It is
a unique post office, and one of its main tasks is to deliver letters to God.
Located
near the famed Hindu temple at the Sabarimala hills, the post office may
perhaps be the only one in the country which doesn't work round the year. It
comes alive when the peak pilgrimage season of the Ayyappa shrine begins on the
first day of the Malayalam month in November, and the period ends towards the
middle of January.
The
post office is also open for 10 days during the Vishu season.
Functioning
six days a week from 8 in the morning to 8 at night, the six employees, led by
23-year-old Sai G. Prakash, have a lot to do.
Prakash
is happy to be here, and says he was a devotee of Lord Ayyappa.
"Our
post office mostly gets invitation cards for weddings and shop openings
addressed to Lord Ayyappa, obviously to seek divine blessings," Prakash
told IANS.
Most
such mail come from Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, he said.
But
the three letter boxes kept in the temple complex get more than post cards and
envelopes. Every morning, the staff find scores of identity cards and wallets
too in them.
"We
make it a point to mail these cards to the individuals concerned," Prakash
said. The employees often spend their own money to do this.
"Since
this season began, I have posted close to 20 PAN cards to the income tax
office."
Police
say all this is the work of pickpockets who operate in the temple town --
crowded during the pilgrimage season.
The
criminals pocket the money from the wallets and dump the cards -- and wallets
-- in the post boxes.
Situated
in the mountain ranges of the Western Ghats at 914 metres above sea level, the
Sabarimala temple is four kilometres uphill from Pamba in Pathanamthitta
district, around 100 km from Thiruvananthapuram.
The
temple is accessible only on foot from Pamba.
During
the last pilgrimage season, more than 4.5 million devotees visited the shrine.
This season the authorities expect a 10 percent increase.
A
feature of the post office is the special pictorial cancellation stamp of the
18 steps that led to the Lord Ayyappa shrine.
"Some
devotees come and buy covers or cards and write their own address and post them
here," said Prakash. "This is their souvenir."
The
post office helps pilgrims to post 'appom' and 'aravana' (the temple prasad).
It also sells mobile recharge coupons.
Of the
six employees, three walk down the hill daily carrying the outgoing mail on
their heads. When they walk up, they carry bags of mail -- mostly addressed to
Lord Ayyappa.
"Overall
we enjoy what we do here," said Prakash. "We are very happy we got
this posting."
Read more at: http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/post-office-kerala-which-delivers-mail-letters-to-god-ayyapa-sabarimala-vishu/1/406330.html
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