| Script :
Gayatri Madan Dutt
ISBN : 81-7508-367-0
Vol. No : 709
Jagannathapuri in Orissa
is one of the four major centres of pilgrimage in India. Built nearly eight
centuries ago, during the reign of Chodagangadeva, the gigantic temple
of Lord Jagannatha enshrines wooden idols of Lord Krishna, his brother
Balabhadra and sister Subhadra. A divine dream ordained a life-long passion
in King Indradyumna to enshrine Lord Krishna in a temple whose legend would
live through the ages. The annual festival of the temple is called Ratha
Yatra or Gundicha Yatra, in which the three idols are taken out in chariots
in a large procession. New chariots are built every year. However, new
idols are carved only every 12 years. The image-making is governed by many
traditions. The images must be carved from the trunk of a neem tree that
grows at a crossroad; there should be no marks on it, no birds’ nests built
on it, and there should be a snake-hole at the foot of this tree. When
the log from such a neem is brought to Puri, the heads of the families
bearing the names Vishvavasu, Vidyapati and Vishvakarma (celebrated personalities
whose contributions to King Indradyumna’s quest were invaluable) symbolically
strike it with axes of gold, silver and iron. After this, the images are
carved out. Symbolically, the ratha or chariot is supposed to represent
the human body; the horses, human desires; and the charioteer, judgement.The
legend of the unusual deities and customs of the Jagannathapuri Temple
is unfolded in this Amar Chitra Katha.
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