WEDNESDAY, April 24, 2024
nationthailand

Looking back with love

Looking back with love

More than 160 years after it was built. the Sri Srinivasa Perumal temple continues to say welcome

The Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple on Serangoon Road has welcomed people from all walks of life since it first opened its doors in 1855. Indian immigrants, British colonial rulers, devotees of Lord Vishnu, tourists and Singaporeans have all gathered here, admiring the place of worship.
At the weekends, the temple bursts into life with about 2,000 devotees gathering for prayers.
During the Thaipusam festival, between January and February each year, thousands of Hindus and non-Hindus gather along Serangoon Road to watch a procession of worshippers walk the six kilometres from the temple to the Sri Thendayuthapani Temple in Tank Road.
“About 10,000 devotees carry elaborate kavadis and milk pots, and on Thaipusam day, we get around 30,000 onlookers from friends to family and curious onlookers,” says K Vellayappan, 72, chairman of the temple management committee.
The temple was built in 1855 after a group of Indian community leaders purchased the land for about 26 rupees (50 cents today) from the British East India Company.
To get to the old temple in the 1950s, known as Narasinga Perumal Kovil, devotees had to walk along a narrow lane that ran through a garden.
When the temple was reconstructed in 1966, its chief deity was changed from the lion-headed avatar, Narasimha Perumal, to Srinivasa Perumal. The temple was renamed accordingly.
“The temple used to have a large pond, there was a forest and plants all around,” says Rajan Krishnan, who was chairman of the temple committee for nine years from 1990.
In the mornings, devotees cleansed themselves and bathed in the same pond where post-cremation ceremonies were conducted, Rajan adds.
Perumal Krishnasamy, 75, who has been visiting the temple since his infancy, says: “In the early years, there were cattle roaming on the temple grounds. People would come and leave the animals after making a vow too.”
By the 1900s, the temple was in a dilapidated state, Vellayappan says. According to a book published by the temple, the building had fallen into disrepair in the 1930s and a chief government architect wrote to the then Mohammedan and Hindu Endowments Board saying it was unsafe for anyone to enter. The roof, in parcticular, was said to be in a dangerous condition.
Restoration works for the temple were finally completed in 1966 and it was gazetted as a national monument on November 10, 1978. Today, the Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple features an elaborate five-tier tower that crowns its entrance.
The temple houses several shrines and a main prayer hall, with ceilings and walls carved with elaborate mandalas.
Inside the main shrine, where only priests can enter to perform religious rituals, sits a statue of the temple’s main deity, Srinivasa Perumal.
There are also shrines dedicated to other Hindu deities in the temple. On the two sides of the main sanctum are the shrines of Lakshmi and Andal.
Perumal says the temple has gone through many changes.
“As a child, my father took me around the temple every Saturday, teaching me about the temple and life. The things he taught me, I still remember today and have kept me well through the years,” he says.
These days, he takes his grandson to the temple from Potong Pasir, where they live. “We go around the temple, doing the same, I tell him about the temple and we pray together. I have grown together with the temple. A lot has changed but my faith remains.”
 

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