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February 02, 2007 Friday Muharram 13, 1428





Malaysian Hindus skewer themselves



By Clarence Fernandez


KUALA LUMPUR: The chant of prayers swelled to a climax as a priest pierced the tongue of pilgrim Uthaya Kumar with a slim, six-inch skewer in one of Malaysia’s biggest Hindu festivals.

Kumar, a stocky 21-year-old, was among hundreds of thousands of ethnic Indians flocking to the Malaysian capital this week for the Thaipusam festival, which involves a steep climb to a hilltop temple to demonstrate their faith in a bid for divine favour.He said he felt no pain when pierced with the miniature spear, a symbol of the Hindu god Murugan, to whom the cave temple is dedicated.

“No, I suffered nothing,” Kumar said, attributing his self-control to divine grace secured by strict abstinence ahead of Thaipusam, a festival associated with penance and atonement.

“When you seek a vow from God you cannot shave, you have to abstain from alcohol, and you must eat vegetarian food,” said Kumar, a bachelor who works as an administrative assistant with a firm in the nearby town of Shah Alam.

Authorities expect 1.5 million people to visit the temple in the Batu Caves complex of limestone caverns outside Kuala Lumpur this year, in a centuries-old tradition among Hindus of southern Indian origin that reaches its climax on Thursday.

At a river’s edge nearby, devotees made offerings of bananas and coconuts, lighting incense sticks and taking cleansing showers before they began the ascent. Rows of barbers sat along the bank, shaving the hair from the heads of other penitents.

“People perform the penance for various reasons,” said Subramaniam, the priest who pierced Kumar’s tongue with the spear. “Many times they want children. Many women pray for good husbands, and when they succeed, they come here.”

The incessant chanting of prayer carries many devotees into a trance-like state that makes them immune to ordinary pain, said Subramaniam, who has assisted at the festival for 15 years.

Kumar carried on his head a pyramidal “kavadi”, or “burden” in Tamil, a kind of portable wooden altar about four feet tall and weighing roughly 20kg, from which hung pictures of Hindu gods, decorated with peacock feathers.

Kumar began his laborious ascent of the 272 steps to the hilltop cave at daybreak. He climbed steadily, pausing only briefly once or twice to catch his breath, marshal his energies, and adjust a strap around his waist that supported his burden. —Reuters






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