Shrines play prominent role in South Indian Catholic life

  • St. Thomas Church, Pulluvazhy, has a celebrated roadside shrine with a statue of St. Anthony that draws a constant stream of visitors.
  • A devotee touches a pieta at Our Lady of Good Health. Hindu and Catholic Indians almost always touch religious statues, as a mark of respect, of physical connection, and as a way of developing mutual affection.
  • Tonsured pilgrims before the statue of Velankannia Matha, Our Lady, in the basilica church
  • Malas, fresh flower garlands, for sale across from the Miraculous Infant Jesus Shrine; these are draped over the saints to honor them.
  • Miraculous Infant Jesus Shrine, Bengaluru.
  • The miracle of the shrine of St. Anthony at Pulluvazhy is that the plant has grown so that it continues to leave the face of St. Anthony and the Christ child visible.
  • Devotee at the shrine of St. Anthony at Pulluvazhy, Kerala
  • St. George, a protector, is one of the most popular saints in Kerala; here he is features at St. Alphonsa's shrine.
  • Empty boxes of special "Alphonsa" candles near the saint's memorial shrine; Bharananganam, Kerala
  • Devotees at the burial Shrine of St. Alphonsa, India's first native saint.
  • A freestanding shrine in the center of Kuravilangad is a spot where passersby will regularly stop to offer a prayer. Large and small shrines of this type are common in Christian areas of Kerala.
  • Street vendors sell oil and candles to bring to the oil lamp at St. Mary's Forane church, Kuravilangad, Kerala.
  • Shrines and feasts often attempt to outdo each other. Here, at the St. Jude Shrine, Koothattukulam, is what they claim is the world's largest oil prayer lamp.
  • Lest anyone doubt it, the sign at the St. Jude Shrine at Kothattukulam gives numbers and measurements to prove that it is the world's largest oil prayer lamp.
  • Devotees at the Miraculous Infant Shrine. Note the sign that says "please hold candles upright." All of the devotees ignore the sign, holding candles forward to drip them.
  • In a back alley of Bengaluru, shrines of Christian saints and the Hindu deity Ganesh share the same property.
  • Annai Vailankanni chapel, a grand devotional spot on a tiny footprint in Bengaluru.
  • The statue of Christ the King in front of the Vettucaud church is a place of local devotion.

Shrines play an unusually big role in Catholic life in southern India. Almost all Catholic churches there have shrines in front and inside. Towns with a significant Catholic population often feature a Catholic shrine near the center of town or at a crossroads, and there are many unofficial shrines built and maintained by individual families or groups of families. Pilgrimages and shrines in India are not simply a populist phenomenon, something elites might avoid.1 Worshipers stop by them steadily throughout the day, offering brief prayers, and signaling that these are active places of religious power, not simply relics from the past. Pilgrims make special trips to the more important of these sites and consider those pilgrimages as important occasions in their lives.

Large shrines in Velankanni, Bengaluru, at St. Alphonsa's tomb at Bharananganam, and St. John de Britto church in Tamil Nadu, are among the prominent pilgrimage sites. The St. Mary's Forane, or Kuravilangad Church, in Kottayam, a Syro-Malabar church and shrine, draws its legitimacy from a reputed appearance of the Virgin at a spring in 105 AD.

 

India's landscape is so replete with shrines and holy sites, some drawing massive crowds, others only local devotion, Diana Eck writes, that "there are so many tīrthas in the sacred geography of India that the whole notion of "sacred space"as somehow set aside from the profane is cast into question.  In Hindu India, sacred space is so vastly multiplied that there is little untouched by the presence of the sacred."2 These spaces, she writes, are created not only by priests and sacred literature, but also "by the countless millions of pilgrims who have generated a powerful sense of the land, location and belonging through journeys to their hearts' destinations."3   

Catholic shrines "overlap" the Hindu sacred landscape, rather than simply replacing the latter.  The Catholic shrines in southern India draw legitimacy from parallel streams in Hindu and Western religion, both of which shaped Indian Catholicism. Devotees at Catholic shrines in some places are often as likely to be Hindus as Catholics. Hindus, like Catholics, go to the shrines to pay their respect to potentially miraculous intercessors, to make a promise in return for some favor, or to fulfill a promise made.  As Eck describes them, Hindu holy sites and the stories behind them frequently narrate some divine act of creation that yielded a particular river or coastland other geographical feature.4 Catholic sites, interestingly, do not seem to make claims about the creation of India, but about divine irruption into an already-created world. 

Sight (Darśan) and touch (Pranāma) are as important in Indian Catholicism as they are in Hinduism. Believers regard it as especially important to behold a saint or holy person in some physical way, so as to put the saint and the believer in sight of one another. Touch is similarly essential, as a mark of respect, of physical connection, and as a way of developing mutual affection. Pranāma is the Hindu practice of touching the feet of a saint as a sign of devotion or respect. Catholic worshipers are also constantly seen touching the feet of religious statues. Sight and touch are regarded as providing a real and tangible connection to a saint, and are particularly prized to a degree that is not true in most of the West.

Interestingly, a number of churches have been putting saints behind glass, protecting them from the touch of the faithful and from dirtiness. In those instances, people are usually seen praying with their hands on the glass. Where there are signs that say "Please do not touch the statues,” they are ignored, for reasons of devotion. 

Prasadam

At the base of statues, whether in Hindu temples or Catholic ones, one almost always finds small plates or piles of salt, peppercorns, coconut pieces or other sweets. 

These prasadam, as they are known in Hindu tradition, are foods offered to, and thus sanctified by the deity. Devotees generally bring these small offerings, leaving them for other devotees to receive. When received, they are regarded as sanctified gifts from the venerated saint himself, and a sign of blessing.

Exchange, prosperity and blessing

To a degree that would surprise many westerners, prayer often seems to be regarded as a way of moving God to grant blessing, or a form of mutual exchange. The shrine of the Miraculous Infant Jesus makes this connection especially apparent in a Christian context.

Listen to segments of an interview with Lukose, a civil servant in Bangalore, who describes the importance of physical images for worshipers in India, and the connection between worship and ethics.

  • 1Corinne Dempsey, Kerala Christian Sainthood: collisions of culture and worldview in South India, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001), 13.
  • 2Diana Eck, India, A Sacred Geography (New York: Harmony, 2012),76.
  • 3Eck, 5, 15.
  • 4Eck, 18.
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In this excerpted interview, Lukose, a Catholic in Bengaluru, talks about the ways Indians pray and the connection between worship and ethics.
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Ganesh, a Hindu man at St. Mary’s Shrine in Bengaluru, explains that many Hindus visit Catholic shrines.
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