Last Resort in the South
Tiruchendur is a tiny temple town that
occupies the coast between Kanyakumari and Rameshwaram. Its white gopuram is
almost on the shore. What looks like the giant hour-hand of a clock, affixed in
neon lights, is actually the symbol of the lance with which Lord Murugan
vanquished a particularly troublesome asura. Unusually this tower has been
built to the west of the sprawling temple. Surrounded by the blue sea and
waving palms, a more delightful end to one's metre gauge journey from the
northern arid zone around Fazilka could not be
imagined.
The small station has recently been renovated
and is immaculate in appearance and operation. A notice threatens to fine
anyone Rs. 16 who enters without a platform ticket, so quickly I buy one to
photograph the train about to leave. This is the "732 Tirunelveli
Passenger" hauled by a diesel. Though I can jump aboard and return by the
"733 Down", the blue of the sea is too inviting and instead I settle
for some conversation with the station master, who apparently has been alerted
of my coming. When in Delhi, promises of flashed messages to ease my way had
seemed a kind gesture by the Railway Information Officer, but to my pleasant
surprise the friendliness with which I was met along the way was largely due to
the promises kept in Delhi.
To make my day a steam engine lay smoking
idly in the siding, waiting to haul the last of the three daily Passengers. For
the end of the line, everything was perfect. The station building had been
remodelled in the temple style, but tastefully so, and the miniscule
reservation office must be the only one in the whole of India where the green
discs are permanently on display. In fact you wonder how long this branch line
can compete with the faster and similarly priced buses. With Tuticorin less
than 40 km away, it is understandable that a famous port town can use a railway
link. A friend had advised me to give Tuticorin a miss since it held little of
railway or aesthetic interest.
The bus is much more direct than the train
for the Rameshwaram-Tiruchendur section, but you pay for the convenience by
becoming part of a hectic running battle between North and South. A party of 14
Hindi speakers got on a Rameshwaram-bound bus and from the word go there was
bickering between them and the Tamil running staff. There were some rain clouds
about and the travellers were worried about their luggage on the roof getting
wet. The bus crew could not provide a tarpaulin and this began the acrimony.
"If it rains, you can report me", said the conductor helpfully,
implying that the clouds would go away - which they did. Next there were
complaints of having to spend 25 paise every time the passengers from the
free-peeing North went to spend a penny in the bus stations. Another grouse was
that the driver was a great gobber, who marked each furlong with the discharge
of spit. At speed this meant some of the passengers shared the fall
The wayside halts for refreshments were
spotlessly clean but almost blew customers away from their counters with the
volume of Tamil rock music belted out. Another source of friction lay in the
strict interpretation of 5 minutes by the bus crew. The timeless North assumed
it meant anything up to 15. When you consider that most of the long-distance
passengers between Rameshwararn and Kanyakumari are pilgrims from the North it
means this verbal warfare occurs daily on the Tamil Nadu government buses. So
much for the claims of cosy cultural integration that the temple at Rameshwaram
puts out.
The resilience of Hindu culture is reflected
in the casteless appeal of the six Murugan temples, of which Palani is
considered third in importance. Tiruchendur is the second in the list and
referred to as "The Abode of Fulfilment" - a very apt description of
my feelings at completing the extended and involved metric circuit. It is
besieged by busloads of pilgrims who sport on the beach as the rust-coloured
breakers add another curious effect of this place with a cave valued for its
"medicinal" properties. (Shankaracharya was cured here.) Many are the
black-clad, bare-bodied Ayappa piligrims bound for the Sabarimala temple in the
Kerala hills. That too is a casteless attraction and it could well be the
orthodox priests, seeing where the pickings are to be had, will decide to throw
open their temples. Tiruchendur for all practical purposes seems a spiritual
holiday resort. Devotees rent cottages overlooking the sea and though they may
not have a whale of a time at least they upstage the much richer tourist
clientele at the Hotel Tamil Nadu run by the government which is situated
further behind. This hotel only had double rooms for 80 rupees, so I inquired
at a new lodge nearby and ended up with a much better deal for 40 rupees,
overlooking the temple and the sea. One breathed in the tantalizing realization
that the elation one had felt at the start of one's journey on the majestic
expanse of the Brahrnaputra was echoed exactly in the furthest pounding of the
waves at Tiruchendur, though the cultural chasm between the two is enormous. In
shrinking the physical poles the metre gauge had performed a kind of alchemical
union of opposites.
I was
tickled to recall at the half-way mark of my probings (near Dwarka) the stout
teetotaller proposition that India's ancient propitiatory beer Somras was
lugubriously "non-injurious to health," because the outstanding
memory of this MG quartering had been my constant intoxication at the sheer
wonder India still is. Those who declare India to be "poor" announce
only their own poverty of acquaintance.
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