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Kerala Airport Halts Flights For 5 Hours For Religious Procession

The flight services were halted around 4.45 pm and resumed at 9 pm after the procession returned to the temple.

Kerala Airport Halts Flights For 5 Hours For Religious Procession
  • Flight services at Thiruvananthapuram airport halted for five hours on Thursday afternoon
  • The Painkuni Arattu procession of Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple passed through the airport runway
  • The procession included royal family members, devotees, elephants, police, and a band
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Thiruvananthapuram:

Flight services from the international airport here were suspended for about five hours on Thursday afternoon to make way for the holy 'Painkuni Arattu' of Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple here, TIAL said.

The flight services were halted around 4.45 pm and resumed at 9 pm after the procession returned to the temple.

The airport has been pausing operations and rescheduling flights twice every year for decades to enable the bi-annual centuries-old ceremonial procession of the shrine to pass through the runway.

The procession began from the shrine at around 5 pm and besides the male members of the Travancore royal family, a large number of devotees, several caparisoned elephants, a squad of mounted police and a police band were also part of the procession.

Sree Moolam Tirunal Rama Varma, the present head of the erstwhile Travancore royal family, sporting the traditional green silk cap, an emerald necklace and carrying the ceremonial sword, led the religious procession from the temple to the Shankumugham beach across the airport tarmac.

He was accompanied by a small contingent of police personnel.

The procession moved along the tarmac and reached the beach to the sound of trumpets and drum beats.

After entering the airport premises, the "utsava Vigrahas" (idols) of Padmanabha Swamy, Narasimha Moorthy and Krishna Swami, were kept at the "arattu mandapam" near the runway for some time and later taken to the nearby beach for the rituals.

After a dip in the sea off Shankumugham beach, the idols were then taken back to the shrine in a procession lit by traditional torches, marking the conclusion of the festival.

The Thiruvananthapuram International Airport Ltd (TIAL) shared photos and videos of the procession in a Facebook post in which it said, "As the Arattu procession of Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple made its sacred journey across our runway, it carried with it a deep connection to Kerala's heritage and devotion.

"At #ThiruvananthapuramAirport, we are honoured to witness this revered tradition, a beautiful reminder of how faith transcends time and place." Flight services resumed at around 9 pm after the procession returned to the temple and the tarmac was cleaned and declared fit for air operations, an airport source said.

The practice of the temple procession passing through the route to reach the Shangumugham beach for the holy bath of the idols began centuries ago and it has been continuing even after the establishment of the airport in 1932.

When the airport was constructed in the particular place, the then Travancore King Sree Chithira Thirunal had made it clear that facility would be open for public for 363 days in a year and for two days for Lord Padmanabha, the titular deity of the royal family, according to historians.

The royal-era ritual has been continuing even after the Adani Group took over the management of the airport.

The airport issues a NOTAM (Notice to Airmen) twice every year before the runway is closed during the bi-annual Alpassi festival, which falls in October-November and the Painkuni festival in March-April.

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