Parayi Petta Panthirukulam

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Parayi Petta Panthirukulam, is a popular folktale in Kerala. According to this folktale, Vararuchi, one of the nine wise men of Emperor Vikramaditya’s (57 BCE- 78 AD) court married Panchami, a girl belonging to Paraya, a lower caste. The couple set out on a long pilgrimage. On the way, they had 12 children. Upon each delivery, Vararuchi enquired whether the baby had a mouth. If the wife said "yes", he would say, "God will appease the one with mouth" and would ask the wife to abandon the baby then and there and proceed. Eleven children were deserted, since they had a mouth. The tale goes that after the 12th birth, when Vararuchi asked whether the child had a mouth, the wife said he didn't have a mouth in the hope that she may get to raise at least that child. But when she looked at the child after saying that, the child indeed was seen to have been born without a mouth. Vararuchi consecrated the 12th child as a deity on top of a hill, and they proceeded on the pilgrimage. The 11 abandoned children were adopted and brought up by 11 different families, from various sections of society. Following are the names of the families who are believed to have adopted the children:

Malayalam poem

The following verses in Malayalam of anonymous authorship and of uncertain date describes the names of the twelve children of Vararuchi and his wife Panchami who comprise the progenitors of the twelve clans of the legend of Panthirukulam. "മേളത്തോളഗ്നിഹോത്രി രജകനുളിയന്നൂർത്തച്ചനും പിന്നെ വള്ളോൻ വായില്ലാക്കുന്നിലപ്പൻ വടുതല മരുവും നായർ കാരക്കൽ മാതാ ചെമ്മേ കേളുപ്പുകൂറ്റൻ പെരിയ തിരുവരംഗത്തെഴും പാണാനാരും നേരേ നാരായണഭ്രാന്തനുമുടനകവൂർചാത്തനും പാക്കനാരും." ttaccanuṃ pinně vaḷḷōn nāyar kārackal mātā ŋgattěļuṃ pāṇanāruṃ ccāttanuṃ pākkanāruṃ

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