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CHAPTER VI Little Mount
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CHAPTER VI

Little Mount

SIX miles from Fort St. George and four miles south-west of San

Thome de Meliapor, there rises a hillock about eighty feet above

sea-level. It is known as Little Mount, or, to put it in popular Tamil,

Chinna Malai. To the Portuguese, it was ‘Monte Pequeno’. This is

one of the three places on the Coromandel Coast actively associated

with the missionary labours of the Apostle. Time was when this

locality showed nothing but a wild growth of trees and shrubs.

Hoary tradition both among Catholics and non-Catholics,

which is reflected in many literary works, proudly holds that this

part of Mylapore extended shelter to the Apostle, when the

ministers of the local king, Mahadevan, were out to murder him. A

Hindu journal in Tamil Sumitran, as recently as 1900, supported

this tradition in one of its leading articles. Though a favourite of the

king, Thomas was ever in danger of losing his precious life–thanks

to the scheming ministers whipped up by Hindu priests.

There is a version that the Apostle was actually handled

brutally more than once in his apartment, in the absence of the king.

In order to save his life for yet a little while for the greater glory

of God, Thomas is reported to have sought refuge is the jungles of

Little Mount. A cave on the hillock afforded him ideal shelter. One

could still see this cave, which is far from artificial, on the gospelside

of the high altar in the old church.

The cave is about sixteen feet in length and about fifteen in

breadth. It is not more than seven feet from the door to the roof, at

its highest. A crevice about five by two feet, with two or three crude

steps, opens down into the cave. Visitors can hardly pass through

70

this passage without an inconvenient wriggle. It has been thought

fit not to embellish this entrance, nor even to change anything in

the whole cave in order to give an idea of its original state.

On the southern side, almost opposite the entrance to the cave,

a sort of window, about two and a half feet long and almost as

broad, throws a dim light into the cave. Strong tradition has it that

this aperture was miraculously effected for the Apostle to make

good his escape, when the enemies, who got scent of him, entered

through the crevice at the northern end. How the Saint managed to

squeeze himself out of this veritable hole is nothing short of a

wonder. It is all more amazing when one sees the clear impress of

his fingers which seem natural formations on the roof of the rock

by the side of the aperture. The finger prints suggest a human figure

of about six to seven feet in height.

Notwithstanding the little light let into the cave by the

aperture, visitors can scarcely make their way in without the help

of a candle. Electric lights now solve the problem of lighting up the

cave and the entrance. The floor of the cave slopes gently towards

an altar erected at the extreme end of the cave. On the altar stands

a modem statue of St. Thomas with a scroll showing the words in

Latin: ‘Because thou hast seen me, Thomas, thou hast believed;

blessed are they that have not seen and have believed’81. A Jesuit

Father, speaking in 1559, said that mass was being offered in the

cave sometimes.

About the year 1551, Little Mount ‘began to be levelled and

cleared for the convenience of the pilgirms’. The Portuguese built

the old church of Our Lady of Health adjoining the cave, to which

one gains access from within the church on the gospel-side. Behind

this church, there is on level ground, a rough cross chiselled on

stone where St. Thomas is said to have offered Mass and spent long

hours in prayer and meditation. Next to this stone, one finds a broad

fissure about five to six feet in depth, widely known as the fountain

of St. Thomas.

Fr. Tachard also mentions two other monuments at Little

Mount. One is the cave and the other is the miraculous spring.

71

Of the cave he writes: ‘Seven or eight steps lead to the altar,

beneath which there is cave about 14 feet broad and 15 or 16 feet

long… One enters it with some difficulty through, a crevice in the

rock........... It has not been thought fit to embellish this entrance,

nor even to change anything in the whole cave, because it is

believed that St. Thomas often retired into this solitary place to

pray. Our Missionaries have put up an altar at the eastern end of the

cave. There is a tradition among the people that a sort of window

on the southern end of about 2 1/2 feet, which throws a very dim

light into the cave, was miraculously made, and that it was through

this opening that St. Thomas escaped.’82

Of the miraculous spring Fr. Tachard has left us this record:

‘This is called St. Thomas’ fountain. There is a rather common

tradition in the country that the Holy Apostle who lived at Little

Mount, being moved to see that the people who came in crowds to

hear his preaching suffered much from thirst, as water could be had

only at a great distance in the plain, knelt in prayer on the highest

part of the hill, struck the rock with his stick, and instantly there

gushed forth a spring of clear water, which cured the sick when

they drank of it trusting in the intercession of the Saint. The stream

which now runs at the foot of Little Mount appeared only at the

beginning of the last century. It was formed by the overflowing and

bursting of a distant tank owing to heavy rain. This formed the little

canal which in times of drought contains saltish water, because at

2 leagues from Little Mount it communicates with the sea. There

are yet people alive who affirm that more than fifty years ago (Fr.

Tachard was writing in 1711) they saw this hole in the rock just as

I have presently described it, and they add that, heretical women

having thrown dirt therein to oppose, they said, the superstition of

the populace, the water receded immediately, and that these women

died that very, day of an extraordinary colic in punishment of their

audacity. The water is continually being taken and drunk.

Missionaries and Christians affirm that it produces sudden cures

even to the present day.83

The stream, which now runs at the foot of the Little Mount,

appeared only at the beginning of the 17th century. It ‘was formed

72

by the overflowing and bursting of a distant tank due to heavy

rain.84 The Perennial Spring of St. Thomas is enclosed.

Portuguese Jesuits erected a Church in the 16th century over

a cross near the aforementioned spring. This church, known as the

Church of the Resurrection, has scarcely left behind any traces of

its existence. A cross still seen there, is etched in relief in the

hollow of the rock. But for its size this cross resembles the one on

the Great Mount. Whenever the cross at St. Thomas’s Mount

changed colour and was ‘overshadowed by clouds and sweat’85,

similar changes were seen on the cross at Little Mount; but the

cloud and sweat were less abundant. Father Silvester De Souza, a

Jesuit missionary in Malabar, who was living for a long time at

Little Mount assured Guy Tachard that he had been an eye-witness

to this miracle.86 Father Silvester De Souza, S.J. is mentioned by

Francisco De Souza, assisting at the sweating of the cross at the

Great Mount on December 18th, 1695.87

The present presbytery an archaic structure in appearance was

constructed in 1559 along with the Church of the Resurrection, by

Portuguese priests. On the opposite side of the presbytery, facing

the Adyar river, there stands a white masonry column capped by a

cross. This place has been regarded as the pulpit of St. Thomas. The

rock below this column bears a cross not unlike the one near the

Perennial Spring. In front of the old church, down below, one could

see a boulder that clearly shows the impress of a huge foot,

reported to be that of the Apostle.

The impression on the boulder is far from artificial and is

quite in proportion to the impression of the fingers on the ceiling

of the cave. An ingenious, nevertheless plausible, explanation has

been offered for the huge size of the impressions, namely, that the

rock has grown, down the centuries and the impression with them.

To others it would seem that St. Thomas was a mountain of a man.

The inscription of the marble slab at the entrance of the cave, runs

as follows: ‘The cave, where lay hid, persecuted just before being

martyred by Rajah Mahadevan A.D. 68, Thomas, one of the twelve,

the great Apostle of India, the very one who put his fingers into the

wounds of his Lord and God.88

73

The Tank of the old Hindu Temple at Palayoor, where according to tradition, St. Thomas

met the challenge of the Brahmins.

74

Ancient Stone Image of St. Thomas, found under the

marble stone on the tomb, when it was dug up in 1729.

75

The extension to the Church built in 1551, proved to be

inadequate for the present congregation of the Parish and has been

pulled down. In its place a .circular Church has now been

constructed to accommodate about 800 to 1000 people.

The idea of the circular Church rose from the fact that the

land available would not permit the conventional church. There

were graves in the Church compound which had to be, retained.

Therefore the grotto alongside the Parish House was dismantled

and rocks blasted to give room for the circular church. The Church

is connected to the vaulted chapel by a corridor. The new Church

has two entrances almost opposite to the flight of steps now leading

down to the foot of the hill. The church can also be approached by

a road, direct from the Marmalong Bridge. The planning allows the

congregation to be as near to the altar as possible and there is

unrestricted view of the Service.

The Church has a diameter of 75 ft., and the spire rises to

about 70 ft. The central area is raised to give more light and

ventilation and this culminates in the spire, a truncated cone, with

a mighty cross above. The tower and cross are visible from the

Marmalong Bridge as one drives to the airport.

Little Mount seems to be invested at present, with an air of

artificiality. The hand of man has changed not a little the original

appearance of the place. Great care, however, appears to have been

taken not to tamper with the things intimately connected with the

Apostle. Hoary and holy monuments impel visitors as it were, to

piety and recollection. The annual feast of the church dedicated to

Our Lady of Good Health, comes off on the fourth Sunday after

Easter. Pilgrims from all over Madras and the suburbs, both

Christians and non-Christians, flock to this place by the thousand

for the feast, year after year.



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