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The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hindusim vol 2

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Tiruchendur<br />

700<br />

A group <strong>of</strong> pilgrims on a tirthayatra<br />

(pilgrimage), Tibet.<br />

incalculable benefits, even for actions<br />

performed unknowingly or in jest. A second<br />

and seemingly contradictory theme<br />

was the stress on the inner state <strong>of</strong> the<br />

pilgrims themselves and the warning<br />

that they would gain no benefits unless<br />

they were serious about their visit. In its<br />

ideal, pilgrimage to the holy places was<br />

not a pleasure tour but a vehicle for spiritual<br />

development, through bathing<br />

(snana) in holy rivers, visiting and worshiping<br />

powerful deities, enduring<br />

hardships, making <strong>of</strong>ferings to the<br />

ancestors, gift-giving, and living a sober,<br />

disciplined life.<br />

In fact, the traditional literature<br />

affirms both sides <strong>of</strong> this tension—the<br />

need for individual commitment and<br />

the inherent sanctity <strong>of</strong> the places themselves—although<br />

the emphasis may<br />

shift depending on the needs <strong>of</strong> the<br />

moment. One explanation, combining<br />

both <strong>of</strong> these themes, is that these holy<br />

places amplified the effects <strong>of</strong> all <strong>of</strong> one’s<br />

actions there, whether good or bad.<br />

Pilgrims were thus encouraged to<br />

benefit from performing meritorious<br />

actions but warned <strong>of</strong> the heightened<br />

consequences from evil deeds, which<br />

were much more severe than normal.<br />

In earlier times pilgrimage required a<br />

large investment <strong>of</strong> time and money.<br />

People would <strong>of</strong>ten spend months or<br />

years on pilgrimage, usually visiting a<br />

series <strong>of</strong> pilgrimage places. This was<br />

seen as a religiously meritorious use <strong>of</strong><br />

one’s money, a notion still current in<br />

contemporary times. For most people,<br />

such an opportunity would come only<br />

once in their lifetime, generally in their<br />

later years, and this long-awaited fulfillment<br />

must have heightened their experience.<br />

<strong>The</strong> advent <strong>of</strong> railroad travel in<br />

the late 1800s largely reshaped this pattern,<br />

although it persisted in the<br />

Himalayas until well into the twentieth<br />

century. With the advent <strong>of</strong> railroad travel,<br />

people were able to visit places with<br />

relative ease and speed. This convenience<br />

encouraged multiple visits, but<br />

also ones in which the person stopped<br />

at fewer places on the way.<br />

<strong>The</strong> most recent change in pilgrimage<br />

patterns has come with the development<br />

<strong>of</strong> tourism, which is being<br />

marketed by state governments as a way<br />

to generate income for the local people.<br />

It cannot be denied that “seeing the<br />

sights” has always been a part <strong>of</strong> pilgrimage,<br />

which provided a religiously<br />

sanctioned motive for travel. Yet the<br />

ideal, then as now, was that this journey<br />

should not be undertaken merely for<br />

enjoyment, but for serious purposes.<br />

Some contemporary Hindus worry that<br />

the growth <strong>of</strong> tourism has commercialized<br />

the sanctity <strong>of</strong> their holy places;<br />

other more sanguine souls consider the<br />

stress on tourism simply a stronger<br />

manifestation <strong>of</strong> trends that have always<br />

existed, which will have no effect on the<br />

truly pious.<br />

Tiruchendur<br />

Temple and sacred site (tirtha) on the<br />

Bay <strong>of</strong> Bengal in Tamil Nadu, sixty miles<br />

up the coast from Kanyakumari.<br />

Tiruchendur is part <strong>of</strong> the network <strong>of</strong> six

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