IT'S ACHYUTHA

IT'S  ACHYUTHA

SLIDE SHOW

A Upanayanam goes like this

The Mathru Bhojanam It was hardly seven in the morning, but the priest hurried me and my eight year-old son to the leaves. The auspicious time for the main part of the ceremony was nearing. Three brahmacharis sat at the other three leaves. The rest of the congregation - my husband, his parents, aunts, uncles, cousins and friends - gathered around us and watched me feed my son. Good natured ribbing followed: "You're supposed to be feeding your son, not eating it all up yourself!" "Go easy on the ghee, will ya." "No more stealing from mama's plate, N. This is the last time." As with many Hindu rituals, especially those involving children, the mathru bhojanam is a poignant affair. It is one of the principal rituals in the upanayanam ceremony and it signifies the last time a son may share food from his mother's plate and the last time a mother may feed her son with her own hands. In fact, the entire upanayanam ceremony, which is almost as big as a Hindu wedding, is one big poignant set of rituals. Not long ago, this sacred thread investiture ceremony prepared a young Brahmin boy for the study of the vedas and marked his passage from his own home to that of his teacher's. The vatu - The Sacred Thread, In the course of the ceremony, usually performed right when the boy turns seven, the boy's hair is shaved off, the sacred thread is placed over his shoulder, he is initiated into the ritual of reciting the Gayathri mantram and performing the Sandhyavandanam by his father, he asks for alms (biksha - items that will help him on his journey to his teacher's house) from his family and he's sent off on his way with his little bag of offerings slung on his shoulder. No matter how purely ritualistic the upanayanam ceremony has now become (young boys don't actually go away to a teacher's house these days and the ceremony itself is now performed minutes before young Hindu men get married just so that they have a thread around their shoulder during the wedding ceremony), it is impossible not to be affected during the rituals. The mathru bojhanam, the biksha ritual and the point at which the son has to worship his father by washing the father's feet are the most difficult to countenance. It was gut wrenching to see him standing there with his bag asking for alms (bikshaan dehi). Most poignant of all was the grace and equanimity with which N handled the proceedings. A few days before the ceremony the priest walked him through the big day, taking him step by step through all the rituals. He woke up at three thirty in the morning because the muhurtham (the auspicious minutes) was only a few hours away, he followed the priest's detailed instructions and recited the mantras meticulously. He patiently bore all the things many different people were doing to him, pulling him in many directions at once. At the end of it all, he found three kids near his own age among our family and was running around the hall playing tag, screaming at the top of his lungs. Towards the evening we said goodbye to all the guests, headed home.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

PREPERATIOONS ON FOR THE UPANAYANA


Finally it has been decided to perform the Upanayanam of Chi. Achyutha Diggavi, on March 1, 2009, at Sri Jayatheerthara Brindavana Sannidhana, Uttaradi Mutt, Pampa Mahakavi Road, Basavangudi, Bangalore.

The Upanayanam Invitation is of some special type. It has Sri Raghoothama Swamiji Stotra with Bhaavartha, Vamana Sthuthi, Hithopadesha, all the texts are edited and came from the blessings of our Guruji Sri Vedagarbha G. Sheshagiri Rao. In general the theme of the invitation is different and was appreciated by all.
The Upanayanam Invitation got printed and distribution is going on.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

superb photos:)

ashok diggavi said...

Hello,

I accidentally came across your online blog. Its very nice!!

Enjoyed the upanayanam pics!!

Keep it up!!

Nice to know you are also DIGGAVI!!

ashok diggavi
Madison US