Karumakan: Sacred Presence of Kiratha Shiva in the Theyyam Tradition Among the many sacred presences that grace the spiritual landscape of North Kerala, Karumakan stands as one of the most revered and deeply rooted deities of the region. The name Karumakan, meaning "the dark son" or "the black one," carries profound symbolic weight in Hindu thought, where darkness is not absence but fullness — the primordial state from which all creation emerges. This deity is understood as a manifestation of Kiratha Shiva, the form in which the great Mahadeva appeared as a forest-dwelling hunter in the Kirata episode of the Mahabharata. The Kirata Episode: Divine Encounter in the Forest The scriptural foundation of Karumakan rests firmly in the Vana Parva of the Mahabharata and is celebrated in the Kiratarjuniya, the Sanskrit mahakavya by Bharavi. In this sacred episode, Arjuna, during his period of exile, undertakes intense penance to obtain divine weapons. Shiva, wishing to test ...