Singapore:Almost 16,000 devotees fulfilled their vows to Lord Murugan during a Thaipusam festival celebrated in Singapore on Tuesday.
Most of the participating devotees undertook to carry the 'paalkudam', or milk pot, while around 300 carried spike 'kavadis', also known as alagu kavadis, which involves piercing of the torso, face and tongue.
Devotees walked 3.2 km in batches from the Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple in Serangoon Road in the Little India precinct to the Sri Thendayuthapani Temple in Tank Road in the central business district from 11.30pm on February 10 to almost midnight on February 11.
Thaipusam is a major religious festival for Tamil Hindus and is celebrated in Singapore and Malaysia, just like it is done in southern parts of India. The annual event also attracted instrumentalists, whose beats inspired joyful dancing among the kavadi bearers.
Pierced with several rods as part of his 'kavadi', Semiconductor engineer Saravanan Rajasuran (30) braced himself on February 11 for his maiden ‘Thaipusam-walk' under the blazing sun. "I am here after 21 days of preparation," The Straits Times quoted Saravanan as saying at the festival.
Nusha Dakshyni, 25, was among the women who took up the 'paal kavadi' -- a wooden frame bearing milk pots at its sides -- which does not require body piercings. "I underwent a vegetarian fast for 30 days before carrying this kavadi. My mother did this for several years before I started," said Nusha, a sociology undergraduate from the University at Buffalo.