Trance, Hindu Pilgrimage and Transformation

09 Mar 2007 Friday | 7.00 pm – 8.00 pm | Ngee Ann Auditorium @ Asian Civilisation Museum

A talk by invited speaker, Dr Carl Vadivella Belle, Hindu Chaplain, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia.

Thaipusam, an annual Hindu festival, is widely known for devotees spearing their cheeks with long, shiny steel rods and piercing their chests and backs with small, hook-like needles in penance. It is claimed that devotees feel no pain, do not bleed from their wounds and have no scars left behind. In examining the Hindu festival of Thaipusam, the speaker will suggest that a particular form of trance (arul) plunges the devotees into a catalytic form of consciousness in which they are exposed to the deity’s transformative power.

All talks are free. No registration required. Admission charges to the galleries apply.

Source: http://www.acm.org.sg/exhibitions/eventdetail.asp?eventID=160

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