Calophyllum inophyllum is a large evergreen, commonly called Alexandrian
laurel, balltree, beautyleaf…. and more
….. this medium-sized to large, slow-growing tree with very hard wood can reach
heights of 20 m (65 ft). It typically has a broad, low-branching, spreading
crown. The simple, glossy leaves have many parallel oblique lateral veins. Understand that these were once grew along the beaches and shorelines all
around the northern Australian coastline.
Its strong limbs and deep roots protected the shoreline creating an
effective buffer between land and water. It is not native to Europe, and has
traditional uses in many other countries, Calophyllum inophyllum has many names …. Its seeds are rich in oil
which was once used to light lamps and lanterns. Dilo oil is believed to have
great medicinal values
Not to confuse further, it is the famous ‘Punnai maram’ associated with
our Puranic lore. Understand that there is one inside the Kapaleeswarar Temple
in Mylapore (the sthala vruksha) and the Shiva here is also known as ‘Punnaivananathar’
(lord of the punnai grove). At our
Divyadesam of Thiruvidanthai, inside the compound of the Sri Nithyakalyana
Perumal Koil, is a magnificent punnai on a specially-erected platform. The
Archaeological Survey of India, which maintains the temple, has put up
epigraphical information to show the temple is more than a thousand years old. There is one at Sri Vaikundavasa Perumal
temple at Koyambedu too.
Lord Krishna
grew up in Brindavan with great exploits – still having time to play around
with cowherds the gopikas. The Punnai
tree is associated with Krishna. At
Thiruvallikkeni divyadesam Sri Parthasarathi has purappadu in Punnaikilai
vahanam (depicting the vasthrabaranam of gopikas) on 1st day evening
of Chithirai Brahmothsavam and on the day next to Sri Jayanthi.
Thirumangai Mannan refers to the tree at a couple of places in his
Thirumozhi :
“பூநீரைச்
செருந்தி புன்னை முத்தரும்பிப் பொதும்பிடை வரிவண்டு மிண்டி… தேனிரைத் துண்டங்கின்னிசை
முரலும் திருவெள்ளியங்குடியதுவே.”……. “வண்டமரும் மலர்ப்புன்னை வரிநீழலணிமுத்தம், தெண்டிரைகள்
வரத்திரட்டும் திருக்கண்ணபுரத்துறையும்”….
Here is a news item that appeared in Times of India, Chennai edition
titled ‘Marina Beach to get tree-lined promenade’.
Rare ‘Punnai’ Tree With Medicinal Properties To Be Planted From Anna
Square To Lighthouse. The promenade in
front of the famous Marina sands is set to get an all-new green cover.
Stretching for 6km from Anna Square to the lighthouse, it will be lined with
trees of a variety that grows best in coastal areas. The decision on the
makeover was taken following complaints that the existing longitudinal green
space, raised between the pavement on Kamarajar Salai and the service lane, has
only been growing weed and grass, a corporation official said. The lawn is
surrounded by a fence.
Now, several trees of a species locally called punnai (Calophyllum
inophyllum) are proposed to be grown along the stretch. “This is a good species
of tree,” said founder of Nizhal, an NGO promoting tree culture in urban areas.
“We need to bring back such trees to the city. Mylapore was supposed to be a
punnaivanam (forest of punnai) but obviously they have become rare,“ she said.
Apart from holding mythological and religious significance, the tree is said to
possess medicinal properties and its seeds are used to extract oil. “Its glossy
leaves will be unaffected by pollution and can withstand the weather of the sea
side,“ a corporation official said. It will be a slowgrowing tree with medium
and large branches hanging low. “We also plan to put up seasonal flowering
plants around the statues along the stretch,” the official said. The new lawn
too will be protected by a fence to restrict cattle, littering and at the same
time not obstruct the view of the beach.
With regards – S. Sampathkumar
24th Sept. 2014.
Janmashtami-3rd Sept 2018 Punnai leaf is seen in Market at this time of Shree Krishna Jayanti Prayers *Worship with Tulasi and flowers in Chennai.
ReplyDeleteThanks your explanation
rgds
CaptTR (Retd)
Chennai