A year after her death, vegetarian crocodile Babia's successor 'arrives' in Kasaragod temple

Babia's funeral (left) and while the crocodile was alive. Photo: X/TheLeapKandula

Kasaragod: The death of the vegetarian crocodile Babia, which apparently sustained just on the prasadam from the Sri Ananthapadmanabha Swamy temple here, made headlines across the nation last year. Ever since, the devotees have been waiting for Babia's successor to appear, as it has been happening in the temple for a long. On November 8, a new crocodile was spotted in a cave along the lake and was spotted by some devotees, an official from the temple said. The development assumes significance, as according to a temple official, there was always a lone crocodile in the lake and the latest one would be the fourth. "When one crocodile dies another one inevitably appears in the lake and this continues to be an unexplained phenomenon," the temple has said on its website.

After the devotees informed the temple about the presence of the new crocodile, the temple officials on Saturday verified its presence. "It is a young crocodile. We have informed the tantri (head priest) of the temple and he will decide what needs to be done next," the temple official said. Babia was found dead on October 9, 2022. She was the third crocodile in the lake and was believed to be over 70 years old. Hundreds of people, including politicians, had turned up for a last glimpse of Babia before being buried.

The Mahavishnu temple is located at Ananthapura near Kumbla in the northern Kerala district of Kasaragod. The temple is known as the 'moolasthanam', the original source, of the Sri Ananthapadmanabha Swamy temple of Thiruvananthapuram, according to its website. "By tradition, the lake is inhabited by a single crocodile and in the memory of the very aged men the present crocodile happens to be the third one they have seen," the website stated. "There is no river or pond nearby where crocodiles exist. The crocodile is friendly and harmless to human beings. Its presence in the lake around the Mahavishnu temple reminds one of the well-known Gajendra Moksha stories in the Bhagavatha Puranam," according to the temple's website.  

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