They were taken there because they were chosen to become DigiDestined, the children that would save the Digital World (along with Earth near the end of the series) from the evil forces that threatened to destroy it. Its premise involves a group of boys and girls being whisked to a parallel reality called the Digital World, sometimes called "DigiWorld" for short, while at summer camp. For other uses of Digimon Adventure, see Digimon Adventure (disambiguation).ĭigimon Adventure ( デジモンアドベンチャー, Dejimon Adobenchā ?) is the first season of the anime saga Digimon: Digital Monsters. This page is about the Digimon Adventure anime series. 3.( US:) Fox, ABC Family, Toon Disney, Nicktoons e-Vadhyar also plans to send 10% of the fees collected to the Matam or Temple of your choice to represent your Vadhyar Dhakshina. If the client is travelling to a different time zone and informs evadhyar 96 hours prior to Amavasya, then attempts will be made to change the Manthra to suit the new location and the same will be advice to the client. The experience of performing the Tharpan with this Audio will be smoother and more satisfactory. The Tharpan Audio is played on a smart phone App. A message will be sent for the Tharpan one week prior to the actual date and also 1 day in advance. A marriage of technology and tradition has made e-Vadhyar possible.Į-Vadhyar will deliver the Tharpan audio file created for each user (custom built) with all relevant embedded details. with adequate silent space for Abhivathaye and time for untying the koorcham. I have consulted with various mutts and Purohits in India to make available a system of pre-recorded Tharpan with Location details, Sankalpam with the correct Thithi, Nakshatra and Day details and also the Ancestral details including the Gothra names etc. This got me thinking about how the rest of the Brahmin community was fulfilling their Tharpan duties! Do they perform the Tharpan or let it go? If they perform, will they be doing it at the right day or just go by the Indian Sankalpam and perform it on the wrong day? When I posed this question to a few friends, I realized that no one was really happy with this but they did the best they could.Į-Vadhyar is a result of this introspection and a lot of research on the subject. This resulted in a disjointed performance of the Tharpan and this was not satisfactory. To perform the Tharpan, I had to play the recording, consult the hand written notes and recite the Sankalpam and go back to the recording for the rest of the Tharpan. I had to consult Almanacs and make necessary changes to the Sankalpam. But this wasn't correct since the Nakshatra or thithi or the day Amavasya should be done in USA sometimes differed from India. But what was available on internet sites was the sankalpam according to the Indian timing. I decided to use the recorded Tharpan Mantra and requested my family Vadhyar in Chennai to record a generic form of Tharpan and I would write down the sankalpam for each month looking at the Internet for exact timings. Why e-VadhyarĪfter I lost my father some 5 years back, I had to drive to my Purohit's place on the Tharpan days and I would be late going to my work on these days. My family always laid a heavy emphasis on doing the ancestral rites in a proper manner and I hope many will benefit from this service. I am back in India now and find that even in India, people face similar challenges. It was my own experience with this situation that gave rise to the idea of starting the e-Vadhyar service. After my father passed away in 2009, I found it especially difficult to perform the monthly Tarpan since the Purohit was 10 miles away and driving to and back from the temple on a working day was next to impossible. Rituals need to be performed at the right time and in the right way and this is always a challenge when you live away from India. Having lived in the USA for the last 16 years, I realized the difficulties of practicing the brahminical rituals in a foreign land. My name is Madhavan Parthasarathy - Vadagalai Iyengar by birth, Chemical Engineer by Profession, American by citizenship and Indian at heart.