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This is vishnumurthy. The night we visited the Vattakeel Muchilotta bhagavathi temple in Kannur district, there were these 2 Theyyams. villagers stand in line for a meeting with the god. There is the (in religions) usual exchange of an offering (money) and a blessing. We could not understand, but the dancers/gods seem to be in a trance and speak in a haunting way. it felt as a shamanic event, some people started crying when the god adressed them.
The legend of Vishnumoorthy
Vishnumoorthy is the deified form of Palanthai Kannan. Kannan was a great devotee of Lord Vishnu. He belonged to a lower caste and lived in Nileshwar. One day, while herding cattle the boy became too hungry and picked mangoes from a tree owned by Kuruvat Nair. Nairs are an upper caste Hindu community. Now caste based discriminations have almost disappeared from the Kerala society, but they used to exist in the past. Kuruvat Nair took offence at this. His bodyguards beat the boy and drove him from Nileshwar. Palanthai Kannan went to Mangalore and took shelter in a Vishnu temple there. He was a staunch devotee of Vishnu and spent six years in this temple. After that he returned to Nileshwar.
On the way, Palanthai Kannan took a bath in a large pond. Lower caste men or women were not allowed to take bath in this pond. When Kuruvat Nair heard that Kannan had returned and that he had taken a bath in this pond, he became furious. He and his men rushed to the pond and killed the boy. Lord Vishnu who accompanied this boy was enraged by this act and destroyed the Kuruvat tharavad. To appease the lord, they built a Kavu (temple) and created the Vishnumoorthy Theyyam. Vishnumoorthy resides in the Vaikundeswara Temple at Kottappuram, Nileshwar.
this performance @ Vattakeel Muchilottu Kavu
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