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Budha Center,
Sivanand (guest)
wrote
17 years ago:
Ajay, in the area you have marked, are there any definitive relics of the Buddhist era? I am interested.
Of course I know about the Buddha statue of Mavelikara.
Thanks
Sabah House Pallippattumuri,
alfiya (guest)
wrote
17 years ago:
hi saba ikka ivideyaano thaamasikkunnathu? njaan arinjilla k tto
Sabah House Pallippattumuri,
nichu (guest)
wrote
17 years ago:
according to me he is an innocent
Hareram Cable Vision,
biji (guest)
wrote
17 years ago:
hai suku anna
this is baumble how r u?
Vathiparampil House,
Lal (guest)
wrote
17 years ago:
wrongly marked by some one
Chenkiliparampil House,
noufu1985
wrote
17 years ago:
daa pooran shafi....
Muhiyuddin Masjid,
noufu1985
wrote
17 years ago:
ellam kollam but aa kallanaayinte mon thadiyan haseeminte vaappa mairan planine secretory staanathu ninnum maattuka
a,
noufu1985
wrote
17 years ago:
muzhuvan kalla marakkanpannikal
Valiaparambu Arts & Sports Club (vasco),
HJHG (guest)
wrote
18 years ago:
alum moodan
paakkan
maniyan panikan
rajan
rajappa swami
karunakaran
sadanandan post
nirmala lady member
Konnapparambil House,
HJHG (guest)
wrote
18 years ago:
AFDSHGGKJJL
Budha Center,
Ajay Sekher (guest)
wrote
18 years ago:
Throughout the coastal belt of Kerala, especially in mid and south Kerala Buddhist sites and relics are widely visible even today. Most of the present Hindu Savarna temples were Buddhist centres of worship and other missionary activities, including Kodungalloor, Mavelikkara, Harippad, Kiliroor, Neelamperoor, Thrikkunnappuzha etc. A granite Buddha statue can be seen in the small pagoda structure in Mavelikkara town. The junction itself is called Buddha junction. Karimadikkuttan of Harippad is actually a partly abolished Buddha idol. Buddhist influcence is deeply imprinted in every aspect of South Indian culture including language and culture. Thinkers and social revolutionaries like Sahodaran Ayyappan, Narayana Guru, Asan, C V Kunjiraman, P K Balakrishnan and others have pointed out the Buddhist legacy of the Avarnas and Dalit Bahujans in Kerala. Sankara and followers were instrumental in the persecution and annihilation of Buddhism in Kerala as elsewhere in India in the ninth and tenth centuries. Hindu Brahmanic internal imperialism engulfed the whole peninsula by the twelfth century pushing down Buddhism and Jainism to certain marginal pockets in the subcontinent, even down south to Srilanka and further east to Myanmar and the far east. For details see Gail Omvedt, 'Buddhism in India,' Sage, 2005.
Valiyaparambu LP School,
rajeev pulikeezhudubai (guest)
wrote
18 years ago:
valiyaparampu school (ente school rajeevkaniyamparampil, dxb)
a,
SHARAF (guest)
wrote
19 years ago:
KFVLKETB'KXMC VJHREH
Peramparampil House,
Unni (guest)
wrote
19 years ago:
Thrikkunnappuzha recent comments: