This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Aanayoottu" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(October 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
| Aanayoottu | |
|---|---|
Aanayoottu in 2010 inThrissur city | |
| Genre | Temple festival |
| Dates | First day of the month of Karkkidakam (Malayalam calendar) |
| Locations | Thrissur City,Kerala,India |
| Patron | Lord Ganesha |
TheAanayoottu (feeding ofelephants) is a festival held in the precincts of theVadakkunnathan temple in City ofThrissur, inKerala. The festival falls on the first day of the month ofKarkkidakam (timed against theMalayalam calendar), which coincides with the month of July. It involves a number of unadornedelephants being positioned amid a multitude of people for being worshipped and fed. Crowds throng the temple to feed the elephants.
Every year of Aanayoottu,gaja pooja, is conducted. It is believed that offeringpoojas and delicious feed to the elephants is a way to satisfyLord Ganesha—the god of wealth and of the fulfillment of wishes. The Vadakkunnathan temple, which is considered to be one of the oldestShiva temples in southern India, has hosted the Aanayottoo event for the past few years.
— Aanayoottu held at Ponnethkavu temple,The Hindu newspaper. |
The special feed of the elephants includes sugar-cane leaves, coconut, jaggery and the sweet mix of Ganapthi pooja prasadam. The feeding session begins with an offering by the chief priest of the temple—usually to an elephant calf. The festival presently involves sixteen elephants; the number was previously higher (around fifty), but was reduced following under direction of the district administration. During the festival, the elephants are fed on rice, jaggery, ghee, pineapples, and other local produce.
The elephants are hailed as sacred animals (a fact which explains the presence of elephants in the South Indian temples). Elephants are an integral part of Kerala culture, and elephants are integral to all festivals, including the Aanayoottu. Many of the famous south Indian temples have a number of their own elephants; feeding these elephants are considered asauspicious. Looking in to these devotes feeling the temple authorities started these rejuvenation therapy as a public event named as ‘The Aanayoottoo Festival’.