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HomeNewsIndiaThrissur Pooram is not happening this year due to the virus. That is a big deal in Kerala

Thrissur Pooram is not happening this year due to the virus. That is a big deal in Kerala

There is a deep emotional connect to Keralites to Thrissur Pooram. Every year, days before the event, people flood the cultural capital of the state (as Thrissur is known) and leave only after the spectacle is over. But this year things are different.

April 11, 2020 / 14:17 IST
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Thrissur Pooram festival in Kerala. (Image: Wikimedia Commons)

In a normal year, at the peak of summer, the city of Thrissur in central Kerala comes alive. The otherwise unobtrusive temple town turns into a lodestar for an ardent festival fan who loves the sight of a bevy of elephants and dive into the sounds of percussion. The city gears up for a centuries-old spectacular carnival called Thrissur Pooram (Malayalam for festival).

Thrissur town, built by Shaktan Thampuran (the Maharaja of Cochin between 1751 and 1805) over a hundred acres of lush teak yard and an ancient Shiva temple, gets ready to welcome its two-months long popular annual temple festival. The town is splashed in myriad colours and decorated with a scrum of wooden ‘pandals’.

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There are three big temples in the town that are inseparably linked to the design of Thrissur Pooram — Thiruvambadi, Paramekkavu and Vadakkunnathan, the Lord Shiva temple that hosts the Pooram.

Temple Town 

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