Pambatti siddhar was one of the 18 siddhars, a lineage of monks or sages who lived at various time periods in India, mainly southern India. Some of his poems, roughly around 600 lines of text are available today. His poems are written in Tamil and he is famous for finishing his poems with the term 'Addu Pambe' which literally means 'dance, o snake'. Even his poems are addressed to snakes. Some of his poems also addresses his spiritual teacher or guru. Pambatti siddhar comes from the line of saints who are believed to have possessed siddhis or supernatural powers through rigorous meditation and other spiritual exercises. He is also believed to have caught snakes and sold them for living before he ventured into his spiritual quest.[1]
Sri Pambatti siddhar had attained the eight supernatural powers called 'Ashtamasiddhi' after performing penance for a very long time in a cave on Marudamalai, near Coimbatore in Tamil Nadu. Also he lived in places like Mahalingamalai in Vathiraayiruppu, Kollimalai, and Bhavani. One notable aspect of his works are the usage of common slang language to explain complex spiritual experiences and siddhis. He has a flavour for imagination and often mentions that salvation is not possible without love in one's heart. He also has performed pooja and meditated near Holy Marudha Tree (Terminalia arjuna) in Marudamalai by praying to Lord Murugan. He is believed to have attained Samadhi by practising his rigorous techniques in Sankarankoil.[2][3] and Vaasi Techniques in Thirukadavur, Nagapattinam District.[2] His duration of life is believed to be 123 Years. His guru was Sattaimuni.[4][5][6]
References
- ↑ "Powers of siddhars". The Hindu. 2 January 2019. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- 1 2 "Pambatti siddhar". siddhars.com. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
- ↑ Siddhars
- ↑ 18 siddhars
- ↑ "பாம்பாட்டி சித்தர் வாழ்க்கை வரலாறு | Pambatti siddhar history". Aanmeegam. 22 May 2020. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
- ↑ ராஜகுமாரன், எஸ். "பாம்புப் பிடாரன் பாம்பாட்டிச் சித்தரான கதை - சித்தர்கள் உறையும் ஜீவசமாதிகள்! அமானுஷ்யத் தொடர் - 10". vikatan.com (in Tamil). Retrieved 8 May 2022.