“Rakṣishyati iti viśvāsaḥ”
“Firm faith that He will protect.”
This is a precious and deeply symbolic image. the abhaya hasta of Sri Ranganatha – Namperumal of Srirangam, covered with the sacred ornament called “Hastābharaṇam / Hastam” (often lovingly called Hastam or Hamsam by devotees). The palm that blesses becomes the focus of meditation for many Sri Vaishnavas.The Hand That Blesses – Namperumal’s Abhaya Hastam
In the crowded streets of Srirangam during a procession, thousands may stand shoulder to shoulder. Jewels sparkle, lamps flicker, conches roar, Vedic chants rise — and yet, the eyes of the devotee search for only one thing.
The raised palm of Namperumal.
Because in that palm lies the promise of refuge.
The Gesture of Fearlessness
The hand shown is the Abhaya Mudra — the gesture that says:
“Do not fear.”
This is not merely symbolic reassurance. In Vaishnava theology, this hand is considered a divine vow.
The Lord is not blessing casually.
He is giving assurance of protection.
The Bhagavad Gita echoes this divine assurance:
“Mā śucaḥ — Do not grieve.” (Gita 18.66)
And the verse that Sri Vaishnavas hold closest:
“Aham tvā sarva pāpebhyo mokṣayiṣyāmi mā śucaḥ.”
“I shall liberate you from all sins. Do not fear.”
The raised palm is this verse made visible.
Why Devotees Look First at the Hand
During Srirangam processions, elders say:
“First see the hand. Then see the face.”
Why?
Because the hand represents dayā (compassion) before majesty.
Before the Lord asks anything of you,
He assures you that you are safe.
Swami Desika beautifully captures this spirit:
“The Lord’s hand rises faster than our fall.”
The Jeweled Palm – Why So Many Gems?
Look closely at the palm ornament.
It is covered in rubies, diamonds and precious stones arranged like a radiant yantra. This ornament is not mere decoration; it represents:
The auspicious marks of Vishnu’s palm
The Sun and Moon shining from His hands
The power to grant protection and prosperity
Tradition says the Lord’s palm bears divine symbols:
Chakra (discus)
Shankha (conch)
Lotus
Flag
When the Hastam ornament is placed, it signifies that all these blessings flow outward toward the devotee.
The Hand that Accepts Surrender
In Sri Vaishnava sampradaya, surrender (prapatti) is central.
When a devotee surrenders, they say:
“I hold Your feet.”
But the Acharyas gently correct this.
They say:
“It is not you who hold Him. It is He who lifts you.”
Pillai Lokacharya writes in Srivachana Bhushanam:
“The burden of protection belongs to Him, not to the soul.”
Thus the raised palm is the Lord saying:
“You are no longer carrying your life alone.”
The Palm as the Gateway to Grace
Many saints have sung about the Lord’s hands more than His crown.
Why?
A crown shows kingship.
A weapon shows power.
But a raised palm shows relationship.
Nammazhwar cries in the Tiruvaymozhi:
“Those hands that lifted Govardhana —
will they not lift me?”
And Andal sings with tender intimacy:
“Your hands that measured the worlds —
place them upon us.”
The same hand that holds Sudarshana Chakra becomes soft and open for the devotee.
The Psychological Beauty of Abhaya
Why does this gesture move the heart instantly?
Because fear is the deepest human emotion.
Fear of:
loss
failure
aging
death
uncertainty
And the Lord’s first message is not instruction, not judgement, not philosophy.
It is simply:
“Do not fear.”
This is why one glimpse of the Hastam can bring tears to the eyes of devotees in a crowded procession.
The Hand in Srirangam Tradition
Srirangam is called “Bhooloka Vaikuntham” — Heaven on Earth.
Here the Lord does not sit distant and inaccessible.
He comes out in the streets.
And when He comes, the first thing He shows the world is:
His blessing hand.
Not His weapons.
Not His throne.
Not His glory.
His compassion.
The Secret Prayer of the Devotee
When devotees fold their hands before Namperumal’s raised palm, an unspoken dialogue happens:
Devotee: “I am afraid.”
Lord: “I know.”
Devotee: “I cannot manage life alone.”
Lord: “You were never meant to.”
The Eternal Promise
Ultimately, the Abhaya Hastam is the visual form of the greatest assurance in Vaishnavism:
“Rakṣishyati iti viśvāsaḥ”
“Firm faith that He will protect.”
That is why in Srirangam, amidst jewels and garlands and music,
the heart seeks only one sight:
The hand that blesses.

