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Saturday, December 17, 2016
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Saturday, September 10, 2016
Friday, September 9, 2016
White Sugar is a Poison . Know the Hidden Secret and Politics Behind Wh...
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Monday, September 5, 2016
Village Tamil Girl's Performenace
Friday, September 2, 2016
கொங்கு நாட்டு தங்கம் கலக்கல் வீடியோ-தனலட்சுமி
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
எங்க வீட்டு மகாலட்சுமியின் திறமை
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Tamil Song with Bharathanaryam
தமிழ் உயிரெழுத்துக்கள் பாடல்.
உங்களுக்காக விழுப்புரம் மாவட்டம்.,
உங்களுக்காக விழுப்புரம் மாவட்டம்.,
ஊ.ஒ.ந.நி.பள்ளி-கோனேரிக்குப்பம் மாணவர்கள்.
நடனம். பரதநாட்டியம்,
பாடல்.,இசை வாயிலாக
பாடல்:
அ ஆ இ ஈ உ ஊ எ ஏ
ஐ
ஒ ஓ ஔ -2
ஃ என்பது ஆயுத எழுத்து -2
உயிரெழுத்துக்கள் 12 ஐ
மறவாதீர்கள்!
அ ஆ இ ஈ உ ஊ எ ஏ
ஐ
ஒ ஓ ஔ -2
ஃ என்பது ஆயுத எழுத்து -2
உயிரெழுத்துக்கள் 12 ஐ
மறவாதீர்கள்!
உயிரின்றி ஒரு வார்த்தையும்
பிறக்காதிங்கே
பிறக்காதிங்கே
Friday, July 8, 2016
Wednesday, June 22, 2016
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Monday, June 20, 2016
Sunday, June 19, 2016
Pencil nip encraving art . . .
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Friday, June 17, 2016
Mani and father in earlier days. . .
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
Tilo cool drink with lot of condamnations . . . Be careful in cool drinks
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Monday, June 13, 2016
Sunday, June 12, 2016
Saturday, June 11, 2016
Thursday, June 9, 2016
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
Homely romance punch dance . . .
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
Rajapandi & Bose doing Magic. . .
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Monday, June 6, 2016
Most Lovely and Sentimental Scene . . .
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Saturday, June 4, 2016
Husband wife love Duiet. . .
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Friday, June 3, 2016
மகளிர் சிலம்பம் Silambam . . .
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Monday, May 30, 2016
Saturday, May 28, 2016
Bear gets cub down from tree . . .
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Friday, May 27, 2016
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Ignorance of Ability brings Disability
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Monday, May 23, 2016
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Indian National Antham in Jalatharangam Music
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Sunday, May 15, 2016
Monday, May 9, 2016
Ancient Tamil enrich Food - Kambu Kolukattai
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Kambu pearl millet (bajira Hindi), kolukkattai / kozhukkattai steamed sweet
dumbling
Few generations ago this must have been a staple snack / breakfast among the village
people of Tamilnadu. I have read about this in Tamil folk tales and tasted a few
times.Then I tried to bring out that ancient snack and here goes the recipe.
rice 2 tbsp
coconut (shredded) 1/2 cup (optional)
cardamom powder 1/2 tsp
jaggery (crushed) 3/4 cup (or lesser)
Let it cool and powder it.
Add 1/2 cup water to jaggery and dissolve it by heating.
Filter and remove any impurities.
Pour the hot solution to a mixing bowl. Add the flour, cardamom powder and kambu
flour. Mix well to get something like hard chapathi dough. Take a ball and press well
inside the palm to get a rough oval shape. Grease an idly mold with very little sesame
oil and place the dumplings. Cook in idly cooker for 5 minutes (full steam).
Kambu kolukkattai is ready!
Kambu kolukkattai
Kambu pearl millet (bajira Hindi), kolukkattai / kozhukkattai steamed sweet
dumbling
Few generations ago this must have been a staple snack / breakfast among the village
people of Tamilnadu. I have read about this in Tamil folk tales and tasted a few
times.Then I tried to bring out that ancient snack and here goes the recipe.
Ingredients:
Kambu 1 cuprice 2 tbsp
coconut (shredded) 1/2 cup (optional)
cardamom powder 1/2 tsp
jaggery (crushed) 3/4 cup (or lesser)
Method:
Dry roast the kambu, rice till the kambu smells good.Let it cool and powder it.
Add 1/2 cup water to jaggery and dissolve it by heating.
Filter and remove any impurities.
Pour the hot solution to a mixing bowl. Add the flour, cardamom powder and kambu
flour. Mix well to get something like hard chapathi dough. Take a ball and press well
inside the palm to get a rough oval shape. Grease an idly mold with very little sesame
oil and place the dumplings. Cook in idly cooker for 5 minutes (full steam).
Kambu kolukkattai is ready!
Saturday, May 7, 2016
TAMIL CUISINE - Rice and ritual: the Tamil art of cooking
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
TAMIL CUISINE
Rice and ritual: the Tamil art of cooking
Thilaka Baskaran
UNESCO Courier, March, 1984
Sangam literature paints a vivd picture of the social life of the ancient Tamils and provides the historical background for their eating habits. In the Sangam poems land is classified into five geographical areas and the food related to each area is described.
Many inscriptions chiselled on the walls of temples reveal how food habits and religious practices became intertwined. These epigraphs give an idea of the role of food in rituals, as sacrificing, cooking, dedicating and feasting all became part of worship. Not eating... fasting, also emerged as a ritual. By the 11th-12th century AD, caste groups had appeared with distinct lines of demarcation, and the eating habits of each caste began to assume different characteristics. (The culinary profile of the castes can still be noted by the careful observer). Such issues as "who can serve whom?" and "from whom can one accept food?" became significant in the context of caste structure. Depending upon the degree to which a caste was "Sanskritized", it became vegetarian or non-vegetarian. A tradition of vegetarianism, which was largely absent from ancient Tamil Nadu began to emerge, mainly as a result of the popularity of Buddhism and Jainism. Over the years, certain interesting concepts in food appeared. Taste was classified into six groups, and all food commodities were divided into two broad categories, hot and cold. The whole of Tamil cuisine is still largely based on this classification which also influenced indigenous medicinal practices: illnesses were classified as hot and cold and the diet therapy was based on treating with cold food those caused by heat and with hot food those caused by cold. This belief still persists. Chicken pox, for example, is believed to be a manifestation of body heat and the foods permitted are those that are supposed to counter this heat--fruit, butter milk and tender coconut. Some of the recipes that were in use in the 1st century AD are still being followed today, pretty much unchanged. Cooking is elaborate and complex, and is considered to be a fine art. Treatises on cookign specify the size of the kitchen, the kind of stove to be used, the direction in which the stove is to face, and even the desirable characteristics of a cook (he should be "a native born and good caste, he should observe the cooking and eating taboos, not harbour any grudge, be absolutely clean in his habits, and always tie his long hair into a bun"). The everyday diet is fairly austere, consisting of boiled rice, sambar (dhal [lentils] vegetable and tamarind), fish or meat curry (for non-vegetarians), a vegetable pugadh, rasam (spicy pepper water) and curds. On special occasions payasam, a milk-based dessert flavoured with cardomom, is served. Even in affluent families there is not much variety in the daily menu, but when there are guests or a wedding is held it is a totally different story, and a truly ambrosial meal will be producted. the food served on these occasions is an indication of the hosts' status. Eating habits vary geographically and are shaped largely by what is grown in the different areas. In the riverine and delta regions, paddy, sugar cane, banana and coconut figure largely in the diet. In dry areas millets and grams are the major foodstuffs. The delicate blending of herbs, condiments and spices is the touchstone of good cookery. The combination and quantity of spices used vary from family to family, providing subtle variations in taste. The contrast between opposing tastes is a recurring theme. Most of the popular dishes like sambar, morekolumbu (curds and spices with cocnut) pulikolumbu (a spciy sour curry with vegetable and tamarind) and the red-hot fish and meat curry are all different combinations of sour and hot tastes. The staple cereal in most parts of Tamil Nadu is, of course, rice, which is often eaten at all three meals. Breakfast in most middle class families consists of idli (a rice and dhal batter, steamed), dosai (the same batter fried like a pancake), puttu (a steamed rice-flour preparation served with coconut scrapings, bana, and sugar), idiappam (a rice-fluor dough pressed through a mould to resemble vermicelli and steamed) or appam (a rice-flour and coconut delicacy fermented with toddy and cooked like a pancake). In modern Tamil cuisine coffee has become one of the main drinks. Brewed from freshly roasted and ground beans, and served with plenty of milk and sugar, it is always drunk at breakfast. This method of coffee-making is holding its ground in all Tamil kitchens in the face of instant coffees promoted in the media. Change in food habits is slow in coming to Tamil Nadu, but some signs of it can be seen. Wheat is being increasingly used in urban areas. Chappathi (wheat flour pancake) may be substituted for rice, especially for dinner, and poori (a deep-fried wheat pancake) and potato be served as breakfast. Though stainless steel cutlery and crockery are used in urban homes, food is still served on ceremonial occasions in the traditional way--on a banana leaf. The leaf is spread in front of the diner, with the tip ointed left. Serving begins with salt and pickle being placed at the extreme left. The first course is sweet--everything has to begin with a sweet whether it is an infant's first solid meal or the newly-wed's first drink. The series of vegetable dishes, pachadi (a vegetable and curd salad) and the crisp appalam, all of which go with the various rice courses, are placed on the top half of the leaf. With every course the leaf is carefully replenished, the diner's protests being totally ignored. Even among non-vegetarians, ceremonial feasts are always vegetarian. Every festival and ceremony has a traditional menu. The first rice meal given to a baby in the seventh month is sarkarai pongal, a combination of rice-milk, sugar and ghee. The teething of a child calls for pal koshukattai (tiny rice flakes resembling teeth, cooked in milk with sugar). The coming of age of a daughter is an important family event, as it is in all traditional communities. Milk, banana and sugar are give to the girl and to all well-wishers who visit her. Seemandam, celebrated in the seventh or ninth month of pregnancy, calls for a variety of rice preparations. Since Tamil Nadu is predominantly agricultural it is not surprising that the most important festival should be pongal, the harvest festival, which is celebrated at the beginning of the Tamil month of Thai. Pongal, which literally means "boiling over", symbolizes the farmer's overflowing prosperity. Newly decorated mud pots are used to cook dishes to fit the occasion, such as sarkarai pongal and ven pongal. Modernization is slowly bringing changes to the culinary scene. Compromises and adaptations are being made. Traditional receipes that call for elaborate and leisurely cooking are disappearing. Processed foods such as ready-made idli-mix and pre-packed curry powders have invaded urban kitchens. Mechanical aids such as motorized idli-grinders are also being used in traditional cooking. The break-up of the joint family and the increase in the number of career women have inevitably changes some Tamil Eating habits. A movement towards a simpler cuisine can be sensed. All the same, Tamil food practices and their cultural implications still retain their basic character. |
Thursday, May 5, 2016
Rice-Paddy-History
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
History of rice cultivation
Oryza sativa was domesticated from the wild grass Oryza rufipogon roughly 10,000–14,000 years ago. The two main subspecies of rice – indica (prevalent in tropical regions) and japonica (prevalent in the subtropical and temperate regions of East Asia) – are not believed to have been derived from independent domestication events. Another cultivated species, O. glaberrima, was domesticated much later in West Africa.
Recent genetic evidence show that all forms of Asian rice, both indica and japonica, come from a single domestication event that occurred 8,200–13,500 years ago in the Pearl River valley region of China.
In China, extensive archeological evidence points to the middle Yangtze and upper Huai rivers as the two earliest places ofO. sativa cultivation in the country. Rice and farming implements dating back at least 8,000 years have been found. Cultivation spread down these rivers over the following 2,000 years.
Puddling the soil – turning it to mud to break it down and prevent too much water percolating away – and transplanting seedlings were likely refined in China. Both operations became integral parts of rice farming and remain widely practiced to this day. With the development of puddling and transplanting, rice became truly domesticated.
Movement to western India and south to Sri Lanka was also accomplished very early. Rice was a major crop in Sri Lanka as early as 1000 B.C. The crop may well have been introduced to Greece and the neighboring areas of the Mediterranean by returning members of Alexander the Great’s expedition to India around 344-324 B.C. From a center in Greece and Sicily, rice spread gradually throughout southern Europe and to a few locations in northern Africa.
As a result of Europe’s great Age of Exploration, new lands to the west became available for exploitation. Rice cultivation was introduced to the New World by early European settlers. The Portuguese carried it to Brazil and the Spanish introduced its cultivation to several locations in Central and South America. The first record for North America dates from 1685, when the crop was produced on the coastal lowlands and islands of what is now South Carolina. It is thought that slaves from West Africa who were transported to the Carolinas in the mid-18th century introduced the complex agricultural technology needed to grow rice. Their labor then insured a flourishing rice industry. By the 20th century, rice was produced in California’s Sacramento Valley. The introduction into California corresponded almost exactly with the timing of the first successful crop in Australia’s New South Wales.
Regional development of rice cultivation
Asia
Based on archeological evidence, rice was believed to have first been domesticated in the region of the Yangtze River valley in China. Morphological studies of rice phytoliths from the Diaotonghuan archaeological site clearly show the transition from the collection of wild rice to the cultivation of domesticated rice. The large number of wild rice phytoliths at the Diaotonghuan level dating from 12,000–11,000 BP indicates that wild rice collection was part of the local means of subsistence. Changes in the morphology of Diaotonghuan phytoliths dating from 10,000–8,000 BP show that rice had by this time been domesticated.[28] Soon afterwards the two major varieties of indica and japonica rice were being grown in Central China. In the late 3rd millennium BC, there was a rapid expansion of rice cultivation into mainland Southeast Asia and westwards across India and Nepal.
In 2003, Korean archaeologists claimed to have discovered the world's oldest domesticated rice. Their 15,000 year old age challenges the accepted view that rice cultivation originated in China about 12,000 years ago. These findings were received by academia with strong skepticism, and the results and their publicizing has been cited as being driven by a combination of nationalist and regional interests.In 2011, a combined effort by the Stanford University, New York University, Washington University in St. Louis, and Purdue University has provided the strongest evidence yet that there is only one single origin of domesticated rice, in the Yangtze Valley of China.
The earliest remains of the grain in the Indian subcontinent have been found in the Indo-Gangetic Plain and date from 7000–6000 BC though the earliest widely accepted date for cultivated rice is placed at around 3000–2500 BC with findings in regions belonging to the Indus Valley Civilization. Perennial wild rices still grow in Assam and Nepal. It seems to have appeared around 1400 BC in southern India after its domestication in the northern plains. It then spread to all the fertile alluvial plains watered by rivers. Cultivation and cooking methods are thought to have spread to the west rapidly and by medieval times, southern Europe saw the introduction of rice as a hearty grain.
O. sativa was recovered from a grave at Susa in Iran (dated to the 1st century AD) at one end of the ancient world, another domestication of rice in South Asia.
Today, the majority of all rice produced comes from China, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, Philippines, and Japan. Asian farmers still account for 92% of the world's total rice production.
Wednesday, May 4, 2016
Philosophy Simplified!
If 1 liter of milk is spilled down and, if you console your
mind by thinking that, 80% of it is only water, this mind set is called ZEN
state.
If suspicion arises, even a Lizard looks like a Dinosaur.
Instead of grumbling, “While selling Salt raining starts,
while selling flour wind blows”, if both are mixed and cooked as a snack, it
can be sold in all seasons.
We know barking dog won’t bite but, the dog does not know it
because, it can’t read.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I am going to tell you, how to turn the curses and abuses of
our teacher, into boons.
a). “You are only fit for cow grazing”:
Don’t worry for
this. Simply start a cattle forming. Teacher become happy as we fulfilled his
words, and profit to us also. Currently, this is better than studying
Engineering.
b). “You will only end up with standing in the street”:
This is not at all a problem. Just clear the traffic police
examination. Problem solved.
c). “See, he is standing like a tree if anything is asked”,
“open your mouth”?
What else, straightaway become Chief Minister. If luck is
there, even there is chance to become Prime Minister.
But, one thing …… whatever may be his abuses, don’t receive
the curse which I tell you now.
It is ……. “You will never improve; you will get a big blow
in life”
If you receive this curse, that’s all! ……. Is it necessary to tell what will happen?
You will get married man,
you will get married!
Monday, May 2, 2016
Honey 100 % Medicated Herbal Food
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Why we take honey daily?
Why we take honey daily?
Drinking milk mixed with honey in night helps in good sleep.
Heart will become strong.
Drinking fruit juice with honey gives energy.
Drinking pomegranate juice mixed with honey helps in
production of new blood.
Drinking lemon juice mixed with honey clears cough.
Drinking amla juice mixed with honey releases insulin.
Taking orange mixed with honey gives good sleep.
Taking rose flower kulkand mixed with honey reduces body
heat.
Taking coconut milk mixed with honey cures stomach ulcer and
mouth ulcer.
Taking ginger mixed with honey clears pitta( a condition of
excess bile).
Taking carat with honey clears iron deficiency in blood.
Applying lime mixed with honey clears lumps or reduces
swelling.
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Holy water given in Our temples are useful one?
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Why Holy water given in our Temples?
Why Holy water given in our Temples?
The Vilva water given in Saiva (Lord Siva) temples cures
leprosy, stomach problem, and stomach ulcers.
The Basil water given in Vainava (Lord Narayanan) temples
cleans blood, increases immunity and life force. Cancer will not attack if
Basil water is taken regularly.
Friday, April 29, 2016
Do you know Which is Love ? - Tamilans Litreture Love
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
One Man Love - Think Differently
One Man Love - Think Differently
If love comes by seeing the eyes,
will it not come to
vision-less persons?
If Love comes for color,
will it not come to black skin persons?
If Love comes for beauty,
those without beauty can’t Love?
If Love comes for richness,
will it not come to poor persons?
If Love comes for the place,
will it not come to those
having no place?
If Love comes for attractive talking,
will it not come to those
who can’t talk?
If Love comes for education,
will it not come to uneducated?
In real, what is Love?
Love is the name of
the noble relationship formed,
from where true love is received by a heart
which yearns for love.
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Bermuda Grass Is Useful in our life? How?
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Bermuda Grass (Arugampul) in our life?
In the eclipse days,
we place Bermuda grass in the vessels filled with water. This habit still
exists in villages in Tamil Nadu India. This is not superstition. Bermuda grass has the
power to block the highly emitted ultraviolet rays during eclipse.
Arugan means Sun. In 3 days, worms and insects will get in cow dung. If Bermuda grass is inserted in cow dung, this will not happen. This is the power of Bermuda grass.
Like this, whenever we begin good activity, we pray God that the activity should be completed without getting spoiled or destroyed.
Even animals like dog or cat and chicken can
be seen bite Bermuda grass and spit when they got disease. Drinking Bermuda grass
juice is good for health as per Siddha medicine.
Drink Bermuda grass juice daily. Not only diabetes and high
blood pressure will get cured, it is good for all those who lack immune
power.
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Why we drink Cumins water ?
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Uses of Drinking the Cumin Water
Cumin keep the body healthy.
Drinking water with Cumin , after filtering it & brought to room
temperature, is good.
This reduces body heat, reduces pitta( excess bile in
body),
It cleans blood by removing unnecessary things in blood,
It increases sweating
and urination, reduces heat in eyes,
It cures mouth ulcer and stomach ulcer,
prevents skin diseases and good to heart.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
In front of Lord Vinayaka(Elephant headed Indian God) Why we knock our head with fist ?
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us.
Knocking the left fore head with right fist and right forehead with left fist is the custom.
Keeping this mind, in earlier periods, teachers punished the students by knocking in their front head.
Our culture is based on health, not based on superstition.
Temporal lobe is located in the two front sides of our head,
where we knock our head. Here only, memory power inducing nerves located. By
knocking at this place, these nerves are stimulated. By this, activeness and
inner enthusiasm arises in the body.
Yogis are telling that, when we knock the sides of fore head,
the pot of Amirtham(a divine liquid which gives immortality) located there
opens and the Amirtham in it spread
entire body.
This methed of technique is now followed and educated in foreign countries as super brain yoga.
Monday, April 25, 2016
During Vinayaga Sathurthi ( Birthday) Why Vinayaka Idol (Elephant headed God) is dissolved in river?
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Our ancients
informed some activities and left us without making it clear.
When rivers
are flooded, the sands in the river carried away. Because of this, water run to
the sea without getting down in to the land. Water will getting down in the
land where clay is there.
Hence, On
Vinayakar Sathurthy(Birth day) days, idols made of clay were dissolved in the
river. Why it is dissolved after 3 or 5 days?
Wet clay
dissolves quickly and run along with the speedy river. Dry clays withstand the
river speed and deposited where it is dropped.
Because of
this, the water coming in the river converted as underground water and solves
our drinking water problem. It has to be dissolved in river only.
If simply
said, today’s youth will not come to drop clay in river.
How is the
cleverness of our ancients?
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Why Ancient Tamilan Used Plantain Leaf Instead of Plate for Eating Food ?
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Proven Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Plantain
leaf is a good germ killer. You might have seen, burn wounded persons are laid
on plantain leaf. In villages, plantain juice is given for snake bites. Poison
immediately neutralized.
To
neutralize any kind of poison, Tamil people placed plantain tree in places of
mass gathering, wedding functions and festive gatherings. This is to ensure
that poison neutralizer should be easily available in such big gatherings.
When
happened to cook in dark and if poison is mixed in that food unexpectedly or if
poison is mixed in food in any other way, immediate poison neutralizer is
plantain. Hence food also served in plantain leaf.
If food is
taken in plantain leaf regularly, skin will shine. Health will be improved. Problems
like laziness, weakness, tiredness will be cleared. Pitta(a condition of excess
bile in body) will become normal. The greenness (Chlorophyll) on plantain leaf
digests food easily and cures stomach ulcers. Induce hungry well.
For school
& college students and office goers, plantain leaf is best to carry lunch.
Food will remain fresh without any spoilage.
Saturday, April 23, 2016
While eating Why we are sitting with folded legs . . .
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
While eating, we should
sit with folded legs. If we keep our legs hanging in vertical position, the
blood circulation flow more towards leg and less in stomach. This causes slow
digestion.
If we eat with folded
legs, food will digest as and when we eat. Because the blood flows more in
stomach instead of leg, the digestion is happening well.
This is the reason why
it is insisted to sit in folded legs while eating.
Friday, April 22, 2016
Astrological Miracle by Ancient Tamilan - Abirami Pattar
Tamil Tradition and Culture is Healthy and Scientific Formalities to us
Astrological Miracle by Ancient Tamilan - Abirami Pattar
Let Us Know about our Ancient People and realise ours
Astrological Miracle by Ancient Tamilan - Abirami Pattar
In ancient days, there was a Abirami Amman temple at Thirukadaiyur near Thanajavur Tamilnadu State - India.
There, Abirami pattar was a temple assistant.
He has unlimited devotion on the temple Deity, Abirami
Amman.
One day, King of that area came to that temple. That day was
a no moon day.
King casually asked Abirami pattar, what was that day?
He replied that, it was a full moon day.
The King instructed his guards, to return to the palace if
full moon comes in the night and if full moon not comes, he ordered to cut his
head.
After king left the place, the nearby people explained
Abirami pattar about what had happened.
Fear on life came to Abirami pattar. He surrendered to the
deity, Abirami Amman, and sang by thinking on her, with tear full eyes.
Night came. Full moon also came. The King hurriedly came and
requested Abirami pattar to forgive him. Abirami pattar shed tears with bliss and thanked Abirami
Amman.
Today’s Astronomical studies say that, once in 25000 years,
there will be 3 consecutive full moon days.
i.e., the full moon – no moon – full moon cycle will break
once.
How this was known to Abirami pattar, who wrote Abirami
Anthathi?
Let the researchers explain, how much ancient our Tamil
culture was.
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