The eighteen Dindigul processions involved the telling of Mahabharata episodes through their rendering into Tamil songs (pattu). These were sung to the accompaniment of the utuppumani, probably the hourglass-shaped utukkai drum and the mani, or bell. In at least one case the sixth-day procession enacting the marriage of Draupadi and Arjuna, the scene was dramatized by two actors dressed as the bridal pair, who performed the wedding scene on the street. In the Gingee core area, one finds all of these elements in contemporary Draupadi festivals. Processions, on the other hand, though they may also occur on each day or night of the festival, normally represent epic scenes only by specific decorations (alamkdras) of the processional icons. Meanwhile, the hourglass drum and bell are not so much typical instruments of the Terukkuttu as infrequently found ritual paraphernalia of the Draupadi temple. In the ten day long festival on the first day, Draupadi is simply taken out with the five Pandavas, and on the second, Lord Krishna goes on procession with Radha. On the third day, however, Draupadi's processional icon is dressed as the distinctly "Vedic" goddess Gayatri, with six heads and many arms. And on the fourth day, Draupadi and Yudhisthira (Tarumar or Dharma) are dressed for their marriage as Minaksi (the "fish-eyed" goddess) and Cokkanatar (or Sundaresvara, the "Beautiful Lord"), these being the forms in which Parvati and Lord Shiva are worshipped at the great Meenakshi Temple in nearby Madurai. Indeed, it is notable that it is now no longer Draupadi's marriage with Arjuna that is ceremonially most significant, but her marriage with the more Brahmanical Dharma, assimilated to Shiva's most prominent regional form. On the fifth day, Draupadi is taken in procession with the "Eight Lakshmis." On the sixth day, Arjuna's chariot is driven by Krishna to the Mahabharata war, highlighting Krishna in his favored form as Parthasarathi, "the charioteer of Partha" (Arjuna), and of course evoking the scene of the Bhagavad Gita. On the seventh day, a statue of Aiyappan set above eighteen steps is taken out to replicate Aiyappan's famous pilgrimage temple atop Sabarimalai Mountain. And on the eighth day, a "hill" is made of books to represent Tirumalai Mountain, home of one of the most celebrated Vishnu temples in all South India. It is to be noted that Draupadi has not been taken on procession since the fifth day, a pattern that continues into the ninth, when the figures carried in procession are Goddess Saraswati, Goddess Lakshmi, and Lord Ganesha. The absence of Goddess Durga is also noted in the procession. Presumably it is she who is represented by Draupadi herself when the latter is finally taken on procession once again on the tenth day the day of Durga's victory-this time in the company of her victorious husband, Arjuna. Draupadi and Arjuna are commonly paired for processions, most notably for their victorious crossing of the coals in fire walking ceremonies. And it is likely that this culminating procession at Dindigul is another vestige or fragment of a ritual of this type. On the fourteenth day of the eighteen-day festival the procession involves an enactment of the episode of the Pandavas and Draupadi's period in disguise. |
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