Why This Indian Airport Shuts Down for a Temple Processionindian-airport-shuts-for-temple-procession

A rare confluence of tradition and take-offs

In a world where airport shutdowns typically point to technical faults, extreme weather, or security concerns, Thiruvananthapuram International Airport in Kerala, India, stands apart.

For a few hours in April, and again later in the year, all flights are paused, and the runway becomes sacred ground.

The Runway That Bows to Rituals

Each year during the Painkuni Festival and Alpashi Festival, the airport halts operations to allow a grand religious procession—part of the rituals of the Sree Padmanabha Swamy Temple, one of India’s richest and most historic temples.

What’s truly extraordinary?

The procession moves right across the airport’s only runway.

Chariots, elephants, priests, and members of the royal Travancore family march solemnly, surrounded by tradition and security. Flights—usually about 90 take-offs and landings a day—pause for nearly four hours.

How Is This Possible in a High-Security Zone?

It’s not impromptu. The airport authorities inform airlines months in advance, rerouting or rescheduling select flights. Special passes, security clearances, and CCTV surveillance are part of the plan.

Barricades are erected, and the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) ensures complete safety. After the idols are bathed in the sea at Shanghumugham beach, the procession retraces its path—again across the runway—back to the temple.

This ritual, a legacy of the Travancore royal family, has continued since the airport was built in 1932—even after its management passed to the government and later, Adani Airport Holdings Ltd.

A Global Rarity

Thiruvananthapuram isn’t the only airport to shut down for religious observances—Ngurah Rai Airport in Indonesia closes for Nyepi, the Balinese New Year, and Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport observes Yom Kippur.

But those closures are full-day national holidays. None, however, allow religious processions across a live runway.

Indeed, in Thiruvananthapuram, a runway isn’t just a path for planes—it’s a path for divinity.

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