Thaipusam

THAIPUSAM is an annual Hindu festival which draws the largest gathering in
multi-racial Malaysia - nearly a million people in year 2015.
Several hundred devotees spear their cheeks with long, shiny steel rods - often
a metre long - and pierce their chests and backs with small, hook-like needles
in penance. Tourists watch in awe as metal pierces the skin with hardly any
bleeding and, apparently, no pain as the devotee stands in a trance in the dawn
light after weeks of rigorous abstinence.
Over the years, curious British, American and Australian medical experts have
come to observe and speculate. Some think the white ash smeared on the body, the
juice squeezed from the yellow lime fruit or the milk poured on the pierced
areas may help to numb the skin. But most admit they have no answer.
"The belief in Lord Murugan is what prevents the pain and the bleeding," says
Krishna Vadyar, a priest at the temple which conducts the annual rituals.
There are plenty stories about what Thaipusam is about. Among the most popular
is that it commemorates the day Lord Siva's consort, the powerful goddess
Parvathi, gives her son, Murugan, the vel (lance) to vanquish three demons and
their large army which were plaguing the world.
Thaipusam falls on a full moon day in the auspicious 10th Tamil month of Thai
when the constellation of Pusam, the star of well-being, rises over the eastern
horizon.
In Kuala Lumpur, the festival is celebrated on a mammoth scale at the Batu Caves
temple on the outskirts of the city. It began in 1892, started by early Tamils
who migrated to colonial Malaya.
Reportedly, two of them made the difficult trek up the ancient limestone hill
and planted the `vel' in the cave. The cave, the size of a soccer field, houses
a temple dedicated to Lord Murugan.
The vel, made of metal and shaped like a lance, symbolises Murugan who is also
known as Velan.
On the eve of Thaipusam, a five-ton silver-chariot bearing Lord Murugan's image
and followed by a procession of several thousand people leaves the Sri
Mahamariaman temple in downtown Kuala Lumpur, on a 15-kilometre trek to Batu
Caves.
Drums beat out trance-inducing rhythms and long wooden pipes, known as
nathaswaram, croon devotional tunes in a loud carnival atmosphere.
The ethnic Chinese in Penang and elsewhere in Malaysia also take part in the
religious festivities. Hundreds break coconuts and offer fruits to the God all
along the chariot's meandering route.
Throughout its history, the chariot has been pulled by up to six pairs of bulls.
But in 2000, the organisers responded to accusations of animal abuse, by
switching to a motorised vehicle.
However, in the island of Penang in northwestern Peninsular Malaysia, the
chariot there continued to be pulled by the bulls. Many in the island's large
ethnic-Chinese community also take part in the festivities, breaking hundreds of
coconuts.
To many Thaipusam is the day of thanksgiving or atonement for wrongs.
Spectacular edifices or kavadis are often carried or pulled by the devotees with
chains and ropes anchored in the skin of their backs or chests.
After ritual cleansing at a stream at the foothills, they walk up the 272 steps
accompanied by family and friends.
undo Malaysian Festivals