Aravan Festival celebrated in late April/early May, is attended by thousands – including many transgenders and homosexuals. The aravani worship the Hindu god, Aravan, and do not practice any system of castration.
Bride of Aravan being “married” to the god inside the Koothandavar Temple, the South Indian temple god, in an age-old rite performed by the sweating, topless temple priest, a re-enactment of the marriage of Mohini (a female incarnation of Lord Krishna) and Aravan related in the Hindu mythological epic, Mahabharata. Another hijra (tranny) friend looks on. The marriage lasts for only one festive night then the god is killed in effigy and the brides become wailing widows the next day.
Bride of Aravan being “married” to the god inside the Koothandavar Temple, the South Indian temple god, in an age-old rite performed by the sweating, topless temple priest, a re-enactment of the marriage of Mohini (a female incarnation of Lord Krishna) and Aravan related in the Hindu mythological epic, Mahabharata. Another hijra (tranny) friend looks on. The marriage lasts for only one festive night then the god is killed in effigy and the brides become wailing widows the next day.
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