Thrissur Pooram Festival

The
most spectacular spectacle in the state. This festival was introduced by Sakthan
Thampuran, the Maharaja of erstwhile Kochi state. Celebrated in Medom (April-May)
the festival parades the fulgent faces of Kerala culture. With every passing year
Tthrissur Pooram, the temple festival, attracts large masses of devotees and spectators.
Of the groups displaying their artistic prowess in the Pooram, the prominent
are Paramekkavu and Thiruvambadi. When Paremekkavu and Thiruvambadi vie each other
for their best performance, the connoisseurs of festivals are blessed with the
rare chance to enjoy Kerala's art and culture.
These temples organise impressive, awe inspiring processions starting from Krishna
temple and Devi temple. On the day before the closing of the pooram the groups
enter the Vadakumnatha temple through the western gate and come out through the
southern gate to parade themselves, face to face.Caparisoned elephants and the
exchange of parasols are other virtual feast to eyes.
The hours-long
dazzling fire works submerge the Thrissur city in an ocean of colour. The consummate
pyrotechnics exhibited by the two temple groups paint the Thrissur sky with flamboyant
pictures. What unfurls in the dark sky will be a rich tapestry.
The
marvelous as well as magical effect of the Panchavadyam, a combination of five
percussion and wind instruments, is to be felt and enjoyed.
Although
this grand festival is known as Thrissur Pooram, it is in fact the conclusion
of the eight day Utsavam of nine temples.
The commissioning of elephants
and parasols is done in the utmost secrecy by each party to excel the other. Commencing
in the early hours of the morning, the celebrations last till the break of dawn,
the next day.
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