The past unfurls as parallel stories in the sleepy town
of Ettayapuram's dusty, narrow streets, row houses and forgotten
palaces. This ancient Pandya province now just a shadow of its past,
still retains the stories of its heroes and villains, told over many
generations, within the walls of its ancestral homes.
Ettayapuram
appears out of nowhere about 40 km from Kazhugumalai, and is a picture
postcard of any south Indian town — temples, memorials, thatched roofs
and large bolted doors. Ilasanadu, as it was earlier called, was ruled
by the Pandya kings until Ettappan was appointed the zamindar. About 150
years and one historic betrayal later, the town, then ruled by his
descendants came to be known as Ettayapuram, after the man who allegedly
tattled on Veerapandiya Kattabomman.
We find this
town in the midst of its afternoon siesta and, with excitement, head to
the birth place of Bharathiar. The century-old house is vaguely similar
to his home in Triplicane, Chennai bunched with the rest of the row
houses, its pyol reaching out to us from under the inviting shade of a
sloping roof.
The house has thick, wooden doors and is about 150 years
old. As we crouch to enter the wonderfully cool, low-ceilinged house,
(the upper portion is not accessible) we find a bust of the poet in a
cordoned off area — the spot where he was born in 1882. To see the
humble beginnings of this great man was worth the long-winded search for
his house. The poet's handwritten poems, letters and speeches are
encased in a wooden cupboard with a glass top, the slants and serifs of
his Tamil font visibly clear on the yellowing paper.
The
walls bear evidence of his glory, covered as they are with his
poems, photos and awards. There are family portraits, photos of him with
freedom fighters and framed black-and-white photographs of his
descendents.
From here, the Ettappan palace is only a
stone's throw but no one seems to know exactly where their king once
lived. As the car trudges through the sandy roads, we turn off into a
corner with a large, broken gate. Inside, past a wide, empty area and a
palatial mansion that seems uninhabited, is a white, domed building in a
corner besides what seems to be a broken down stable. One look at this
enormous white-stone palace, with its tapering, circular domes,
intricate floral carvings along the walls, shuttered windows, and stone
lion turrets, and we know that this was the home of the Raja of
Ettayapuram.
Legend has it that Ettapan had given out information about
the whereabouts of Veerapandiya Kattabomman (who was in hiding) to the
British and this caused the braveheart's death by hanging. The area
surrounding this grand, dilapidated palace is empty and we're left alone
wondering about the stories that lie untold within its cold, stone
walls.
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