Festivals
Icons carried in procession during Thaipusam at Batu Caves. Also seen in the background is the 42.7 m high golden statue of Lord Muruga.
Icons carried in procession during Thaipusam at Batu Caves. Also seen in the background is the 42.7 m high golden statue of Lord Muruga.
Batu Caves
serves as the focus of the Hindu community's yearly Thaipusam (Tamil: தைபூசம்) festival. It
has become a pilgrimage site for not only Malaysian Hindus, but Hindus
worldwide from countries such as India, Australia and Singapore.A procession
begins in the wee hours of the morning on Thaipusam from the Sri Mahamariamman Temple, Kuala Lumpur leading up to
Batu Caves as a religious undertaking to Lord Muruga lasting eight hours.
Devotees carry containers containing milk as offering to Lord Muruga either by
hand or in huge decorated carriers on their shoulders called 'kavadi'.
The kavadi may
be simple wooden arched semi-circular supports holding a carrier foisted with
brass or clay pots of milk or huge, heavy ones which may rise up to two metres,
built of bowed metal frames which hold long skewers, the sharpened end of which
pierce the skin of the bearers torso. The kavadi is decorated with flowers and peacock feathers
imported from India. Some kavadi may weigh as much as a hundred kilograms.
After bathing
in the nearby Sungei Batu (Rocky River), the devotees make their way to the
Temple Cave and climb the flights of stairs to the temple in the cave. Devotees
use the wider centre staircase while worshippers and onlookers throng up and
down those balustrades on either side.
When the kavadi
bearer arrives at the foot of the 272-step stairway leading up to the Temple
Cave, the devotee has to make the arduous climb.
Priests attend
to the kavadi bearers. Consecrated ash is sprinkled over the hooks and skewers
piercing the devotees' flesh before they are removed. No blood is shed during
the piercing and removal.
In 2007, the
festival attracted more than 1.5 million pilgrims, making it one of the largest gatherings in history.
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