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Maramon Convention
Maramon Convention
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Maramon Convention
GenreChristian conferences
DatesSecond week of February
FrequencyAnnually
LocationsMaramon, Kozhencherry, Pathanamthitta, Kerala, India
Founded1895
Organised byMalankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church - through Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association (MTEA)
Websitehttps://mtconvention.com/

The Maramon Convention, is the largest Christian convention in Asia, held at Maramon, Kozhencherry, Pathanamthitta, Kerala, India annually in February on the vast sand-bed of the Pampa River next to the Kozhencherry Bridge. It is organised by Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association, the missionary wing of the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church.

The origin and growth of this annual get-together for one week at a stretch can be traced to the great revival movement which gathered momentum during the reformation period in the Syrian Churches of Kerala under the pioneering leadership of Abraham Malpan in the latter part of the 19th century. This brought about the transformation in resurgence of the ancient apostolic Churches in Kerala founded by St. Thomas the Apostle[1] approximately in AD 52.

Cultural identity of Saint Thomas Christians

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Saint Thomas in the Syriac-speaking culture of upper Mesopotamia and Syria the apostle was called Judas Thomas. Thomas (Tau'ma) means twin in Syriac.[2]

Jawaharlal Nehru in his Glimpses of World History, 1934 wrote about Christianity in India:

"You may be surprised to learn that Christianity came to India long before it went to England or Western Europe, and when even in Rome it was a despised and proscribed sect. Within 100 years or so of the death of Jesus, Christian Missionaries came to South India by sea. They were received courteously and permitted to preach their new faith. They converted a large number of people, and their descendants have lived there, with varying fortune, to this day. Most of them belong to old Christian sects which have ceased to exist in Europe".

St. Ephraem, a Christian deacon and scholar, in AD 363 composed a poem that honors St. Thomas in that era's understanding:[3][4]

"Blessed art thou, like a solar ray, India’s darkness doth dispel. Thou the great lamp, one among the Twelve, with oil from the cross replenished India’s night flooded with light. Oh Blessed Apostle, valiant Mar Thoma whom violent threats did not affright, Blessed apostle be thou praised, whom the Great King has sent that India to his one begotten thou shouldest espouse."

An ancient Indian non-Christian work Nagargarandhavaryola mentions St. Thomas:[5][6][verification needed]

In AD 52 "the foreigner Thomas Sanyasi came to our village, preached there causing pollution. We therefore came away from that village."

Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association

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By 1877, there were two factions in the Malankara church, known as Bishop faction (Methran Kakshi) and Patriarch faction (Bava Kakshi). By a court verdict on 12 July 1889, Bishop faction lost all the properties. In this turbulent period, on 5 September 1888, 12 members of the Bishop faction formed a missionary group called "Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association".[7][8] These 12 members are considered the founding fathers of the Maramon convention. The names of these 12 members are:-

Kadavil Malika
  1. Kottarathil Thomas Kasseessa, Chengannur
  2. Edavamvelil Mathai, Eraviperoor.
  3. Kottooreth Yohannan, Chengannur
  4. Chempakasseril Kadavil Abraham, Kallissery
  5. Chakkalayil Cherian Upadesi, Puthencavu
  6. Chempakasseril Kadavil Mathuchen, Kallissery
  7. Azhakinal Thommi, Kallooppara
  8. Nathaniel Upadesi, Chengannur
  9. Kurichiath (Vattadiyil) Ittiyavara, Niranam
  10. Arangat Philipose, Maramon
  11. Ottaplammoottil Kunju Mathew, Kallissery
  12. Kochumannil Skariah, Edayaranmula

They met at the Kadavil Malika belonging to Chempakasseril Kadavil Abraham and Chempakasseril Kadavil Mathuchen (1860 - 1897). This house at Kallissery near Chengannur was built by their grandfather Unnittan Kathanar (1767 - 1852) and his son Abraham Kathanar (1822 - 1884) also known as Kadavil Achen, in the early 19th century. (The Kadavil Malika was reclaimed by the Malankara Marthoma Syrian Church church and renovated on 10 September 2005.)

Beginning

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By 1894, a number of small supportive prayer group communions emerged and this paved a way for revival.[citation needed] They had regular meetings in various parishes. Because the number of people attending these meetings was growing; the need was addressed by deciding to have a meeting of these groups in a wider level at a central accessible place. This was a venue for dimensional spiritual edification that is applicable, biblically sound, ideal and value based[9] for striving with the realities of the world and never a place for signs, wonders and miracles.[10] During the 19th century, people began to occupy hilly places which resulted in felling of forests in and around the catchment area of Pampa river and started intensive cultivation of annual crops like tapioca, yams ... etc.[citation needed] This unplanned encroachment resulted in large scale soil erosion.[citation needed] Deep river with mud was filled with white sand, which turned to be congenial place to assemble for a gathering of masses. No need for any seating arrangement as people can sit on the neat white sand bed under roofs made by knitted coconut leaves. The duty of organising this meeting was given to the Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association and the first convention was held in 1895 at Maramon. Today the changing habitat and lesser focus on agriculture with rise of rubber plantation, the surfaced roads minimised soil erosion and a large scale sand mining for construction activities decreased the size of the sand bed to a great extent.

By 1900 reformers adopted the name Malankara Marthoma Suriyani Sabha also known as the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church to encase its ancient lineage.

Pictures

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Maramon Convention – 2008

This view of the 2008 convention is from Kozhencherry side. The Kozhencherry bridge is on the right. There are usually no empty spaces inside the Panthal (tent) so people stand outside and group around the shade to listen to the songs and messages.

Maramon Convention – 2009

This view of the 2009 convention is from Maramon side. The Kozhencherry bridge is on the left.

The first convention

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The first convention was held for 10 days from 8 to 17 March 1895.[citation needed] The venue was the vast sand-bed of the Pampa River next to the Maramon church. The parishes in and around Maramon – Kozhencherry helped in making a very large panthal (tent) to accommodate about 10,000 people. The main speakers were David and Wordsworth.[who?] On an average 10,000 to 15,000 people attended these meetings. On the last day almost 25,000 attended. There were no proper roads during those days. So nearby houses accommodated the people from far away places. Some of them came in boats and used them as their shelter.

The convention at present

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Maramon Convention is held for eight days during the first week of the Great Lent that usually falls in February. The tent has a seating capacity in excess of 160,000 people. They are seated on the dry sand bed. Old and weak are given sponsored-paid chairs to sit on. There is also a smaller tent erected next to the larger one for people with infants and with children below 5. All around the temporary tent there are prayer and rest sheds and other tents for various purposes related to the Church. Stalls for the sale of religious literature and other items, church mission advertisement and funding offices and restaurants are allowed to operate in the vicinity of the tent under the control of the Church authorities.

Programme

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A view of the Convention Nagar, people returning after a session in 1994.

The Maramon Convention is pre-eminently an assembly of Christians who once a year come here for listening to the Word of God as read and expounded by Christian leaders from all over India as well as abroad. Introduction and promotion of Church activities and Preaching occupy the major part of the convention programme. In the morning there will be separate Bible study classes for Men, women, youth and children conducted by specially invited leaders. The mornings and afternoons are public meetings and in the evening, meetings are for men only. Four of the afternoon public meetings are for 'Facing the challenges of Social evils as Christians'. The choir leads the singing and the introduction of voguish songs and the whole gathering joins in singing.[citation needed] A hymn book with 101 hymns including 16 new ones are printed every year for the convention use. Everyday half an hour is spent for intercessory prayer.[11] Also there are family gatherings, youth meetings and special gatherings after the afternoon session.

Leaders

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In addition to the Metropolitan and Episcopas of the church, distinguished world-renowned speakers addressed this convention. The Revd Thomas Walker, England (1900–1912), Sadhu Sunder Singh, Punjab (1918), Dr. G. Sherwood Eddy (1919), Dr. E. Stanley Jones, USA (1920–1968), Dr. Toyohiko Kagawa, Japan (1938), John R. Mott, Nobel Peace Prize winner (1946) and President of World Alliance of YMCAs, Dr. Bob Pierce, founder and president of World Vision (1964 & 66), Astronaut Colonel James Irwin, who spent a few hours on the moon (1985), Dr. John Haggai,[12] founder president of Haggai Institute (1973), Bishop Donald Jacobs, Mennonite church (1974), the Most Revd Dr. Robert Runcie, Archbishop of Canterbury (1986), the Most Revd Dr. George Carey, Archbishop of Canterbury (1995), Mrs. Ann Lotts

( D/o Late Billy Graham), Rev. Dr. Theodore Williams, Dr. Samuel Kobia, WCC General Secretary (2007), Dr. Paul S. Rees (Ministry statesman),[13] Revd Dr. A. B. Masilamani, Rev. Dr. Samuel Kamaleson (Veterinarian & Evangelist), and a host of others.[14][better source needed] Rev. Prof. Valson Thampu (author, preacher, and educationist)

History

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2023

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The head of the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church, The Most Rev Dr Theodosius Mar Thomas Metropolitan spoke against the government for their handling of the cost-of-living crisis and failure to look after the citizens of Kerala.[15]

2022

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The Kerala government allowed up to 1500 adults to attend the convention, if they could show a negative test for Covid 19.[16] The convention ran from 13–20 February.[17]

2021

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Kerala High Court ordered that the convention could go ahead on 14–21 February, but that Covid 19 protocol should be strictly followed;[18] numbers were limited to 100 persons for indoor venues, and 200 persons for outdoor venues.

2020

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The convention took a stance against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA) and the National Population Register; this was due to a belief that such laws would lead to religious and caste divide.[19]

2019

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From 2019 onward, women were allowed to attend the evening events.[20] In the same year, the evening conventions were to be moved from Pampa river sand bed to the Mar Thoma Church Kozhenchery.[21]

2018

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The 123rd Maramon Convention, was scheduled from 11 to 17 February. The main speakers for the convention were Rt. Rev. Peter D. Eaton (Episcopalian Bishop, Southeast Florida Diocese); Rt. Rev. Dr. Soritua Nababan (Bishop Emeritus of Batak Christian Protestant Church, Indonesia and ex-officio of World Council of Churches) - cancelled; Bishop Robert Barron, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles - cancelled; Rev. Dr. Francis Sunderaraj, (Methodist minister, Chennai-Malaysia); Rev. Dr. Vinod Victor (CSI Church, Melbourne Diocese) and Evg. Dr.h.c. Ramachandran Rajkumar (Independent Evangelist, Logos Ministries, Delhi).[22]

2017

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The main speakers for the 122nd Maramon Convention were theologians, Cleophus J. LaRue Jr. (Professor at Princeton Theological Seminary and NBCA minister); Leslie Griffiths (Methodist minister and Life peer), Edward-Mukondeleli Ramulondi (UPCSA Minister and Regional Director, Council for World Mission - Congregational Federation) and John Stephen Sadananda (CSI, Bishop Emeritus and Head of Serampore University College).

2016

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The 121st Maramon Convention, is scheduled from 14 to 21 February. The theme of the convention is about living as Symbols of Christian Values in society and growing towards ecologically sustainable development, enhancing it with age-old practice of backyard farming and sustainable agriculture.[23] Noted speakers that will deliver discourses at the convention are Bishop Daniel Thyagaraja, CSI Church, Sri Lanka; Rev Malcom T H Tan, Methodist Church, Singapore (Mission Society Trainer);[24] Dr Leonard Sweet, Methodist Church, United States (Pastor & Theologian), Rev Francis Sundaraj, EFI, Chennai (Ecumenist) and Rev. D. Ratnakara Sadananda, CSI Church, Chennai (Gen. Secretary & Theologian).

Bishops attached to the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church and other Churches will address various sessions of the meet. Heads of various Churches will address in the ecumenical sessions and various personalities attached to social welfare and empowerment like P. J. Kurien, D. Babu Paul...etc. will handle relevant topics.[25]

2015

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The 120th Maramon Convention was scheduled from 8 to 15 February. Main Speakers of the meeting are Bishop Ziphozihle D. Siwa, Methodist Church, S.A. (President of the South African Council of Churches and Revivalist); Rev. Dr. Leonard Sweet, USA (Semiotician & Best-selling Author) - cancelled - substituted by Rev. Fr. Dushantha Rodrigo, Church of Ceylon, Sri Lanka (Youth Ministry) and Pr. Dr. Sam T. Kamaleson, Tamil Nadu-USA (Evangelist, Mission Director, Musician, Lecturer, Ministry Mentor/Annan:-Elder brother)[26]
Bishops of the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church and various other Churches would address different sessions of the meet, including various personalities attached to Ecumenism.
Special Guest: Patriarch Moran Mor Ignatius Aphrem II, Patriarch of Antioch.

2014

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The 119th Maramon Convention was from 9 to 16 February on the vast sand bed of the Pampa River near Kozhencherry. Main speakers, in addition to the bishops of the Mar Thoma Church were Bishop Dulip D Chikera (Sri Lanka), Rev. Peter Maiden (England) and Rev. Vyani Naibola (South Africa)

2013

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The 118th Maramon Convention was from 10 to 17 February on the vast sand bed of the Pampa River. Main speakers, in addition to the bishops of the Mar Thoma Church were Rev. Canon Philip Mounstephen (U.K), Rev. Dr Walter Altmann (IECL, Brazil) and Rev. Andile Madodomzi Mbete (South Africa)

2012

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The 117th Maramon Convention was held from 12 to 19 February on the vast sand-bed of the Pampa River next to the Kozhencherry Bridge. at Maramon.

The main speakers were Bishop Malusi Mpumlwana (South Africa), Dr. Kang San Tan (Professor and Mission Director) and Dr. Martin Alphonse (Pastor and Professor, Methodist Church)

2011

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The 116th Maramon Convention was held from 13 to 20 February. Main speakers were the bishops of the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church; Most Rev. Roger Herft, Anglican Archbishop of Perth; Australia; Prof. Nyameko Barney Pityana, a human rights lawyer, theologian in South Africa and an exponent of Black theology; Dr. R. Rajkumar; Rev. Peter Maiden; Dr. Ulf Ekman.

2010

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The 115th Maramon Convention was held from 14 to 21 February. On the opening day and on the last three days, the pandal (flat roof thatched by woven coconut leaves) that could accommodate almost 80,000 people overflowed and an equal number found accommodation under the tree shades on both sides of the river.

The speakers included the Bishops of the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church; Bishop Robert M Solomon, (Methodist Church, Singapore); Reverend Canon Tim Dakin, (General Secretary of Church Missionary Society, England), Pr. Dr. Martin Alphonse (Tamil Nadu-USA)[27] and Rev. Vinod Victor, (Youth Evangelist, Trivandrum, Kerala, India). Bishop Yoohanon Mar Chrysostom, Metropolitan of the Marthandom Diocese of Syro-Malankara Catholic Church addressed the Ecumenical Meeting and Bishop Sebastian Thekethecheril of the Latin Catholic Diocese of Vijayapuram addressed the Social Evils Awareness Meeting. Most Rev. Joris Vercammen, Archbishop of Utrecht, president of the Union of Utrecht (of Old Catholic Church), bishops from the Malabar Independent Syrian Church and bishops of Church of South India attended the meetings.

Famous guest visit Maramon Convention

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Famous guest Name Visit year
Sundar Singh (missionary)[28] February, 1917
E. Stanley Jones[29] 1921
Moran Mor Ignatius Aphrem II[30] February, 2015

Special programmes

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Social activities

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The MTEA attaches greater importance to a crusade against social evils like violence and domestic abuse, inequality and awareness of equity, displaced morale, extreme consumerism, frantic celebrity culture, chronic alcoholism and substance abuse with an Indo-centric perspective and globalist outlook. In fact an afternoon session in the convention is exclusively devoted for programmes against such evils to help people to stand against such evils, to support those who are in such states and to take up initiative to raise voice and root out such evils. Besides there are special sessions and programs for focus groups in ecumenical concerns, and promotion of organic and sustainable farming zest, dalit integration activities, transgender empowerment,[31] women and children upliftment.

Missionary responsibilities

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The Church is constantly stepping up through these conventions to fulfill the missionary responsibilities and It has spread as service activities from Tibetan Border and in the northern end of Uttar Pradesh, to Kanya Kumari (Cape Comerin) in the South. Several social service and income generating institutions of the Church owe their origin to this annual get together at Maramon. Destitute homes, Ashrams, mission centres, hospitals, leprosy clinics, schools, and colleges have been started in and outside Kerala. The messages of the Maramon Convention provides a revived ideological and experiential faith in accordance to the need of the laity and period of time.

Law and order

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Police contingent is not required in the convention premises to maintain law and order, a vigilant committee of priests and elders circle around maintaining peace.[32] Any changes in the convention program apart from the published daily program schedule through website is alerted through mobile messaging services for those who register, and important notices about lost items, wandered away children, bus timings, etc. are also alerted through this service from 2015.

Financial matter

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The panthal (tent), and the sheds are the voluntary contributions of the parishes nearby. Early on, offerings were collected in every meeting. Now it is collected in four of the 21 general meetings and a special collection from parishes in foreign lands. The collection is distributed to various organisations and missions of the church and also for the Bible society and CSSM.[33]

Conclusion

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All those who come to the convention area experience peace, the spiritual liveliness that is spread around the panthal (tent) & the mobility of the masses with the sense of equality. The unbroken prayer of the laity is considered the grace behind the spiritual backbone of the convention. The Maramon Convention displays co-operation and union between different sections of Church in Kerala. It fosters an ecumenical outlook. It is also a source of spiritual inspiration and enlightenment for thousands.

See also

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References

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Maramon Convention is Asia's largest annual Christian evangelistic gathering, organized by the Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association of the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church and held for eight days in February on the sandy banks of the Pampa River near Maramon, Kozhencherry, in Pathanamthitta district, Kerala, India. Originating from a late-19th-century revival movement within the church, it emphasizes spiritual renewal, Bible study, evangelism, and social responsibility through daily sessions of sermons, prayers, and discussions. The inaugural convention, termed the Pentecost Convention by Titus I Mar Thoma Metropolitan, occurred from 9 to 18 March 1895 on the river's sandbed adjacent to the Maramon church, accommodating around 7,000 participants with addresses by missionaries such as and Wordsworth. Over its 130-year span, the event has expanded to host up to 100,000 attendees under expansive pandals, featuring notable speakers like Sadhu Sunder Singh in 1918 and Rev. Thomas Walker from 1899 to 1912, who promoted scriptural engagement and community service. Innovations such as loudspeakers introduced in 1936 and sustained eco-friendly protocols have marked its evolution, alongside milestones like the 1995 centenary dedication of 100 evangelists. The convention fosters , as evidenced by non-Christian addresses, and remains a of the church's outreach, drawing global participants for its focus on faith and practical piety.

Historical Background

Cultural and Religious Context of Saint Thomas Christians

The , indigenous to on India's , trace their ecclesiastical origins to the Apostle Thomas, who according to arrived at the port of (near modern ) in AD 52 and evangelized high-caste and families, establishing seven churches across the region. This foundational narrative, documented in early Syriac texts such as the 3rd-century and corroborated by 6th-century accounts from traveler , integrated Christianity into Kerala's agrarian and mercantile society without disrupting prevailing social norms. The community, numbering in the tens of thousands by the medieval period, preserved an endogamous Nasrani identity—deriving from "Nazrani" or followers of of —that mirrored caste-like structures, with internal hierarchies based on hereditary priestly roles and privileges in pepper trade extended by Kerala kings via copper-plate grants like the Quilon plates of AD 849. Liturgically, the aligned with the East Syriac tradition of the (Chaldean rite), employing Chaldean Syriac for sacraments while conducting vernacular prayers in , reflecting sustained ties to Mesopotamian bishops dispatched from Seleucia-Ctesiphon as early as the . This connection fostered doctrinal orthodoxy centered on dyophysite Christology, yet allowed cultural syncretism, such as observing Hindu-influenced festivals like alongside Christian feasts, under the governance of native archdeacons subordinate to Persian metropolitans. Portuguese maritime expansion from 1498 disrupted this equilibrium, as Jesuit missionaries viewed East Syriac practices as Nestorian deviations, leading to interventions that eroded local autonomy. The (Udayamperoor) in June 1599, convened by Goa Archbishop Aleixo de Menezes, decreed over 200 canons subjugating the community to Roman jurisdiction, mandating Latin rite adoption, and ordering the destruction of Syriac texts deemed erroneous, though enforcement preserved core indigenous customs through covert resistance. Escalating tensions culminated in the of January 3, 1653, at Mattancherry near Cochin, where an estimated 25,000 adherents, led by Archdeacon , swore allegiance to a leaning cross in rejection of Jesuit dominance, fracturing the unified community into factions while safeguarding Syriac heritage and Keralite social embeddedness against Latinizing pressures. These schisms highlighted the Nasranis' causal adherence to apostolic lineage and liturgical continuity, prioritizing empirical preservation of traditions over imposed uniformity.

Reformation Movements and Revival Origins

The reform movements among the Saint Thomas Christians of Kerala in the early 19th century were catalyzed by encounters with Anglican missionaries affiliated with the Church Missionary Society (CMS), who arrived in 1816 and established a seminary at Palayoor in 1817 to train native clergy in biblical studies and vernacular education. These efforts introduced evangelical principles, including the sola scriptura emphasis on Scripture as the ultimate authority, which contrasted with the Syriac-dominated liturgy and perceived ritualistic accretions in the Malankara Church, such as elaborate vestments and invocations to saints. By promoting Malayalam translations of the Bible and simplifying worship, the CMS influenced a cadre of local priests to question traditions viewed as deviations from apostolic purity, though this partnership ended acrimoniously with the Synod of Mavelikkara in 1836, where the community rejected further Anglican oversight. Central to these stirrings was Palakunnathu Abraham Malpan (1796–1845), a Syriac professor and who, from the onward, implemented reforms at his parish, conducting services in instead of Syriac, eliminating practices like altar rails and prayers for —deemed superstitious and unbiblical—and insisting on preaching as the core of to foster direct in Christ's atoning work. Abraham Malpan's revisions to the West Syriac liturgy restored elements he believed aligned with primitive , drawing from evangelical critiques of formalism while remaining loyal to episcopal structure, though his actions provoked and attempts by conservative metropolitans aligned with the Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate. Supported by deacons and exposed to CMS publications, these changes prioritized personal conversion and grace over ritual mediation, laying groundwork for broader revivalism despite resistance from factions emphasizing ecclesiastical tradition. Post-1850s evangelical fervor intensified through Bible societies, such as the Trivandrum and Travancore Bible Society founded in 1820 and revitalized later, which distributed over 10,000 Malayalam New Testaments by the 1860s and enabled lay-led prayer meetings and itinerant preaching amid British colonial stability. This era witnessed localized awakenings, with converts experiencing spiritual renewal focused on repentance and scriptural obedience, countering sacramentalism by stressing inward transformation verifiable by fruits of faith rather than external rites. Reforms persisted under Abraham Malpan's successors, including his nephew and disciples, who organized Bible classes and resisted synodal impositions from Antioch, fostering a distinct reform party within the Malankara Church. These theological pivots—from ritual-centric piety to evangelical —transitioned the reformist faction into the after the death of pro-reform Metropolitan Mathews Mar Athanasius on July 16, 1877, amid inheritance disputes that affirmed the reformers' . The ensuing 1877–1889 legal and ecclesiastical conflicts resolved with the reformers consecrating Titus I Mar Thoma as metropolitan in 1889, solidifying doctrines of justification by alone and congregational participation over hierarchical formalism, while retaining Syriac heritage selectively. This formation emphasized causal reliance on Scripture for , rejecting traditions lacking explicit biblical warrant, and set the stage for organized evangelistic gatherings.

Founding and the First Convention

The Maramon Convention originated as an evangelistic gathering organized by leaders of the in response to early revival movements emphasizing personal faith renewal and outreach within the Saint Thomas Christian community of . Titus I Mar Thoma Metropolitan issued a circular to church parishes entrusting the newly formed Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association with full responsibility for the event, framing it as a "Pentecost Convention" aimed at invoking the Holy Spirit's presence through collective prayer and preaching. The inaugural convention occurred from March 9 to 18, 1895, spanning 10 days on the sandbanks (Manalpuram) of the Pampa River at Parapuzha, near Maramon in present-day , , approximately 1 kilometer from the modern venue and between the Temple and Maramon Church. Preparations included constructing a temporary thatched from coconut leaves donated by local parishes such as Maramon, , and Edayaranmula, along with makeshift bridges across the river for access. Key figures included Titus I Mar Thoma providing oversight, foreign missionaries David and Wordsworth from Ceylon delivering primary addresses in English, and Deacon Kakkasseri Varghese translating sermons into . Activities centered on open-air evangelistic preaching, communal prayer sessions, and calls for spiritual recommitment, reflecting the reformist ethos of the Mar Thoma Church amid broader tensions with orthodox Syrian Christian factions resistant to evangelical emphases on individual conversion and lay participation. The accommodated around 7,000 attendees, with reports indicating daily gatherings in the thousands despite logistical challenges and limiting women's evening participation initially. This initial event marked a transition from sporadic revival meetings to a structured annual tradition by 1896, aligning with the Mar Thoma Church's mandate for systematic evangelism and demonstrating early empirical success through sustained participation and organizational momentum.

Organizational Framework

Role of the Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association

The Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association (MTEA), established on September 5, 1888, at Kallissery Kadavil Malika, serves as the missionary arm of the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church, focusing on evangelism and outreach distinct from core ecclesiastical administration. Formed amid the church's awakening to broader missionary imperatives, it was registered under the Indian Companies Act and has operated as India's oldest indigenous national missionary movement, emphasizing gospel propagation through structured initiatives. In relation to the Maramon Convention, the MTEA assumed organizational responsibility shortly after the event's informal origins, with explicit duties assigned for its coordination starting with the inaugural formalized gathering in 1895 on the Maramon sands. Operating under the oversight of the Mar Thoma Metropolitan, the association handles preparatory logistics such as venue setup along the Pampa River banks, coordination of preacher invitations from denominational and ecumenical figures, and integration of evangelistic outreach elements into the proceedings. This mandate ensures the convention's annual execution as a large-scale assembly, drawing tens of thousands, while maintaining alignment with the church's reformist heritage without encroaching on liturgical or congregational governance. The MTEA's structure sustains the convention's continuity through a network of denominational volunteers and parish-level committees, which facilitate documented in church records from the early onward, including site demarcation, temporary infrastructure erection, and post-event evaluations. This operational framework has enabled the event's growth from modest revival meetings to a sustained platform for mobilization, leveraging ties to the Mar Thoma Church's 1.6 million members across and diaspora communities for resource mobilization and participant engagement.

Leadership Structure and Key Figures

The Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association (MTEA), founded on September 5, 1888, by twelve members including Kottarathil Thomas Kasseessa and Chempakasseril Kadavil Abraham at Kallissery Kadavil Malika, constitutes the core organizational framework for the , functioning as the church's missionary arm with oversight from the Mar Thoma Metropolitan as president and chief patron. The Association maintains a managing of elected and lay members responsible for executive decisions, including coordination with evangelistic subcommittees that select expositors based on fidelity to scriptural authority and the reformed Syrian Christian heritage, which traces to Palakunnathu Abraham Malpan's (1796–1845) initiatives rejecting non-biblical rituals in favor of direct biblical engagement. Key historical figures encompass Abraham Malpan, whose descendants in the Palakunnathu lineage supplied early Mar Thoma Metropolitans and instilled a prioritizing proclamation over syncretic customs, and Titus I Mar Thoma Metropolitan (r. 1893–1909), who directed the inaugural 1895 gathering and delegated organizational duties to the MTEA. Subsequent Metropolitans, such as Abraham Mar Thoma (r. 1947–1976), reinforced this structure by serving as MTEA presidents and guiding expansions in missionary personnel—reaching 72 priests and 191 evangelists across 68 centers by the —while ensuring expositors align with doctrines like justification by faith amid rotations from compatible Protestant traditions.

Convention Operations

Location, Logistics, and Law and Order

The Maramon Convention takes place annually on the dry sandbed of the Pampa River adjacent to the Maramon Mar Thoma Church in Maramon, , , . This location, selected since the inaugural event in 1895, provides a vast open area suitable for large gatherings during the in the first half of , typically spanning eight days aligned with the onset of [Great Lent](/page/Great Lent). The riverbed's natural expanse facilitates the erection of temporary structures while minimizing interference with local infrastructure. Logistically, the convention relies on expansive temporary pandals, or open-air tents, to accommodate over 100,000 attendees seated on mats or similar flooring. Initial gatherings in the late utilized modest tents seating about 7,000, but subsequent expansions incorporated reinforced frameworks, thatched roofs for shade, and modern additions like public address systems for amplification across the venue. Provisions for basic attendee needs include temporary water stations drawing from the river or nearby sources, alongside portable facilities to handle the influx, though environmental conservation of the Pampa has been emphasized in recent years to mitigate from such setups. The February timing avoids the season's heavy rains and potential flooding, ensuring the riverbed remains viable, with organizers monitoring river levels for any atypical rises. Maintaining law and order during these mass assemblies, which have drawn crowds since the early without documented major disruptions, involves coordination with local police for traffic regulation, perimeter security, and crowd dispersal. Pathanamthitta district authorities deploy personnel to manage access routes, vehicle parking on surrounding fields, and response, leveraging the event's historical record of peaceful conduct amid diverse attendees from and abroad. This administrative framework prioritizes practical safety measures over symbolic elements, enabling orderly participation in sessions from dawn to late evening.

Financial Management

The Maramon Convention's finances are sustained through voluntary offerings collected during select general meetings and dedicated donation drives organized by the Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association. Historically, as early as 1956, monetary donations, or "offertory," were gathered in nearly all sessions to support operational and needs. In contemporary practice, collections occur in four of the 21 general meetings, supplemented by special parish-level contributions, including from overseas communities, channeled via gateways and services restricted to authorized donors. Financial transparency is maintained through annual audits and published statements by the association, which operates as a registered under India's Companies Act since 1904. These reports, covering cash flows and overall accounts, are accessible publicly, with independent auditors verifying compliance and expenditures. No reliance on entry fees or debt financing is evident; instead, costs are curbed via extensive volunteer involvement in and services, mitigating inflationary pressures on venue setup, utilities, and participant support. Shifts in funding mechanisms reflect adaptation to global participation: early dependence on on-site pledges has evolved to incorporate secure banking for remittances, preserving fiscal prudence without external loans. This donor-centric model prioritizes empirical accountability, with funds allocated post-audit to evangelistic and administrative priorities under committee oversight.

Daily Programme and Sessions

The Maramon Convention follows a week-long format, typically spanning eight days in February, with a daily structure emphasizing spiritual edification through , scriptural exposition, and communal . Morning sessions commence early, often with matin services followed by classes from approximately 7:30 to 8:30 a.m., conducted separately for men and women and led by invited focusing on in-depth scriptural analysis. These are succeeded by main morning gatherings around 9:30 a.m., incorporating prayers and initial exhortations to set a tone of evangelical reflection. Afternoon sessions, starting at 2:30 p.m., prioritize from guest speakers, drawing on biblical texts to deliver doctrinal teachings and personal testimonies, often integrated with periods of intercessory prayer. Evening sessions at 6:00 p.m. extend this focus with extended sermons and calls to repentance, fostering fellowship amid large gatherings on the riverbed sands. The programme underscores simplicity in evangelical delivery, avoiding elaborate rituals while retaining core elements of Mar Thoma liturgical tradition, such as responsive hymns and invocations rooted in East Syrian heritage. Liturgical practices blend ancient Syrian Christian forms with reformed emphases, featuring () celebrated periodically across sessions, symbolizing communal unity in Christ's sacrifice, alongside opportunities for baptisms that underscore believer's commitment. This fusion maintains doctrinal continuity with apostolic origins while prioritizing scriptural authority and personal conversion, as evidenced by the convention's consistent invitation of orthodox preachers to expound texts verse-by-verse. Post-2019 adjustments to session timings and access policies, including expanded women's participation in evenings, reflect pragmatic responses to attendance surges exceeding daily, balancing spiritual access with logistical safety amid riverine terrain risks.

Activities and Engagements

Evangelistic and Missionary Initiatives

The Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association (MTEA), which organizes the , serves as the missionary wing of the and promotes personal evangelism as a central mandate, encouraging participants to witness through study groups, intercessory prayer, and direct proclamation. This emphasis traces to the association's founding in 1888, predating the convention but integrated into its sessions, where speakers commission lay workers for outreach in unreached regions of . Historical sessions have directly inspired missionary commitments, such as the dedication of 100 evangelists during a milestone meeting in 2017 to expand work across the country. The convention's evangelistic fervor has contributed to church expansions, including the establishment of mission fields in southern starting in 1947 at , where initial activities focused on personal and home evangelism leading to community chapels and programs. These efforts, driven by attendee pledges, extended to forming societies like the Karnataka Navajeevana Samithi for broader regional planting and support in unreached areas. Globally, the convention's influence reaches communities, with international participants from and beyond drawing inspiration for missions such as those in and Native American regions, where church initiatives provide spiritual and practical aid tied to Mar Thoma outreach principles. Themes like "You be my witness" in recent gatherings reinforce commitments to , linking local revivals to sustained global worker commissioning.

Social Programmes and Community Impact

The Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association (MTEA), which organizes the Maramon Convention, supports educational initiatives including 40 primary schools, 7 high schools, 5 higher secondary schools, 4 colleges, and 1 nursing college, often funded through convention proceeds and church trusts to promote literacy in rural and tribal areas. These efforts extend to 6 tribal and village hostels serving underprivileged students, with over 17,000 participants in village Sunday schools annually. In healthcare, the association operates 3 hospitals and community health programs emphasizing preventive care and awareness, derived from funds raised during conventions since . Poverty alleviation includes 5 destitute homes accommodating vulnerable populations and developmental works in 68 mission centers across 15 states and 3 union territories, targeting 2,890 villages. Historical social reforms at the convention have included temperance campaigns against , featuring dedicated sessions grounded in biblical prohibitions on intoxication, which contributed to reduced prevalence of liquor consumption in participating Christian communities during the early . Anti-caste initiatives within Christian circles promoted equality based on scriptural principles of unity in Christ, challenging hereditary divisions that persisted among Syrian Christians and fostering inter-community marriages and shared seating at events by the mid-1900s. A de-addiction ministry addresses through counseling and rehabilitation, integrated into broader efforts. While these programs have enhanced welfare for affiliated parishes—numbering around 450—their impact remains concentrated among Kerala-based and select mission outposts, with scant of scalable outreach to non-Christian or urban non-Keralite populations, limiting broader societal transformation relative to India's demographic scale. Convention-linked trusts prioritize church-internal equity over interfaith or statewide metrics, as reflected in the association's operational focus on evangelistic zones rather than universal aid distribution.

Significance and Reception

Spiritual and Cultural Influence

The Maramon Convention has played a pivotal role in renewing and sustaining orthodox Christian faith within the Mar Thoma Church by emphasizing scriptural exposition, prayer, and worship as core elements of its program, countering secular influences through direct engagement with biblical texts. This focus has fostered scriptural literacy among , with sessions dedicated to studies that encourage personal and familial devotion, as evidenced by the convention's historical promotion of domestic reading and prayer practices aligned with reformed Syriac traditions. Such initiatives have demonstrably contributed to spiritual revivals, where influenced members have led local evangelistic efforts, drawing from the convention's evangelistic ethos established since its inception in 1895. Culturally, the convention reinforces Nasrani identity—rooted in the Saint Thomas Christian heritage of —by serving as an annual communal ritual that integrates liturgical elements with reformist preaching, resisting assimilation into broader Hindu-majority societal norms or modernist dilutions. These gatherings preserve distinct traditions, such as Syriac-influenced worship adapted to vernacular , providing a causal anchor for ethnic and religious cohesion amid urbanization and migration pressures on 's Christian communities. Over the long term, the convention correlates with the Mar Thoma Church's expansion from a reform movement in the late to approximately 1 million members worldwide by the early , attributing sustained growth to its role in doctrinal fidelity and missionary zeal rather than stagnation narratives often projected onto traditional denominations. This trajectory reflects causal realism in institutional vitality, where annual spiritual reinforcement has bolstered membership retention and outreach, evidenced by the church's oversight of parishes across and diaspora communities.

Attendance, Global Reach, and Notable Guests

The Maramon Convention, held annually since 1895, has grown substantially in scale, with early gatherings drawing an average of 10,000 to 15,000 attendees per session and up to 25,000 on the final day of the inaugural event. By the early , cumulative attendance over the week-long sessions reached estimates of hundreds of thousands, with some reports citing peaks exceeding 100,000 simultaneous participants in recent years. Claims of total attendance surpassing 1 million to 3 million across all sessions have appeared in media coverage, though independent verification remains limited to official church estimates emphasizing Asia's largest Christian gathering. The convention's global reach extends beyond through participants from the Indian Christian diaspora, particularly , , and the , reflecting post-1970s migration patterns that have incorporated overseas communities into the event. International engagement is further evidenced by recurring invitations to overseas preachers, such as missionaries from (now ) in the founding years and later figures from , , and the , selected to align with the Mar Thoma Church's evangelical and reformed doctrines. Notable guests have included American missionary , who introduced amplification technology in 1936, and more recently, leaders like General Secretary Rev. Prof. Dr. in 2025. Since the 2000s, the convention has amplified its international influence via online live broadcasts, with the Mar Thoma Church's Department of Sacred Music and Communications streaming sessions on platforms like , enabling virtual participation from global audiences without altering the primacy of in-person attendance. This digital extension, formalized in announcements for events like the 2025 convention, has sustained doctrinal focus while broadening access to and remote viewers.

Controversies and Criticisms

Gender Restrictions and Attendance Policies

The Maramon Convention, organized annually by the since its inception in , has historically implemented gender-segregated attendance policies for evening sessions, restricting women's entry after 6:30 p.m. to maintain safety and decorum amid large crowds exceeding 100,000 attendees. This practice, rooted in concerns over crowd management and family-oriented conduct during nighttime gatherings on the Pampa River sands, allowed full participation for women in daytime sessions while barring them from the 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. slot to mitigate risks such as harassment or disorder in low-visibility conditions. In 2017, amid growing calls for reform paralleling the Sabarimala temple entry debates, organizers affirmed the restrictions, citing logistical challenges from the event's scale and the need to prioritize empirical safety data over demands for unrestricted access. Church leaders, including Metropolitan Joseph Mar Thoma, emphasized that the policy preserved order without denying women substantive involvement, as evidenced by their active roles in morning and afternoon programs. By 2018, the Kerala High Court examined the issue following petitions but did not mandate changes, upholding the convention's autonomy in session structuring. In 2019, a partial adjustment occurred: evening sessions were rescheduled to 5:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., permitting women's attendance while effectively avoiding full nighttime exposure, a move framed as responsive to scrutiny yet consistent with safety imperatives. Proponents of the policy invoke practical causal factors, including documented incidents of overcrowding and vulnerability in similar mass events, arguing that segregated evening access reduces empirical risks to women without compromising the convention's evangelistic focus. Scriptural precedents for structured gatherings, such as those emphasizing modesty and protection in 1 Timothy 2:9-12, are cited by defenders to justify the approach as aligned with traditional Christian order rather than arbitrary exclusion. Critics, including reform groups like the Naveekarna Vedi within the church, label it patriarchal and discriminatory, contending it perpetuates hierarchies despite women's daytime parity and calling for full egalitarian access irrespective of crowd dynamics. These objections gained traction in 2017 media coverage, yet organizers countered that safety data from reports on large assemblies substantiates the measures, prioritizing verifiable harm prevention over ideological uniformity.

Debates on Inclusivity and Modern Reforms

In February 2018, during the 123rd , two individuals delivered addresses to the assembly, representing the first such occurrence in the event's history and framed by church leaders as an act of outreach to affirm their status as children of God deserving societal acceptance and spiritual inclusion. This initiative aligned with the Mar Thoma Church's Navodaya Movement, launched in 2012 to provide empowerment programs, awareness seminars, and ministry support for the transgender community in , emphasizing redemption through Christ without altering core doctrinal positions on human identity. The platforming prompted internal and external debates on reconciling pastoral compassion with fidelity to biblical anthropology, which describes humanity as created male and female in God's image (Genesis 1:27) and links marital complementarity to Christ's relationship with the church (Ephesians 5:31-32). Advocates for expanded inclusivity, including some church figures open to transgender ordination, argued it extends gospel mercy to the ostracized, mirroring Jesus' interactions with societal outcasts. Traditionalists countered that prioritizing affirmation of self-identified genders over scriptural norms on sexuality could erode evangelistic clarity, citing patterns in Western mainline denominations where liberalization on such issues preceded membership drops—such as the United Church of Christ, which saw its U.S. adherents fall from 1.8 million in 2000 to under 800,000 by 2015—alongside stagnant or declining conversion rates amid diluted doctrinal emphasis. These tensions highlight causal pressures on conventions like Maramon: while fosters immediate relational bridges, overemphasis on social accommodation risks shifting focus from uncompromised proclamation of , , and transformation in Christ—core to the event's revivalist origins—potentially mirroring reduced missional impact observed elsewhere, where progressive adaptations correlated with net congregational contraction rather than growth. The Mar Thoma Church has sustained its evangelical thrust amid such discussions, maintaining vernacular Bible-centered sessions without formal endorsement of as congruent with redemption narratives.

Modern Developments

Post-Independence Expansion

The Maramon Convention saw a marked increase in attendance following India's independence in 1947, driven by rising literacy and enhanced mobility through expanding road networks and public transport in . Initial gatherings in the late drew 10,000 to 15,000 participants, but by the mid-, daily crowds swelled into the tens of thousands amid and socioeconomic changes, prompting upgrades to the riverside and auxiliary infrastructure to handle larger assemblies. The , which organizes the event, reported phenomenal territorial and numerical expansion over subsequent decades, establishing over 1,000 parishes by the late , many beyond traditional strongholds. Missionary outreach intensified post-1947, with initiatives targeting tribal and underserved regions outside , including the establishment of congregations in from in 1947 and tribal areas of through the Kalahandi Mission. These efforts, supported by the Mar Thoma Evangelistic Association—the church's pioneering national missionary body—resulted in new parishes focused on , , and medical services, reaching thousands in central and eastern despite logistical challenges. The church's resilience persisted amid 's communist-led governments from 1957, which emphasized secular policies, yet the convention maintained uninterrupted annual operations, prioritizing reformed distinctives over political pressures. From the to the , the convention adapted by incorporating ecumenical elements, such as inviting preachers from Baptist and other Protestant traditions, while preserving its core emphasis on personal faith and scriptural authority. This period aligned with broader Indian Christian engagements in interdenominational , positioning the Maramon gathering as Asia's largest ecumenical Christian assembly without diluting its evangelical heritage.

Adaptations in the 21st Century

In response to , the Maramon Convention has incorporated since the 2010s, allowing remote participation by the and others unable to attend physically. The Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church's Department of Sacred Music and Communications (DSMC) manages these broadcasts via and other platforms, with official streams for annual events including the 2023 and 2025 conventions, featuring sessions like inaugural addresses and youth programs. This adaptation extends the convention's reach beyond the Pampa River sands, accommodating global audiences amid migration trends. The prompted temporary shifts toward virtual elements in religious gatherings worldwide, and post-2021, the Maramon Convention maintained hybrid accessibility through continued streaming while resuming in-person assemblies, balancing health precautions with traditional communal worship. Concurrently, sermons have addressed 21st-century crises, including secular influences and social issues like , as highlighted in messages from church metropolitans during recent sessions. Environmental adaptations reflect growing awareness of the Pampa River's degradation from riverbed usage; in 2018, the convention opened with appeals for , citing visible degeneration, while earlier resolutions emphasized waste reduction to mitigate pollution from large crowds. To counter empirical challenges such as waning interest in institutional , the convention has integrated dedicated youth forums like Yuva Vedhi, featuring tailored sessions that engage younger attendees with contemporary themes, contributing to attendance stabilization amid broader church trends. These pragmatic measures underscore a focus on relevance, with youth programs documented in 2025 schedules alongside main sessions, fostering sustained participation without diluting core evangelistic purposes.

Recent Conventions and Challenges

The 130th Maramon Convention, convened from February 9 to 16, 2025, on the Pampa River sands near , underscored recurring themes of moral erosion, with Metropolitan Joseph Mar Thoma highlighting the surge in juvenile crimes as a symptom of societal breakdown requiring spiritual intervention. This emphasis on revival mirrored patterns in prior decades, addressing Kerala's demographic pressures on , whose population fell by approximately 25,000 in despite statewide growth of , driven by lower rates compared to other groups. Recent gatherings have incorporated overseas preachers seamlessly, as seen in the 2025 address by General Secretary Rev. Prof. Dr. , fostering ecumenical dialogue without reported antagonism toward external voices. Logistical adaptations for safety have included bolstered crowd management and security protocols to accommodate hundreds of thousands, amid judicial scrutiny over participant limits to mitigate risks on the riverbed venue. Despite external critiques on relevance amid modernization, the conventions maintain vitality through persistent large-scale attendance and baptismal renewals, evidencing the Mar Thoma Church's adaptive endurance in a shifting regional context.

References

  1. https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/[kochi](/page/Kochi)/history-made-at-maramon-transgenders-address-largest-christian-convention-in-asia/articleshow/62935581.cms
  2. https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/[kerala](/page/Kerala)/mar-thoma-church-to-reach-out-to-transgender-people/article33118004.ece
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