When runway became path of faith at Thiruvananthapuram airport


Media Release

Thiruvananthapuram, Apr 2: Aircraft movements paused and the runway fell silent at Thiruvananthapuram International Airport as a centuries-old ritual unfolded, drawing thousands of devotees and offering a rare moment where modern aviation gave way to living tradition.

The occasion was the annual Painkuni Arattu procession of Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple, a festival rooted in Kerala’s royal and spiritual heritage and historically associated with the temple traditions of the erstwhile Travancore kingdom. Named after the Malayalam calendar month ‘Painkuni’ and referring to the ritual sea bath (‘Arattu’), the festival marked the symbolic purification of the temple’s deities through immersion in the sea. 

On the final day of the 10-day festival, idols of Lord Padmanabhaswamy, Narasimha Moorthy and Krishna Swamy were carried in a ceremonial procession from the temple to Shanghumugham Beach, about six kilometres away. The route passed directly across the airport’s runway, reflecting its origins under the erstwhile Travancore royal family, which built the airport in 1932.

Accompanied by caparisoned elephants, traditional percussion and members of the royal lineage, the procession paused briefly near the runway before continuing to the Arabian Sea for the ritual bath. The return journey unfolded after dusk in a torch-lit procession, marking the close of the festival.

Flight operations resumed only after the runway was inspected, cleaned and cleared for safe use. The temporary pause reflected a longstanding local practice in which infrastructure yielded, briefly, to ritual.

The airport is operated by Adani Airport Holdings Limited (AAHL), India’s largest private airport operator, which assumed operations in 2021. It worked closely with temple authorities and local administration to facilitate the procession while maintaining strict aviation safety protocols.

The continuation of this practice underscored a distinctive feature of Kerala’s cultural fabric, where tradition and modern systems coexist. Facilitated by the Adani Group, through its airports business, the initiative reflected a broader ethos of respecting and sustaining India’s living traditions, a sentiment echoed the same day as chairman Gautam Adani and his family offered prayers at the Shri Ram Temple in Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh. At Thiruvananthapuram, it stood as a quiet but powerful reminder that progress can move forward without displacing the past.

 

 

  

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Title: When runway became path of faith at Thiruvananthapuram airport



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