Tamil Nadu: Huge devotee turnout at Chithirai Car festival in Srirangam

ANI April 26, 2025 612 views

The Chithirai Car Festival at Srirangam Temple drew massive crowds as devotees pulled the grand chariot of Lord Ranganatha. Namperumal, adorned in sacred silk, blessed devotees during the nine-day celebrations. Earlier processions included a Golden Horse Vahanam and palanquin darshan. The festival also saw parallel celebrations at Vekkali Amman Temple in Woraiyur.

"Thousands of devotees enthusiastically pulled the chariot, chanting 'Govinda! Govinda!' as it rolled through Srirangam streets." – Temple Officials
Trichy, April 26: The town of Srirangam witnessed an overwhelming turnout of devotees as the annual Chithirai Car Festival was celebrated with grandeur at the Sri Ranganatha Swamy Temple on Saturday.

Key Points

1

Devotees pulled the massive temple chariot chanting divine hymns

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Namperumal adorned in sacred silk from Srivilliputhur

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Police ensured smooth festival arrangements

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Vekkali Amman Temple also celebrated with fervor

Drone visuals showed a massive sea of devotees filling the temple streets as the ornately decorated temple car was pulled through the streets of Srirangam.

The grand annual Chithirai Car Festival, also known as Viruppan Thirunal, was celebrated with great devotion at the Srirangam Sri Ranganathaswamy Temple in Trichy.

Thousands of devotees gathered for the festival were seen chanting "Govinda Govinda" at Srirangam Temple.

"Today, on the ninth day, in the early morning hours, Namperumal emerged from the sanctum at 5:15 AM dressed in a parrot-green silk garment gifted ceremonially from Srivilliputhur Andal Temple, aligning with the Mesha Lagnam (auspicious astrological timing). He ascended the giant temple chariot (Thiruther), and at 6:30 AM, thousands of devotees enthusiastically pulled the chariot, chanting "Govinda! Govinda!" as it rolled through the four main streets of Srirangam.

Earlier, on the eighth day (April 25), the deity was taken around the Chithirai streets on a Golden Horse Vahanam, blessing devotees with his divine presence.

On the seventh day (April 24), Namperumal was carried in a Thiruchivigai (palanquin) and gave darshan at Nell Alavu Mandapam before visiting Thayar Sannidhi (the shrine of the divine consort), receiving a holy bath (Thirumanjanam), and returning to the sanctum.

The atmosphere was filled with devotion as devotees called out "Ranga! Ranga!" and received darshan of Namperumal in his majestic chariot. Elaborate police security arrangements were in place throughout Srirangam for the smooth conduct of the festival.

A few days earlier, a large number of devotees pulled the car of Vekkali Amman Temple in Tamil Nadu's Tiruchi on the occasion of the 'Chithirai car' festival. The decorated car went around the important streets of Woraiyur in Tiruchi before returning to its base. A special puja was performed to Goddess Vekkaliamman after the temple car reached its base.

Devotees, who came from different parts of the city and neighbouring areas, offered prayers on the occasion of 'Chithirai therottam.' Several of them carried milk pots and offered 'abishekam' to the Goddess.

Reader Comments

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Priya K.
What a beautiful sight! The devotion and energy at Srirangam during Chithirai festival is unmatched. The drone footage gave me goosebumps! 🙏 Can't wait to attend next year.
R
Ramesh V.
While the festival was magnificent, I wish the article had more details about the history behind the parrot-green silk garment tradition. The cultural significance would have made the piece even richer.
S
Sundar G.
Attended with my family this year after 5 years! The "Govinda Govinda" chants echoing through the streets is something you have to experience in person. No video does it justice!
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Anitha M.
The police arrangements deserve appreciation too. Managing such huge crowds while maintaining the spiritual atmosphere isn't easy. Kudos to all involved! 👏
K
Karthik B.
Mesha Lagnam timing, the silk from Srivilliputhur, the golden horse vahanam - our traditions are so scientifically and spiritually profound. Proud to be part of this culture!
M
Meena R.
The milk pot abishekam tradition is so beautiful. My grandmother used to tell me stories about how she carried pots as a young girl. These rituals connect generations ❤️

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