Southern part of India and Srilanka
Nature is
all powerful. Can you imagine that something which existed about half a century
ago and frequented by people at will no longer exists !!. Have you travelled in
a not so good road (only sands in fact) on a ubiquitous rickety nerve wracking
contraption that perhaps runs on kerosene where you could see on both sides.
Yes on one side – the deep and rough waters of the mighty Indian Ocean and on
the other shallow calm waters of Bay of Bengal.
The
island of “Rameshwaram” in Ramanathapuram District of Tamilnadu is a very
religious place housing the famous Ramanatha Swamy temple – the place where
Lord Rama worshipped Shiva in linga form. This is on Pamban island separated
from the main land – the Gulf of Mannar. The land point in Ramnad district is
Mandapam. From here is the famous bridge leading to the island – the earlier
Pamban bridge used to open up allowing ships to pass by.
From Rameshwaram,
when you go further is - Danushkodi (Danush would
mean the bow and kodi means the end). Hindu legend has it that at the
request of Vibeeshana, Lord Rama broke the Sethu (the bridge) with one end of
his bow and hence the name Danushkodi. For pilgrims the pilgrimage is complete
starting from darshan at Kashi to worship at Rameswaram besides a holy bath in
the confluence of Mahodadhi (Bay of Bengal) and Ratnakara (Indian Ocean)
Till
recently, there existed land inhabited by people – the southern tip of
Rameshwaram island – the end point of India situated much closer almost 18
miles close to Talaimannar in Jaffna of
Srilanka. Dhanushkodi used to be the only land border between India and Sri
Lanka – a shoal being the distance breaker. Have heard from many elders that
there existed ferry services across,
transporting goods and passengers by sea. The small place was flourishing with
business activity with hotels, textile shops and dharmashalas (free
choultries). It had a Railway station also besides various Govt institutions
like Railway hospital, Post Office, Port office etc.,
google map of Rameshwaram, present day danushkodi and Srilanka
Cyclone and heavy weather are not unheard of, in the southern States of India. Some records
of Geological survey of India indicate that the southern part of Dhanushkodi
township sank by almost 5 meters during 1948 due to tectonic movements. But
something worst happened on this day (23rd Dec) in 1964 – a cyclonic storm
wiped out part of the Nation and took away Dhanushkodi from the Indian map.
It is stated that it was the formation of a depression with its
centre at 5N 93E in South Andaman Sea on 17 December 1964. On 19th December it intensified into a cyclonic storm.
The Rameswaram storm not only formed at such low latitude but also intensified
into a severe cyclonic storm at about the same latitude, indeed a rare occurrence. After 21st
December 1964, its movement was
westwards, almost in a straight line, at the rate of 250 miles (400 km) to 350
miles (560 km) per day. On 22 December it crossed Vavunia of Srilanka with a
wind velocity of 150 knots (280 km/h), moved into Palk Strait in the night and
crashed into Dhanushkodi of Rameshwaram island on the night of 22–23 December
1964. It was estimated that tidal waves were 8 yards high when it crossed
Rameshwaram.
There used to be a direct train service from Madras called Boat
Mail Express and other trains. Fatefully, train No.653, Pamban-Dhanushkodi
Passenger, a daily regular service with 110 passengers and 5 railway staff, was
hit by a massive tidal wave near the Dhanushkodi station and was washed away
killing all its passengers. The high tidal waves ruined and devastated
the entire town. Following this disaster, the Government of Madras declared the
town as Ghost town and unfit for living after the storm. Only a memorial pillar
lies there now. The railway track got covered by sand dunes and was abandoned –
no body lives there and the train services were no longer considered viable.
Today in the forlorn place, some fisherfolk live. There are
several temples associated with Lord Rama here.
The Boat Mail was a train and steamer ferry service between
India and Ceylon (Sri Lanka, as it then was). In the late 19th century, the railway route in India was from
Madras to Tuticorin. At Tuticorin, passengers embarked on a steamer to Colombo.
The train took 21 hours and 50 minutes for the journey from Madras to
Tuticorin. The Boat Mail was one of the early trains to get vestibuled
carriages, in 1898. After the Pamban Bridge was built, the train's route
changed and it went from Madras to Dhanushkodi. A much shorter ferry service then took the
passengers to Talaimannar in Ceylon, from where another train went to Colombo.
All this became a thing of the past after that devastating
cyclone in 1964. Very sad indeed..................
Regards –
S. Sampathkumar.
23rd Dec 2010.
The boat mail (at least the steamer service) is getting opened again between Tuticorin & Colomobo this year.
ReplyDeleteNice blog :)
Very informative and makes one yearn to go here, esp when we plan for Rameswaram - Gupta
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