Pushpaka

Pushpaka is a caste of Hindu Brahmins of Kerala.[1] In Malayalam language, this caste is also referred to as Pushpakan, Pushpakar, Pushpaka Unni or Pushpakan Unni. They are a part of the Ambalavasi community in Kerala.[2] They carry out the various activities of the temple like teaching of sacred texts, garland making, lamp works etc., and sometimes they perform actual priestly activities also. The male members of this caste generally use the surname Unni with their name. They also use the surnames Nambi and Sarma.

Pushpaka women are known as Pushpakathi or Pushpini. Pushpaka men are addressed by their surname Unni or Nambi, while pushpaka women are addressed as Atheramma. Pushpaka houses are known as Matham.

The caste known as Pushpaka are prominent in Sothern Kerala and Central Kerala. In Northern Kerala, the Nambeesan caste is referred to as Pushpakas owing to their cultural similarity with Pushpakas in Central and Southern Kerala.

Customs

  • Pushpakas are strict vegetarians, and prohibited from drinking spirituous liquor.
  • They practice sixteen rituals (Shodasa Samskara) of Hinduism.
  • They observe a pollution of 10 days, called Balayma, after a birth in patrilineal line. After a birth in matrilineal line, Balayma is observed for 3 days.
  • They observe a pollution of 10 days, called Pula, after the death of patrilineal relatives. After a death in matrilineal line, Pula is observed for 3 days.
  • The Suddha-punyaha, i.e, the cleansing ritual after pollution, is performed through the learned men from Pushpaka community or through the agency of Namboothiris.

Association with Kurukkal Caste

The Kurukkal caste had close association with the Pushpaka caste of Travancore among whom they live.[3] There were cultural exchanges between these two castes. In the traditional matrimonial system, probably due to their cultural and occupational similarities, marriages between these two castes were common, thereby allowing a type of dual exogamy. The progeny of a Pushpaka man and a Kurukkal woman were treated as Pushpakas, and they continue to follow the patrilineal system of Pushpakas. Similary, the offspring of a Kurukkal man and a Pushpka woman were treated as Kurukkals and continued to follow matrilineal system of Kurukkals. The dual exogamy practiced by these two castes ultimately formed Kurukkal families of purely Kerala background, abjuring their Tamil background completely.

Comparison with other brahmin castes

  • In the wedding rituals (i.e. Vivaha), a Namboothiri bride always wear white dress while the Pushpaka bride will wear coloured dress, preferably red. The auspicious thread which is knotted around the bride's neck is referred to by Pushpakabrahmins as Mangalyasutra (Thali), whereas it is referred to by Namboodiris as Kanthasutra (Thali or Cheruthali). In a Pushpaka marriage, it is the groom who ties it around the bride's neck, whereas in a Namboodiri marriage, it is the bride's father who ties the Kanthasutra to bride's neck.
  • Namboothiri women (Antharjanams) were not allowed to wear coloured dress. They were supposed to wear only white dress. They were not allowed to pierce nose. Further, a Namboothiri woman was not allowed to look at any man other than her husband, father, grandfather or her brothers on either side. Namboothiri women were not allowed to move out of the house without a maid. These types of restrictions were not generally observed by Pushpaka women (Atherammas).
  • They are Ekayajnopavitadharinah, that is, they wear only one "Poonool" (Yajnopaveetham, sacred thread) even after marriage, whereas Paradesi Brahmins wear two sacred threads after marriage, according to their sampradayas.
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See also

  • Pushpaka Brahmins

References

  1. Rose, Suma (2004). Polity, Society, and Women: With Special Reference to Travancore, 1700-1900 A.D. Carmel International Publishing House. p. 217. ISBN 9788187655374. Retrieved 30 April 2013.
  2. Report on the Socio-economic Survey on Castes/communities, Kerala 1968. Bureau of Economics & Statistics, Government of Kerala. 1969. p. 42.
  3. Singh, Kumar Suresh (2002). People of India, Volume 27, Part 3. p. 1292.
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