

Anand showed us images of the temple he got in his digital camera. Hopefully, he would post in this blog photos of the temple, and also better and clearer snapshots of his parents.
It was their day. The Jagannaths of Phoenix celebrated their younger grandson Nikhil's first birthday last Sunday, Dec.14. For the record, Nikhil completed one year on Nov.16, if we go by the Christian calender. But the birth date, in accordance with Hindu calculations fell in mid-Dec. Which was how the Jagannaths came to organise Nikhil's Ayush Homa when they did.
Ganesha and Ayusha Homa was held at Ekta Mandir, a specious temple complex in Phoenix. Incidentally, Mr Jagannath who has spent four decades in the town was among the NRI core group that conceived of, planned and executed the Ekta Mandir complex, which, apart from a spacious worship area, has an auditorium that is used by local NRIs for organising spiritual discourses, celebrating marriages , mundan ceremony, upanayanam and other socio-religious events.
The kids are on their own trip as their parents do puja.
Nikhil dressed up for the homa
Elder brother Sidharth in a dress tailored for the occasion and fedexed from Bangalore by elder ajji Vaidehi and thatha Srinivas.
Our grandson Sidharth is three (on Dec.16). The picture (above) was taken in July. Would share with you here his latest when we get from Meera and Ravi photos of a puja they held in Phoenix Sunday last, in celebration of Nikhil's first birthday. Phoenix is where his grandparents - Jagannaths - live. And they did it by the book - puja, homa and a feast . Nikhil turned one on November 16.
Advantage with having two sets of grandparents - one in Phoenix and the other, Mysore - is that you get to have your birthdays celebrated at three different places. Sidharth cut a birthday cake while at his grandpas place at Phoenix on Sunday. Coming Sunday, his parents have lined up a birthday meet at San Ramon, to which a neighbourhood Santa Claus is a special invitee.
At Mysore, Sidharth's grandma did the usual temple rounds, and even took in the dargha close to our place. Incidentally, this was the first place of worship we happened to visit soon after we learnt of Sidharth's birth at a California hospital three year back.Sidhath at birth, Dec.2005.
We spent last evening at Chamundi Children's Home. Raghu, a locally influential friend, relation and Sidharth's chota grandpa, had made arrangements for serving evening meals to the 17 children at the orphanage. On our way back we dropped in at Diya's place at Gokulam. Diya is Raghu's grand-daughter and Sidharth's favourite in Mysore.
Earlier, at the orphanage children greeted us with folded hands and a knowing smile, as if we were old friends. They conveyed their birthday greetings with a message on the blackboard. Notice the bouquet they have drawn on the blackboard. What was touching was the children singing 'happy birthday' in unrehearsed chorus.
Saraswathi, a senior, guides younger children with their maths while doing her own home-work. All children go to Brindhavan school in their neighbourhood.It was an interaction with Saraswathi about her schooling that prompted Sidharth's grandma to decide on visiting Chamundi Children's Home on a regular basis, say twice weekly, to help the children with their Hindi lessons.
The idea is to bring together distanced cousins whose parents or their parents had links - close or tenuous; by birth or through marriage - with the Chakrapani family. A scattared lot, the second and subsequent generations of cousins, uncles, aunts and 'athimbers' are separated not only geographically, but also because of lack of information about one another.