Saturday, September 5, 2009
YSR had special attachment for Tirumala
The special attachment that the Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy had for Tirumala needs no mention. He had visited Tirupati on over two dozen occasions and motored up the Tirumala on almost all the times to offer prayers to Lord Venkateswara.
Also, he successfully transformed the TTD, which was till then a religious body, into a major delivery channel to achieve many of the government’s social obligations.
Even in the height of proselytization charges that rocked the Tirumala in 2005-06, the YSR regime left no stone unturned to drive home the message loud and clear that it would not tolerate any delinquency in bringing the accused to book.
When a Government Order issued in early 2006 was misconstrued as limiting the extent of the seven hills to only two, which created a furore across the country, Y.S.Rajasekhara Reddy came forward to put the record straight.
After laying the foundation for SV Vedic University here in August 2006, he announced that Tirumala would have ‘all the seven hills’ and the area of 10 1/3 sq. miles around the temple would continue to be under the control of the TTD.
YSR got several projects inaugurated at Tirumala, keeping in view the growing demands of pilgrims. Lakshmi Narasimha (Tarigonda), Gandi Anjaneya (Kadapa), Varadaraja (Nagari) and Lakshmi Venkateswara (Devuni Kadapa) temples languishing for funds were brought under the TTD roof for better maintenance. This apart, he sanctioned Rs.2,000 per month for maintenance of other small temples.
Schemes launched
‘Kalyanamasthu’, the mass marriage programme, became an instant hit where weddings were performed to the poor brides and grooms with blessings of Lord Balaji. Performing the Lord’s celestial wedding (Kalyanotsavam) in metro cities, slums and Dalitwadas was another novel idea to reach out the glory of Lord Venkateswara as well as to get back the ‘excluded’ sections into the fold of Hinduism.
‘Ayushmanbhava’, a scheme to provide life insurance cover to priests and pundits in the 65-75 years age group, was inaugurated in February this year. ‘Satha Kundatmaka Homam’ was performed in Chennai and Hyderabad to propitiate the rain god.
Under ‘Geetha Govindam’, copies of ‘Bhagavadgita’ were distributed to prisoners to bring repentance in them and make them useful to the society.
‘Padmavathi Ammavari Pustaka Prasadam’ was a TTD-funded project to distribute textbooks to all the poor students of State-run schools. ‘Sravanam’ is another TTD-run scheme aimed at identifying aural disability in infants and providing early intervention to treat the malady.
Tirumala, Tirumala news, YSR News,
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