Appar (Tamil: அப்பர்), also known as Tirunavukkarasar (Tamil: திருநாவுக்கரசர்), was a seventh-century Tamil Shaiva poet-saint and one of the four principal acharyas of the Tevaram tradition, renowned for composing thousands of devotional hymns praising Lord Shiva and for his pivotal role in the revival of Shaivism against competing religious influences like Jainism in ancient Tamilakam.[1] According to tradition, he was born as Marunikkar (or Marulneekkiyar) in the late sixth century CE in Tiruvamur, a village in the Tirumunaippadi region of present-day Tamil Nadu, to devout Shaiva parents Pukazhanar and Mathiniyar; orphaned young, he was raised by his pious sister Tilakavatiyar, who instilled in him early devotion to Shiva.[1] In his youth, Appar pursued scholarly studies and initially embraced Jainism, rising to become a prominent monk titled Dharmasena, but a severe stomach ailment—interpreted as divine intervention in hagiographical accounts—led to his dramatic conversion back to Shaivism after his sister administered sacred ash (vibhuti) at the Tiruvadigai Veerattam temple, where he experienced a miraculous cure and received the name Tirunavukkarasar ("king of divine speech") from Lord Shiva himself.[1]Appar's life, as chronicled in the 12th-century hagiographical epic Periyapuranam by Sekkizhar, exemplifies unwavering bhakti (devotion) through numerous miracles and acts of service, including surviving ordeals such as being thrown into a lime kiln, an elephant rampage, and a poisoned meal orchestrated by Jain adversaries, as well as floating unscathed on a stone raft across the sea while chanting the sacred Panchakshara mantra ("Om Namah Shivaya").[1] He undertook extensive pilgrimages to Shiva temples across South India and beyond, composing over 4,900 hymns in Tamil—collectively part of the Tevaram anthology, the first four books of the Thirumurai scriptural corpus—that vividly depict Shiva's grace, cosmic dance, and lingam worship, influencing Shaiva Siddhanta philosophy and Tamil devotional literature profoundly.[1] A key figure in the Bhakti movement, Appar played an instrumental role in converting the Pallava king Mahendravarman I from Jainism to Shaivism, as referenced in contemporary inscriptions, thereby strengthening Shaiva institutions and temple culture during a period of religious pluralism in the 6th–7th centuries CE. His humility was legendary; even as a revered saint, he performed menial tasks like carrying palanquins for his young contemporary, the child-saint Jnanasambandar, who affectionately called him "Appar" (father), a title that endures.[1] According to tradition, Appar lived to about 81 years, attaining final liberation (moksha) in blissful union with Shiva at Tirupugnur on the Sadayam asterism in the month of Chittirai, his body dissolving into divine gnosis, leaving a legacy as the epitome of selfless devotion among the 63 Nayanars.[1]
Biography
Early Life and Family Background
Appar, originally named Marulneekkiyar, was born around 570 CE in the village of Tiruvamoor, located in the Tirumunaippadi region of the Chola Kingdom in present-day Tamil Nadu.[2] He was born into a Vellalar family, a community of agrarian landowners known for their agricultural pursuits and adherence to Shaiva traditions.[3] His father, Pukazhanar, was a righteous householder from the Kurukkai clan, while his mother, Matiniyar, hailed from a similar lineage; the couple first had a daughter, Tilakavatiyar, before Marulneekkiyar's arrival.[3]Following the early death of his parents, Marulneekkiyar and his sister were orphaned and supported by their kinsfolk, who performed the necessary obsequies and provided care during their time of grief.[3] Tilakavatiyar, who remained unmarried after her betrothed's death and devoted herself to Shaiva worship, played a key role in his upbringing, ensuring familial stability in their pious household.[4] This early loss immersed him in a close-knit family environment centered on devotion and community support.Marulneekkiyar received his initial education in the arts and Vedic traditions, mastering them with innate aptitude and emerging as a promising young scholar.[3] Growing up in a Vellalar agrarian setting, he was exposed to the rhythms of farming life, including cultivation along fertile riverbanks, which later informed his poetic imagery.[3]In the 7th-century Tamil society of Tiruvamoor, a devout locale emphasizing dharma and virtuous living, Vellalar families like Appar's thrived under the overlapping influences of the Pallava and Chola kingdoms.[5] This era witnessed dynamic interactions between emerging Shaiva bhakti movements and established Jain communities, with royal patronage fostering religious pluralism amid agricultural prosperity and temple-centered culture.[5]
Conversion to Jainism and Return to Shaivism
Appar, originally named Marulneekkiyar, was born into a Shaiva family but converted to Jainism in his youth, drawn by the appeal of its ascetic principles and ethical doctrines prevalent in 7th-century Tamil Nadu, where religious competition between Shaivism, Jainism, and Buddhism was intense. Upon conversion, he adopted the monastic name Dharmasena (or Tarumacēṉ) and joined the Jain order at the monastery in Tiruppatiripuliyur (modern-day Cuddalore), where he quickly rose through the ranks due to his scholarly debates against Buddhists and commitment to Jain scriptures.[6][7]During his time as a Jain monk, Appar suffered from a severe and debilitating illness, described in hagiographical accounts as dysentery or a chronic stomach ailment, which he and his associates interpreted as divine retribution for abandoning Shaivism. Desperate for relief, he undertook a pilgrimage to the Shiva temple at Atikai (near Tiruvidaimarudur), despite opposition from his Jain brethren. There, he bathed in the temple tank and fervently chanted "Shambo," an epithet of Shiva, leading to his immediate and miraculous recovery. This event marked a profound personal turning point, prompting Appar to reject Jainism outright and recommit to Shaivism, resuming the wearing of the sacred ash and adopting the honorific Tirunavukkarasar ("King of Divine Utterance").[6][7]Appar's apostasy from Jainism provoked retaliation from the Jain community, who viewed his conversion as a threat to their influence at the Pallava court. They petitioned King Mahendravarman I (r. c. 600–630 CE), a staunch Jain patron, to persecute him. The king ordered several ordeals to test Appar's faith, including being trampled by a mad elephant, boiling in a lime kiln (a vat of heated lime), consumption of poisoned milk rice, and attempted drowning. In each trial, Appar survived unscathed through what were portrayed as divine interventions by Shiva, such as the elephant bowing reverently or the lime cooling miraculously. These events, detailed in Shaiva hagiographies, underscored the theological conflict and Appar's unwavering devotion.[6][7]Witnessing Appar's ordeals and survivals, Mahendravarman I underwent a dramatic conversion to Shaivism around 600 CE, renouncing Jainism and dismantling Jain institutions, including a monastery at his capital. This royal shift, attributed directly to Appar's influence, bolstered Shaivism's resurgence in the region and led to the construction of early rock-cut Shiva temples, such as the Kudumiyamalai shrine. Appar's experience thus represented not only a personal redemption but a pivotal moment in the broader religious dynamics of early medieval South India.[6][7]
Devotional Practices and Travels
After his return to Shaivism, Appar embraced a life of profound bhakti devotion to Shiva, adopting the epithet "Appar," meaning "father," which was affectionately bestowed upon him by the child-saint Thirugnanasambandar to signify his nurturing role among devotees.[8] This title reflected his commitment to humble service, as he wandered as a peripatetic ascetic, bearing a farmer's hoe known as uzhavaram, which he used to clear weeds, dig tanks, and maintain the premises of Shiva temples as acts of selfless labor.[3]Appar's devotional routine centered on rigorous daily practices that embodied egalitarian worship, open to all irrespective of social standing. He adhered to pathinensandhi, a discipline of reciting sacred Shiva names or hymns—such as the Panchakshara mantra or tandaka verses—eighteen times each day, often while performing physical service like sweeping temple courtyards with cow dung or gathering flowers for offerings.[3] These rituals emphasized communal devotion, where Appar prioritized serving fellow Shaivites and ensuring temples remained pure spaces for universal adoration of Shiva.[8]His lifelong peregrinations took him to over 200 Shiva temples spanning Tamil Nadu's diverse regions, from Tondai Nadu to Pandya country, where he composed hymns, performed miracles like opening sealed shrine doors through recitation, and restored neglected sites. Key among these were visits to Thiruvannamalai, where he hymned the lord as a fiery pillar, and Kanchipuram, a Pallava stronghold central to his propagation of Shaivism.[3] During these journeys, Appar fostered bonds with other Nayanars, most notably Sundarar, whom he encountered at Tiruppukalur; there, Appar anonymously shouldered Sundarar's palanquin, demonstrating humility and mutual reverence among saints.[3]Appar attained mukti around 650 CE at Thirupugalur during the Chithirai month on the Sadhayam nakshatra, after a life marked by unyielding pilgrimage and service.[3] Traditional hagiographies, including the Periya Puranam, date his lifespan from approximately 570 to 650 CE, though some scholars propose a narrower 7th-century timeline based on contemporary historical contexts and oral traditions, reflecting uncertainties in precise chronology.[9]
Literary Contributions
Composition of the Tevaram Hymns
Appar, also known as Tirunavukkarasar, is traditionally credited with composing approximately 4,900 devotional hymns, or pathigams, in praise of Shiva, each consisting of 10 or 11 verses, amounting to around 49,000 stanzas in total.[10] Of this vast output, 313 pathigams comprising 3,130 verses have survived, forming the core of his preserved literary legacy.[10] These hymns were created during his extensive devotional travels across Tamil Nadu, where he visited numerous Shiva temples and composed verses extolling the deity in those sacred sites.[7]The surviving hymns are structured musically according to ancient Tamil melodic modes known as panns, with the Tevaram corpus utilizing 23 such panns to enable ritual singing accompanied by instruments like the yazh (a stringed lute).[11] Examples include panns such as Geetapanchami, which lend a rhythmic and melodic framework to the verses, facilitating their recitation in temple liturgies.[11] The poetic form primarily employs viruttam (free verse), drawing on classical Tamil traditions to convey devotion through vivid imagery and emotional depth.[12]Appar's hymns often weave in personal experiences, such as his conversion from Jainism to Shaivism and the trials encountered during his pilgrimages, transforming these into fervent pleas for divine grace and protection.[7] For instance, verses reflect his miraculous escape from persecution and his yearning for Shiva's presence amid journeys to holy sites.[13]As part of the Tevaram—the first seven books of the Tirumurai sacred canon—Appar's works (books IV–VI) complement those of Sambandar (books I–III) and Sundarar (book VII), collectively establishing the foundational hymns of Shaiva Siddhanta liturgy recited daily in Shiva temples.[14]Scholarly accounts note that many of Appar's hymns were lost over time, with hagiographic traditions attributing their partial recovery to efforts during the Chola era in the 11th century, such as by Nambiyandar Nambi under the patronage of Rajaraja Chola II, who gathered scattered palm-leaf manuscripts.[15] Recent estimates reaffirm the traditional figure of 4,900 pathigams based on references in Sundarar's Tiruttondattogai.[10] Archaeological evidence, including Chola-period copper plates inscribed with Tevaram verses discovered at Chidambaram temple, attests to the hymns' early ritual recitation from the 11th century onward.[16]
Themes, Style, and Poetic Innovations
Appar's Tevaram hymns revolve around core themes of profound emotional and spiritual depth, prominently featuring the agony of separation, or viraha, from Shiva, where the poet-saint expresses intense longing and yearning for union with the divine. This theme is intertwined with anugraha, the compassionate grace of Shiva that redeems the devotee from worldly illusions and suffering, often portrayed as an act of divine intervention that restores the soul's harmony. Ethical living emerges as a practical dimension, urging devotees toward moral conduct, humility, and selfless service as pathways to spiritual fulfillment, reflecting Appar's own life of renunciation and pilgrimage. Drawing from his Vellalar agrarian roots, Appar employs vivid rural imagery—such as comparing devotion to plowing fields or harvesting crops—to symbolize the labor and fertility of spiritual practice, grounding abstract bhakti in everyday life.[17][7]The stylistic hallmarks of Appar's poetry emphasize raw emotional intensity, evoking a visceral sense of devotion through exclamations of joy, despair, and surrender that resonate with listeners. He frequently deploys rhetorical questions to challenge the divine or reflect on human frailty, such as querying why Shiva tests his devotees' faith amid trials, heightening the dramatic tension and inviting communal reflection. Direct addresses to Shiva, often intimate and conversational, foster a personal bond, as if the poet is pleading with a beloved companion, which humanizes the transcendent deity. Unlike the elite, Sanskrit-inflected devotional traditions, Appar's use of simple, idiomatic Tamil ensures accessibility to common folk, employing colloquial rhythms and vernacular metaphors to democratize Shaiva piety.[18][14]Appar's poetic innovations lie in his seamless fusion of folk elements—drawn from oral traditions and rural songs—with classical Tamil prosody, creating a hybrid form that elevates everyday speech into sacred verse while maintaining metrical elegance. His hymns prioritize temple-centric worship, vividly describing Shiva's linga icons, rituals, and sacred landscapes as loci of divine presence, thereby reinforcing pilgrimage and architectural devotion in Tamil Shaivism. Subtly woven critiques of rival faiths, particularly Jainism—stemming from his personal conversion narrative—appear through contrasts between ascetic denial and joyful Shaiva embrace, without overt polemic, highlighting devotion's superiority over ritual austerity. These contributions pioneered the personalization of bhakti, transforming it from impersonal liturgy to an individualized emotional journey.[19][7]Appar's Tevaram exerted a lasting influence on Tamil literature, inspiring the Alvars' Vaishnava hymns by modeling intimate, emotive bhakti that bridged sectarian divides and shaped medieval poets' emphasis on personal experience over doctrinal rigidity. Recent 21st-century linguistic studies have illuminated gender-neutral dimensions in his devotion, portraying Shiva as a universal beloved accessible beyond binary roles, while eco-themes in agrarian metaphors underscore harmony with nature as integral to ethical spirituality.[20][21]
Compilation and Transmission
Historical Compilation Processes
During Appar's lifetime in the 7th century CE, his devotional hymns, collectively known as part of the Tevaram, were primarily transmitted orally among Shaiva devotees and communities across Tamil Nadu, ensuring their widespread recitation in temples and pilgrimages before any written records emerged.[22] This oral tradition preserved the hymns' rhythmic and musical structure, allowing them to influence Shaiva worship despite the absence of standardized texts.[14]By the 9th century, Shaiva scholars began committing these hymns to palm-leaf manuscripts, marking the shift from oral to written preservation amid growing institutional support for Shaivism under Pallava and early Chola patronage. These early manuscripts, often housed in temple libraries, facilitated the hymns' dissemination but remained fragmented due to the perishable nature of palm leaves and limited copying efforts.[23]The pivotal rediscovery and systematic compilation occurred in the late 10th to early 11th century under Raja Raja Chola I (r. 985–1014 CE), who, inspired by recitations at his court, commissioned the scholar Nambiyandar Nambi to collect and organize the scattered hymns of Appar, Sambandar, and Sundarar. Nambi's efforts resulted in the canonization of Appar's surviving approximately 3,130 stanzas (in 313 hymns) as volumes 4 through 6 of the Tevaram within the broader Tirumurai compendium, a 12-volume Shaiva sacred corpus, all under Chola royal patronage to elevate Shaiva orthodoxy.[24] These compiled texts were used in the liturgy of the newly constructed Rajarajeshvara Temple in Thanjavur, where Raja Raja appointed oduvars (temple singers) to perform the hymns daily, ensuring their integration into temple rituals.[25]In the 12th century, Sekkizhar further integrated Appar's hymns into the Periya Puranam, a hagiographic epic that weaves biographical narratives of the 63 Nayanar saints with excerpts from their poetry, dedicating 428 verses to Appar's life and blending his devotional themes of service and conversion with illustrative hymn quotes to inspire moral and spiritual emulation.[3]Following the Chola decline in the 13th century, political disruptions including invasions by Pandyas and Hoysalas posed risks to manuscript preservation during the transition to Vijayanagara rule in the 14th century, though the hymns endured through temple safeguarding and continued oral recitation.In the 2020s, Tamil universities have advanced digital preservation, with Tamil University in Thanjavur digitizing thousands of palm-leaf manuscripts, including Tevaram texts, through collaborations like the British Library's Endangered Archives Programme, while Project Madurai provides open-access electronic editions to prevent further degradation and enhance global accessibility. In 2023, over 480 copper plates inscribed with Thevaram hymns were discovered at the Sattainathar Temple in Sirkazhi, providing the first physical evidence of such inscriptions on metal, with studies continuing as of October 2025.[26][27][28]
Translations, Editions, and Accessibility
One of the earliest efforts to translate Appar's Tevaram hymns into English occurred in the 19th century through the work of British colonial scholars and missionaries, with Francis Whyte Ellis contributing foundational studies on Tamil literature in the 1810s that paved the way for later renditions of Saivite texts. In the 1890s, J.M. Nallaswami Pillai advanced this by providing English translations and expositions of key Saiva Siddhanta works, including selections from the Tevaram, emphasizing their philosophical depth in publications like his editions of related hymns.[29]Critical editions of Appar's hymns emerged prominently in the 20th century, led by U.V. Swaminatha Iyer, who meticulously collected and published palm-leaf manuscripts of the Tevaram alongside commentaries, ensuring the preservation of the full corpus in Tamil with scholarly annotations through his extensive bibliographic efforts starting in the early 1900s.[30] These editions, housed in institutions like the U.V. Swaminatha Iyer Library, provided a standardized textual basis for subsequent studies.Modern scholarly translations have focused on capturing the poetic and devotional nuances of Appar's works. Indira Viswanathan Peterson's 1989 volume, Poems to Śiva: The Hymns of the Tamil Saints, offers English renderings of select Tevaram hymns by Appar, Sambandar, and Sundarar, prioritizing fidelity to the original meter and imagery while contextualizing them within Tamil Saivite tradition.[31] Similarly, David Shulman's translations in the 1990s and 2000s, such as those in Songs of the Harsh Devotee (1990) for related Tevaram poets and broader discussions in Tamil: A Biography (2016), highlight Appar's contributions through annotated excerpts that underscore linguistic innovation and cultural synthesis.[32]Efforts to enhance accessibility have accelerated in the digital era, with the Tamil Virtual Academy establishing online archives in the 2010s that include digitized versions of the Tevaram hymns, complete with searchable Tamil texts and audio recitations for global users.[33] Bilingual editions, often featuring Tamil originals alongside English or other translations, have been developed for the Tamil diaspora, facilitating hymn recitation in community settings and religious practices abroad.[34] Post-2020 publications continue to build on these, with updated scholarly editions incorporating new manuscript discoveries, though comprehensive AI-assisted translations of Appar's works remain limited and experimental as of 2025.[35]
Legacy and Cultural Impact
Religious Influence and Temple Associations
Appar played a pivotal role in the revival of Shaivism in 7th-century South India, particularly through his influence on royal conversions that shifted patronage from Jainism to Shaiva traditions. The Pallava king Mahendravarman I, initially a devotee of Jainism, converted to Shaivism under Appar's guidance, marking a significant turning point that facilitated the construction of rock-cut Shiva temples and the promotion of Shaiva devotional practices across the region.[36] This royal endorsement contributed to the broader dominance of Shaiva Siddhanta over Jainism, as evidenced by the subsequent decline in Jain monastic influence and the integration of Shaiva elements into Pallava architecture and governance. Although direct links to Chalukya rulers are less documented, Appar's hymns and missionary travels helped propagate Shaivism northward, influencing the religious landscape amid Pallava-Chalukya conflicts.Appar's devotional works are intrinsically tied to the 276 Paadal Petra Sthalams, sacred Shiva temples revered in the Tevaram hymns of the Nayanars, with Appar composing hymns for numerous of these sites (over 300 pathigams, covering many unique temples) that celebrate their divine presence. His hymns describe personal encounters with Shiva at these locations during his extensive travels, revitalizing temple worship by emphasizing direct spiritual connection over elaborate rituals. These associations underscore Appar's contribution to temple-centric Shaivism, where sites like Tiruvadigai Vidar became symbols of his own reconversion from Jainism.[37]The Tevaram hymns, including Appar's contributions, remain integral to Shaiva liturgy, chanted daily in major temples such as the Madurai Meenakshi Temple and during festivals at the ChidambaramNataraja Temple. In Madurai, these verses accompany processions and rituals, blending Tamil devotional poetry with traditional worship to invoke Shiva's grace. At Chidambaram, Tevaram recitation enhances the Natyanjali festival and daily arati, preserving the hymns' musical modes (pann) as a living tradition of Bhakti expression.[38]Theologically, Appar's emphasis on personal devotion (bhakti) to Shiva as a compassionate, accessible deity over rigid ritualism profoundly shaped the Bhakti movement, promoting emotional intimacy and egalitarian access to the divine.[39] His hymns portray Shiva as a personal protector, fostering a shift from institutional Jain asceticism to heartfelt Shaiva surrender, which influenced later interfaith dynamics. Recent ecumenical studies highlight Appar's legacy in Jain-Shaiva relations, portraying his reconversion as a model for dialogue on shared values like non-violence and devotion, though historical tensions persist.[40]
Role in Tamil Literature and History
Appar played a pivotal role in elevating Tamil as a sacred language for expressing bhakti devotion, transforming it from the secular poetic traditions of the Sangam era into a medium for profound spiritual discourse. As one of the three principal Tevaram poets alongside Sambandar and Sundarar, his hymns integrated emotional depth and personal surrender to Shiva, influencing the revival of classical Tamil forms in later works such as Kamban's Kambaramayanam in the 12th century. This shift democratized religious expression, making it accessible beyond elite Sanskrit circles and fostering a vernacular literary renaissance that emphasized humility and service.[41]Appar's compositions offer valuable historical insights into 7th-century Tamil society, particularly the temple-based economy, agrarian life, and political structures during the Pallava dynasty's dominance and early transitions toward Chola influence. His hymns describe temple rituals, land endowments to Shaiva institutions, and the role of kings as patrons of devotion, reflecting a landscape where peasant devotion intertwined with royal authority and agricultural prosperity. For instance, references to temple sweeps and offerings highlight the socio-economic fabric of rural Tamil Nadu, where Shaivism gained traction amid competing religious influences like Jainism. These details corroborate epigraphic evidence from Pallava rock-cut temples, illustrating the integration of bhakti into everyday kingship and community life.[42][43]The historicity of Appar relies heavily on later hagiographies such as the 12th-century Periya Puranam by Sekkizhar, which narrates his life as a convert from Jainism to Shaivism, though these accounts blend legend with tradition. Archaeological corroboration comes from 8th- and 9th-century temple inscriptions in sites like Tiruvannamalai, which invoke Nayanar saints and affirm their devotional legacy without precise dating for Appar himself. Traditional and scholarly accounts place the Tevaram poets in the 7th century, though debates persist over exact timelines due to the oral transmission of hymns. Appar's legacy also symbolizes Tamil cultural resistance to northern Sanskrit hegemony, as his use of pure Tamil bhakti poetry asserted regional identity and non-Brahmin agency in religious discourse.[44][45]
Modern Veneration and Iconography
Appar continues to be venerated in contemporary Tamil Shaiva traditions through annual festivals at key temples associated with his life and hymns. A prominent 10-day festival is held each year at the Veerataneswarar Temple in Thiruvathigai, near Panruti, Tamil Nadu, reenacting episodes from Appar's biography, including his conversion from Jainism, trials imposed by Jain rulers, and miraculous interventions by Shiva, such as the theppotsavam ritual symbolizing his survival after being cast into the sea.[46] Similarly, the Appar Guru Poojai at the Agneeswarar Temple in Tirupugalur commemorates his attainment of mukti on the Sadhayam star in the Tamil month of Chithirai (typically April-May), drawing devotees for rituals, processions, and recitations of his Tevaram hymns.[47] These events underscore Appar's role as a model of unwavering devotion and service (charya), reinforcing Shaiva siddhanta principles in modern practice.[48]Appar's life and works are part of the educational focus on classical Tamil literature and bhakti traditions in Tamil Nadu. Shaiva siddhanta monasteries, such as those affiliated with the samaya acharyas tradition, honor Appar as one of the four foundational teachers (alongside Sambandar, Sundarar, and Manikkavachakar), with his hymns recited daily in rituals and his image enshrined as a symbol of the charya pada, the path of ethical service and temple worship.[49][48]In iconography, Appar is typically depicted as an elderly sage with a white beard, embodying humility and wisdom, often holding a small hoe (pattarai)—a tool referencing his labor in digging temple tanks—and a Shivalingam to signify his devotion. Bronze statues from the Chola and Vijayanagara periods, such as a 12th-century 57 cm standing figure and 15th-century copper alloy icons, portray him in robust, devotional postures on lotus pedestals, now housed in museums and temples across Tamil Nadu. Stone images of Appar are revered in nearly all Shiva temples, including prominent installations at the Meenakshi Temple in Madurai and various shrines in Chennai, where he appears alongside other Nayanars in murals and sculptures highlighting his role in the bhakti revival.[50]Modern adaptations of Appar's hymns extend his influence into popular culture and global contexts. In 1950s Tamil cinema, Tevaram verses inspired devotional songs and themes in films, blending bhakti with cinematic narratives to evoke spiritual fervor among audiences.[51] His compositions are staples in Carnatic music recitals, with renowned artists like M.S. Subbulakshmi rendering pieces such as "Azhukku Meipodum" and "Vediya Veda Gita" in concerts, preserving the pann (ancient melodic modes) tradition.[52] In diaspora communities, Shaiva events worldwide, including the Malaysia Hindu Sangam's National Thirumurai Festival, feature Tevaram recitations honoring Appar, fostering cultural continuity among Tamil Hindus in Southeast Asia and beyond.[53][54]Appar symbolizes Tamil cultural identity, particularly in 20th-century movements asserting non-Brahmin heritage against colonial and Sanskrit-centric influences, as highlighted in Dravidian ideology that drew on Shaiva saints like him to promote linguistic and social pride.[7] Recent honors, such as the 2023 National Thirumurai Festival awards by the Malaysia Hindu Sangam for innovative Tevaram adaptations, recognize contemporary efforts to reinterpret his works through music and performance.[54] Post-2020, digital platforms have amplified this legacy, with social media bhakti groups on Instagram and Facebook sharing renditions of Appar's hymns, such as "Pitha Pirai Soodi," to engage global youth in Shaiva devotion via short videos and online recitals.[55][56]