kallara (Vault) B happened to be
already situated under Mahabharatakonam. According to a popular legend, many
Devas and Sages met Lord Balarama when he was on pilgrimage to
Thiruvananthapuram, on the banks of Padmateertham. They requested him that they
may be permitted to reside there, worshiping Lord Padmanabha.
Balarama granted them their wish. It is believed that
these Devas and Sages thereafter reside in Kallara B worshipping the Lord and
guarding the wealth of precious metals and precious stones stored there. Naga Devathas devoted to the Lord also dwell in this
Kallara. Kanjirottu Yakshi, whose enchanting and ferocious forms are painted on
the south-west part of the main Sanctum, resides in this Kallara worshipping
Lord Narasimha. Holy objects like Sree Chakram were installed beneath this
Kallara to enhance the potency of the Principal Deity.
Lord Ugra Narasimha of Thekkedom is said to be the Protector of
Kallara B. There is a serpent's image on Kallara B indicating danger to anyone
who opens it. A four-day Ashtamangala Devaprasnam conducted in August 2011 declared Kallara B as
forbidden territory. In 2011, the antechamber to Kallara B was opened by the
Observers appointed by the Supreme Court of India. But the Observers could not
open Kallara B. However, Gopal Subramaniam in his report submitted to the
Supreme Court in April 2014, recommended its opening after conducting another
Devaprasnam.
The two Pushpanjali Swamiyars are the highest spiritual
dignitaries of Padmanabha Swamy Temple. The Pushpanjali Swamiyar of Naduvil
Madhom sent letters to the Chairperson of the Administrative Committee and the
Executive Officer on February 8, 2016 expressing his strong opposition to the
opening of Kallara B. The Pushpanjali Swamiyar of Munchira Madhom led a
Ratha Yathra from Kasaragod to Thiruvananthapuram in May 2018 campaigning
against opening the sacred Kallara. Azhvanchery Thamprakkal, the supreme spiritual leader of Kerala Brahmins, while
addressing a meeting held in connection with the Ratha Yathra also demanded
that faith should not be trampled upon by opening Kallara B.
According to folklore, Padmanabhan Thambi, arch rival of
Anizham Thirunal Marthanda Varma, marched to Thiruvananthapuram with his forces
and tried to loot the vaults of the Temple. Thambi stayed at Sri Varaham and
sent his mercenaries to Sree Padmanabha Swamy Temple. It is said that divine
serpents materialized in hundreds and scared away Thampi's men. Emboldened by
this heavenly intervention, Pallichal
Pillai and local people opposed
Padmanabhan Thambi and ensured that the mercenaries did not proceed with the
misadventure.
It is highly unlikely that Kallara B was opened after
the 1880s. An article by Emily Gilchrist, a visiting Englishwoman in the 1933,
recalls in her book 'Travancore: A Guide Book for the Visitor' (Oxford
University Press, 1933) about an unsuccessful attempt to open one Kallara in
1908: "About 25 years ago, when the State needed additional money, it was
thought expedient to open these chests and use the wealth they contained."
"A group of people" got together and attempted to enter the vaults
with torches. When they found the vaults "infested with cobras" they
"fled for their lives.
Controversies:
The Kerala High Court ruled in 2011 that the state
government should take over the control of the temple and its assets, but the
Travancore royal family appealed to the Supreme Court. An independent
report was commissioned, and was completed in November 2012, finding no
evidence that the royal family were expropriating the treasures. As of
end-April 2016, vaults B, G, and H along with their several ante-chambers were
yet to be opened; while inventorying of the items in vaults C, D, E, and F were
completed (in August 2012) and formal inventorying of vault A had
commenced.
Several hundred pots and other items made of gold, that
are used for daily rituals or intermittently for ceremonies in the Temple, were
not inventoried as the Temple-priests expressed strong objections. Over
1.02 lakh 'articles' had been retrieved from Vault A and its ante-chambers,
till that point, though only a small part of them had been inventoried then. An
'article' could be either an individual item, or collections of several items,
examples of the latter being a cache of 1,95,000 'Rassappanams' (Gold coins)
weighing 800 kg and sets of Navaratnas (collections of nine different
kinds of diamonds). There are over 60,000 fully precious stones, set as
parts of larger pieces of gold Jewellery, amongst those items inventoried as of
March 2013.
The results of the inventory are not to be released
until the completion of the whole process by order of the Supreme Court of
India. In April 2014, Amicus
Curiae advocate Gopal
Subramaniam filed a 577-page
report to the Supreme court of India alleging malpractices in the administration of the
temple. According to him, the authorities failed to perform their ethical
duties by opening many bank accounts, trusts and also not filing Income Tax
returns for the past ten years. He alleged that Vault B was opened despite a
previous ruling of the Supreme court prohibiting the same.
The report states, "The large amount of gold and
silver, the discovery of which was a shock to the Amicus Curiae, is a singular
instance of mismanagement. The presence of a gold plating machine is also yet
another unexplained circumstance. This discovery raises a doubt of the
organized extraction by persons belonging to the highest echelons. There
appears to be resistance on the part of the entire State apparatus in
effectively addressing the said issues. The lack of adequate investigation by
the police is a telling sign that although Thiruvananthapuram is a city in the
State of Kerala, parallelism based on monarchic rule appears to predominate the
social psyche."
The Supreme court bench comprising justice R. M. Lodha
and justice A. K. Patnaik ordered a change in administration by forming a
5-member committee and appointing Vinod
Rai as auditor. The committee will include Thiruvananthapuram District judge K. P. Indira, Thantri and Nambi of the
temple and two members to be decided in consultation with the Government of Kerala. Additionally, IAS officer and former administrator of the
temple, K. N. Satish was appointed as executive officer. The Government of
Kerala agreed to comply with the Supreme court order.
Moolam Thirunal Rama Varma remains the trustee of the temple and still does
the ritual duties as the titular Maharaja of Travancore, but has no responsibility regarding the temple
management after the interim ruling by the Supreme Court. The report also
found the existence of two more vaults that were never even made mention of or
hitherto spoken about. The report named them Vault 'G' and Vault 'H'. Like Vault
'B' and all its antechambers, both these vaults and their antechambers were yet
to have been opened, as of May 2014. The report also mentions that Mr.
Subramanian found several large trunks filled with artifacts made of precious
metals and precious stones outside of the eight vaults and their antechambers.
The CBI and the Intelligence Bureau have red-flagged the
appointment of Gopal Subramaniam as a Judge in the Supreme Court. The IB cites Mr.
Subramaniam's report on Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple as one of the instances
where he relied heavily on his spiritual instincts rather than rational logic
and hard facts. In his second report on Sree Padmanabha Swamy Temple, Mr.
Subramaniam himself reveals, "It was his morning ritual of his mind and
seeking guidance, which resulted in discoveries in this direction.”
The Amicus Curiae has also been accused of conducting
poojas in the Temple in violation of its customs. He performed poojas at
the Thevarappura in the Temple and in front of the Vedavyasa Shrine. Despite opposition
from the Royal Family and the Tantries of the Temple, he pulled out a stone
Yantra from the nearby Marthandan Madhom Palace and did pooja on it for several
days. The Tantries explained that the Yantram had no connection with the
Padmanabhaswami Temple and that it was for the protection of the Palace.
But the Amicus Curiae insisted on having it installed in
the Sanctum Sanctorum of the Temple. Due to severe opposition from the Tantries
the Yantram remains where it was. Every morning, Lord Padmanabha is to be
awakened only by blowing the conch shell and chanting the Sripada Sooktham. But
the Amicus Curiae introduced the daily rendering of Venkatesa Suprabhatham to
awaken the Lord. The Supreme Court requested the Tantri to take the final
decision on whether the Suprabhatham could be sung.
Following that, the Senior Tantri Nedumpilli
Tharananalloor Parameswaran Namboothiripad directed the Temple authorities to
stop the chanting of Suprabhatham forthwith as it was causing 'Anya Mantra
Yajana Dosham' (affliction due to worshipping the Deity with incompatible
mantras) to the Presiding Deity and the Temple. As atonement for this Dosham,
the Tantri wants Vedic scholars to chant 12 'muras' each of Rig Veda and Yajur
Veda. In his first report to the Supreme Court, the Amicus Curiae directed the
Tantries to examine whether a Sri
Yantra can be installed in the
Sanctum Sanctorum in front of the Utsava moorthi.
According to a report by Comptroller and Auditor General
of India Vinod Rai,
records shared with him show that Kallara B has been opened a number of times
in recent decades: twice in 1991 and five times in 2002. Once Vinod Rai's
report was out, Princess Aswathi Thirunal Gowri Lakshmi
Bayi clarified that Mr. Rai was referring to the outer
Vault of Kallara B, which was opened even in 2011 by the Supreme
Court-appointed observers.
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