Puli Maranja Thondachan (Kari Gurikkal)
This is one of the most
important Theyyams of North Malabar on two counts. First, it tells the story of
Thondachan, i.e, the great grandfather who is a Master in his own right.
Secondly, Thondachan is a Dalit. However, irrespective of the cast
aspect, the story is universal and relevant in all times! Comparable to
“Waiting for Godot” if you take out an example from theatre, though the themes
are different.
Human history is replete with the
lives of heroes who wanted to change the world for greater common good.
Naturally, they have to face the ire of the ruling elite and get tortured or
killed in most heinous ways. However, the rebels never say die. They are quite
selfless and find a meaning to life by cultivating love. Courage is their
password. The tragedy is that such lionhearted people, more often than not,
emerge defeated. Their dreams come crushing!
Why?
The theyyam depicting the life
of Kari Gurikkal provides a possible answer.
I have not seen a live performance to be frank, though I’m familiar with it’s theatre and movie versions. Even the clips of Kari Guikkal available in YouTube are far from satisfying. They are disappointing in many ways! The experience might be different if you ‘decipher’ the lengthy ‘thottam’ to get the first-hand grasp of the life and times of Kari Gurikkal.
Puli maranja Thondachan (Kari Gurikkal) |
A landlord named Kunjambu
of Chenicherry was on the look-out of farm-hands to take care of his fields
and found the couple, Karimban & Virunthi at the temple-festival at Thiruvarkad.
A deal was struck and they followed the landlord! A son, Kari was born
to them in due course who was brilliant and a forerunner among children. He
wanted to learn Martial Arts, but couldn’t secure admission to any Kalari,
being a Dalit. His ‘owner’ cum mentor, Kunjambu advised him to change
his identity including name and address and retry his luck. Needless to say, he
got admitted to all the eighteen kalaries, each one specialising in one
of the esoteric subjects. He got mastery over impersonation
from Chotian Kalary. After undergoing studies in Madayi Kalary,
he was bestowed the status of Gurikkal, the highest distinction of the Kalari
system of learning. Normally the Kalaris don’t teach occult for obvious
reasons of misuse. Only students with earnest intentions are taught the
mysterious practices. Kari Gurikkal was the chosen one.
When the ruler was back to
normal, however, there was some wavering regarding the fee ! The word was not
kept. The ruling elite felt that the disease could recur anytime in future and
people in the palace were really tense. So, Gurikkal should bring
leopard’s milk and its flock to ward off the two possibilities. The ruler was
supposed to drink the leopard’s milk while his entire body was being brushed
with the tuft. It was a trap to
eliminate the magic-healer. To their surprise, Kari Gurikkal agreed to
bring both. It was not a big deal for him as he knew impersonation inside out.
His wife, Vellachi was a virtuous woman. Gurikkal wanted to
apprise his wife about the happenings and to give her detailed instructions
what to do when he came back in the form of a leopard. She was supposed to throw
gruel (water from cleaning rice) on his face and beat him with a broom dipped
in liquid cow-dung! On his way home, he encountered so many other theyyams, Pottan, Kurathi, Gulikan etc. of which some were his
benefactors while some others were detractors. ( In fact this is a representation of Gurikkal's own mental state.)
Other theyyams blocking Gurikkal's way |
He was in a hurry to get back
home before daybreak and he did reach there in time and called out for his
wife. Sadly enough, Vellachi got immensely scared seeing the leopard and
forgot everything that her husband had instructed.
She didn’t open the door.
Kari Gurikkal was
stuck forever. Unless he regained his human-form, he was absolutely helpless
and would become the butt of ridicule and injury. He disappeared into a
fathomless abyss.
After some time, Alladam
Thampuran suffered from yet another bout of lunacy and everybody knew the
reason. Karma was settling its accounts.
Half the wealth as promised
was immediately given away. A statue of Kari Gurikkal
in gold was installed and he
was elevated to the theyyam status.
Puli Maranja Thondachan came
into being.
The story of Kari
Gurikkal ends at this point.
The theyyam starts
working on you after the performance is over. We are too familiar with Gurikkal
like characters in real life.
I just cite one example from cinema.
Think of the last scene of
Andrzej Wajda’s polish film “Ashes and Diamonds” (1958).
The protagonist gets killed
and his body lies in a garbage dump. The camera pans the sky. Birds flying
unhindered. Too many of them.
“Experiencing freedom from one
wingtip to another”.
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