Helping To Celebrate Pongal
16 January 2005 — Tamil Nadu
"When bad times come, it's very common to hear
women crying, but not men. Here, the men are crying
like anything. They can't even speak. I've never seen
anything like it." According to one of Amma's
senior brahmacharis helping with the Ashram's relief
work in Tamil Nadu, this is the situation in many of
the seaside villages of Chennai and Cuddalore. In Cuddalore,
the ocean intruded more than two kilometres, destroyed
the ripening nut harvest and rendered the land useless
for farming for the next five years.
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The 14th of January was Pongal. It’s a time for
worshipping God in the form of the sun and for
paying thanks for the harvest. This year, obviously
the devotion of Cuddalore's farmer's was tested.
But Amma's brahmacharis and devotees were there
for them. The day before the festival in the seaside
villages of Pudukuppam, Cupudupettai and Kannikoil,
they provided families with the essential Pongal
provisions, namely ingredients for the traditional
dishes (cereal, rice, jaggery, sugar, etc.), as
well as utensils, clothes and blankets.
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Amma's brahmacharis spent Pongal itself in Chennai,
singing bhajans, giving satsang and lighting the puja
lamps in the villager's houses. They also performed moksha
deepam [prayer for the peace of the dead] in various
places around South Chennai (Srinivasapuram, Kovalam,
Foreshore Estate and Karukattukuppam), North Chennai
(Kasimedu and Royapuram) and in Kanyakumari.
Swami Ramakrishnananda performed the same puja in Nagapattinam
and in Pondicherry. They were accompanied by busloads
of devotees. And everywhere they went, they spent a
lot of time with the villagers, talking to them and
listening to their stories.
"Some stories you can't believe," says one
of the brahmacharis. "One lady lost her two children.
It was too much for her—a few days later, she committed
suicide. I met her older brother. You cannot console
someone like that. Words have no value. Only listening
has a value."
—Kannadi
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