SACRED GEOGRAPHIES
The final dimension of Kalai unfolded through the sacred architecture of the region. At Thirumayam Fort and Temple, historian Dr Pradeep Chakravarthy guided visitors through a temple complex where architecture and geology appear inseparable. Rather than imposing built form upon the landscape, the temple emerges from living rock, preserving the natural formation as part of the sacred environment. Dating largely to the 17th century under the Sethupathi rulers, the site carries traces of older Pandya rock-cut traditions and contains both Shaivite and Vaishnavite shrines. During an earlier conversation, Sujata Shankar reflected on the nature of pilgrimage itself. One spends hours travelling, climbing temple steps and enduring physical exertion, only to arrive before the deity and close one’s eyes. Reverence, she suggested, often resides not in visuality, but in the suspension of it.
Festivals like Kalai perform an important cultural function. They expose the limited and flattened ways in which history is commonly interpreted. Regions such as Chettinad are frequently reduced to isolated categories when in reality they emerge through interconnected networks of food, material culture, urbanism, trade and community life.
At one of the final stops, Chidambara Vilas, Resort Manager Senthil Kumar Bheeman, recounted how, throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, Chettiars across Southeast Asia acted as bankers, providing liquidity and capital that helped drive trade wherever they settled. This history becomes especially significant when read alongside the discriminatory lending practices of the British colonial system. It is due in part to the Chettiars that we see the expansion of coconut, rubber, coffee and tea cultivation in Ceylon; rice, gems and teak in Burma; tin, rubber and rice in Malaya; rice in Vietnam; and sugar in South Africa and Mauritius. The Chettiars also pioneered swadeshi banking institutions, founding banks such as Indian Bank, Indian Overseas Bank and Bank of Madura, which later merged with ICICI Bank, alongside ventures like United India Insurance.
Today, as many of the families who once inhabited Chettinad have migrated elsewhere, their homes remain as elegies to a remarkable mercantile age. In the hot and humid night, as I walked out of the magnificent property at Chidambara Vilas, a curious local greeted me. A pale white hound with a lean, sweeping frame stood guard near the entrance. Around estates like these, the dog could well have descended from a hunting Rajapalayam dog or Chippiparai dog. In their heyday, when the homes were full and the business was booming, these dogs offered protection and companionship. Now, in the wake of an empty village, they become innocent reminders of the stories we leave behind.
Read more: Interested in Chettinad Food? Know more about the Suvai food festival!