HR & CE has converted ‘Food’ into a lucrative
business inside the temple complex
Food Counter auctioned for around Rs.
1crore at the Srirangam temple, that’s a mind boggling Rs. 30000 a day
At the Varadaraja Perumal Temple in Kanchipuram, the auctioned Food Stall this year has fetched the HR & CE Rs. 65 Lakhs
At the Varadaraja Perumal Temple in Kanchipuram, the auctioned Food Stall this year has fetched the HR & CE Rs. 65 Lakhs
It has been historical tradition and belief that
prasadam of the God is to be consumed in minimal quantity and devotees
typically shared even this minimal quantity handed to them with other devotees
who missed out.
But like so many other twists that have happened
inside temple in recent decades, the concept of prasadam and the way it has
been positioned and now viewed too has undergone a dramatic change. The new
wave of devotion that has struck devotees has seen them buy food from the so
called prasadam stalls. It may have nothing to do with the historical concept
of prasadam and how it is to be consumed. The new set of devotees – and they
are in huge majority- is comfortable buying and eating food inside the temple.
In most case, a temple trip is incomplete without the consumption of the now
popular delicacies of the respective temple.
The
Srirangam Temple
Till the 1970s, paniyaram at the Ranganathaswamy
Temple in Srirangam was presented to the Lord and brought to Sri Pandaram,
where it was sold to devotees. It was on a very small scale. The
traditionalists who understood the process waited near the flag post at the
Ariya Bhattal Vaasal and picked up the real ‘hot’ prasadam.
It was a period when Trustees held a strangle hold
on the temple and its functioning. The trustees ensured that the temple
activities were performed in an orderly manner. HR & CE played less of a
role.
However, with HR and CE gaining dominance in the
1970s and in the subsequent decades, things began to turn hugely commercial.
The focus shifted to generating revenue out of the open spaces in the temple.
Out of nowhere, a small 200 feet space opposite the Garuda Sannidhi was
converted to a food counter disguised as a Prasadam stall.
But even the HR and CE would not have visualized
the potential of this new revenue model, one that was to turn into a big money
spinner for them across the large temples in Tamil Nadu.
Prasadam is food made at the Madapalli in a pious
way and presented to the Lord / Thayar/Ambal and distributed to the devotees in
small quantity. It is not something that is to be ‘sold’ for a price.
However, in the new few decades old model, food is
made far away from the Madapalli and is even brought in many temples from
outside the temple complex. It is also
food and snacks prepared by non-traditional people. And yet the foolhardy
devotees have fallen for the ‘devotional quotient’, for the HR & CE sold
this as ‘Prasadam’, the sacred food of the Lord when there was very little
element of sacredness about the food.
As decades passed by, the value of the stall went
through the roof. Driven by the physical hunger (after having been inside the
temple for a couple of hours) and a belief that they were consuming Godly food
within the temple, devotees queued by in large numbers through the day to pick up
different varieties that was on offer at the food counter.
Delicious Menu on
Offer
The menu on offer had a luring element to it, so as
to entice the devotees into believing that this was from the God. And the
devotees fell for it, the young and old, the modern and the traditionalist. Laddu,
Athirasam, Chakkarai Pongal, ‘Mysore’ Paakku and Puliyotharai gave devotees the
feel that it was Prasadam. Little did they know that this was food that was
neither made at the Madapalli nor presented to the Lord.
Demand drives
Combo Offers
Encouraged by the huge demand, the food stall put
together combo offers which included a variety of snacks packed in a cotton
bag that devotees took back home. Sales sky rocketed and the HR and CE cashed in heavily on this opportunity
to bolster its income from the temple. The annual price (that the franchise had
to pay the HR & CE) of the small food stall is said to have gone up to a mind boggling
Rs. 1 crore, amounting to roughly Rs. 28000 a day. It had now become a full fledged
business inside the temple. Give this huge tender price, one can imagine the
sales that one has to generate each day to recover this money and run as a
profitable business.
Over a 3-4 decade period, HR and CE, across all
temples in Tamil Nadu, coined the vulgar title of ‘Prasadam’ stall misguiding
devotees to consume outside made eateries as the Lord’s Prasadam.
When Chairman, Board of Trustees Venu Srinivasan
tried to shift the older and the smaller of the stalls from the Sri Pandaram, as
part of the temple restoration exercise, he faced stiff resistance on the
grounds that he was hitting at the very survival of a Sri Vaishnavite family.
To shift the more recently and just a few
decades old official food stall of the temple will be an onerous task if not
near impossible for it generates huge revenue for the HR & CE.
One of the members of the Temple Worshippers Society filed a
case against the sale of food at the Chidambaram temple.
Prasadam is to be distributed, 'Not Sold'
Temple Activist TR
Ramesh, who played a significant role in securing the Chidambaram Natarajar
Temple back for the Dikshithars a few years back, refers to an ancient verse relating to the temple that food is to be 'distributed'. He is not happy that food, even though prepared at the
Madapalli, is ‘sold’ for a price.
First the Devotional Wave, Now the Food Wave
Wrongs over several decades have now been
formalized as the rights of the temple and have become part and parcel of the
system, misguiding the devotee in the process. A long distance has been
travelled since the 1970s and it will require a herculean effort to undo the
wrongs that have now come to be part of everyday life at the temples in Tamil
Nadu.
The devotees, on their part, can resist from ‘buying’ and consuming food
wrongfully sold in the name of Prasadam. However, it seems that it does not
matter to the devotee anymore as the taste buds have succumbed and given way to
temptations even inside the temple, a place where God expects devotees to
‘Give-Up’. And it is this temptation that HR and CE has cashed on, in a vulgar
way. They have understood the mood and requirement of a devotee after darshan
and have catered to that need.
Delicious food, call it by what name, is difficult
to resist for the normal human mind even in a sacred zone like the temple
complex. Chakkarai Pongal at the Parthasarathy Temple in Thiruvallikeni Divya
Desam, Panchamirtham at the Murugan temple in Palani and Athirasaram at
Srirangam Ranganathaswamy temple are all made outside of the madapalli through
auctioned contracts.
Devotees are now well entrenched in a cycle that
ends with consumption of food from the official stall outsourced by the HR & CE. They are happy to ignore the
truth that there is no sacred element to the food. Just like the new devotional
wave that swept the state over the last decade and a half, the food wave inside
the temple is unlikely to subside anytime soon.
Good one. One missing element. There is a free Anna dhaanam provided. Despite that if the stall is so lucrative either Anna dhaanam food must be pathetic or the belief that it is prasadam must be so high.
ReplyDeleteSuper article. For restoration to the old traditional way of distribution of prasadam one among us has to go to Court
ReplyDeleteThis was done in the 70s. Now I don’t know what the answer is to this problem
ReplyDeleteShocking and sad.
ReplyDeleteYes use the word Food court. High time the word prasadam is removed Its highly objectionable ad misleading innocent devotees. The sanctity and reverance for prasadam should be protected.
ReplyDelete