CONTENTS |
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Forum on
Caste & the Tamil Nation |
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On the Unintended Influence of Janinism on the Development of Caste in Post
Classical Tamil Society -
Sudalaimuthu Palaniappan "..Like any other human being,
the average Tamil also functions at the intersection of many overlapping
identities. In spite of the persistence of a linguistic identity over two
millennia, and a self-conscious Tamil nationalist political movement of the
20th century which argued against caste differences among Tamils, for many
Tamils of today, caste is> a significant, if not the primary, identity
still. One of the results of this caste identity is that many Tamils who are
members of the Scheduled Castes or Dalits feel alienated from the interests
of the Tamil Nationalist movement." |
Fuzzy and
Neutrosophic
Analysis of Periyar’s Views
on Untouchability - W. B. Vasantha Kandasamy, Florentin
Smarandache, K. Kandasamy |
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Caste & tamilnation.org -
Comment by Dr.S.Ranganathan
and Response by
tamilnation.org,
June 2006 |
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Are Brahmins the Dalits of today?
- Francois Gautier, 23 May 2006 |
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On Dalit
Phobia - Chandra Babu Prasad, June 2006 |
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Castes
& Caste Observances amongst Tamils in Ceylon, Rev James Cartman, 1957 |
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Aryan & Tamils - Swami Vivekananda |
Untouchability and
Catholicism:
The Case of the Paraiyars in South India - Robert Deliège, 1998 |
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The Pattern of Abuse: Southern District Clashes in Tamil Nadu - Human
Rights Watch Report, 1999 |
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Dalit Anti-Dravidianism Debunked - Exposing the New Brahmanic
Conspiracy - Mukesh Paswan, 2000 |
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Fundamental genomic unity
of ethnic India is revealed by analysis of mitochondrial DNA - Research
Article, Current Science, November 200 "...Pallar community shows a
higher frequency of haplogroup-M in DNA where as North Indian castes show
higher frequency of haplogroup-U meaning that higher Caucasoid mixture in
North Indian castes.Haplogroup-M is attributed to Dravidians.." |
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Ambedkar |
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Infantry Regiments of Indian Army & Caste "... Between 1892 and 1914,
recruitment was confined almost entirely to the martial races. These modes
of recruitment and organization created a professional force profoundly
shaped by caste and regional factors and loyal and responsive to British
command. The procedures also perpetuated regional and communal ties and
produced an army that was not nationally based. .." |
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Translating Tamil Dalit Poetry - Anushiya Sivanarayanan,
May 2004 |
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Dalit
Panthers of India Leader T Tirumavalavan visits Jaffna to salute Tamil Eelam,
December 2004 "I want a Tamil Government... I want a Tamil country... That
country I dream of is coming up in Sri Lanka's Jaffna. I went there to
salute that land.." |
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Brahmins & Eelamists, - V.Thangavelu, 2001 "...If not for the social
revolution engineered by Periyar the Tamils would still be hewers of wood
and drawers of water for the master race. ..Is it a coincidence that the
Brahmins are ganging up against Tamil Nationalism? They oppose Tamil Eelam;
they oppose Tamil as the language of education in LKG and UKG. Why? Brahmin
students offer Sanskrit as one of the subject for Plus 11 instead of Tamil.
Why? .." |
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Pfaffenberger, Bryan -
Caste in Tamil Culture: The Religious Foundations of Sudra Domination in
Tamil Sri Lanka, Syracuse, Syracuse University, 1982. |
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Nature of Caste in Sri Lanka "When the
Portuguese began to trade extensively with South Asia, they quickly noticed
a fundamental difference between South Asian societies and those of other
world areas. In India and Sri Lanka, societies are broken up into a large
number of groups who do not intermarry, who are ranked in relation to each
other, and whose interactions are governed by a multitude of ritualized
behaviors. The Portuguese called these groups casta, from which the
English term caste is derived. In South Asia, they are described by
the term jati, or birth. According to traditional culture, every
person is born into a particular group that defines his or her unchangeable
position within society." |
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தலித் இலக்கியம் - Thamizh Arasan - அடங்க மறு |
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Caste & The Myth of Hindu Tolerance |
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Caste in Ceylon - Country Study |
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Forum - Who is
a Tamil? |
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On Origin of Pallars at Forum Hub |
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Tamil
Nadu: shaking off the shackles of Hindu caste, 2002 |
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Implementation of Social Justice Through Reservation -Dr. Justice P.
Venugopal |
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Caste in Wikpedia |
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Shudras- Untouchables- Dalits at Asian Human Rights |
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Why Dalits dont Need Brahmins |
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Dalits In Reverse "... From being the dominant community at one time,
the Tamil Brahmins are facing the effects of a new casteism.." |
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Needed A Tsunami To Destroy The Ugly Relic Of Varna System
- V.B.Rawat, 2005 |
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Dwelling in Futures Past: Place, Region and Tamil Nation in Ra. Krsnamurti’s
Civakamiyin Capatam - Akhila Ramnarayan |
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Vedic "Aryans" and the Origins of Civilization: A Literary
and Scientific Perspective
- Navaratna S.
Rajaram and Davis Frawley. |
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Caste and Religions of Natal Immigrants - K.
Chetty |
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Caste in Transition - V.G. Julie Rajan
2003
Caste, nationalism,
and ethnicity : an interpretation of Tamil cultural history and social order
- Jacob Pandian |
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National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights |
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Tamils group seen exploiting caste in Jaffna election, 1998 |
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Danger Stalks Dalit Leaders, 2004 |
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Dalits in Dravidian Land, 2005 |

Visit
Tamil Nation Library
- Caste & Tamil Nation |
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Caste &
the Tamil Nation -
Dalits, Brahmins & Non Brahmins
"The
Tamil nation is a political community, a grand solidarity.
To maintain its solidarity, the Tamil nation has to remove all
sorts of divisions that causes dissension and discord among its
members. The Caste System is such a pernicious division that has
plagued our society for thousands of years."
“Caste is not a division of labour, it is a division
of labourers.” Dr.Ambedkar
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The Stink of Untouchability |
1. S.M.Lingam on Tamil
Nationalism & the Caste System - Swami Vivekananda and Saint Kabir
"The Tamil
nation is a political community, a grand solidarity.
To maintain its solidarity, the Tamil nation has to remove all
sorts of divisions that causes dissension and discord among its
members. The Caste System is such a pernicious division that has
plagued our society for thousands of years.
The Caste System still occupies an important place in the Hindu
religion. The primary aim and ideal of all religions is the
emancipation of all its followers, especially that of the weaker
sections and the downtrodden. So it is strange that a religion like
Hinduism goes against that ideal and purposefully condemn a section
of its own followers as untouchable outcasts. The Hindu Brahmins
have created theoretical explanations, Puranic stories and religious
myths to support and justify their conduct. The sole aim of what is
called "Brahminism" is to create and maintain a system which gives a
supreme place of importance to Brahmanic priests and other Brahmins
in general. Since all of these arguments are purported to be based
on Hinduism, it is proper that we examine the
ideals of real Hinduism and its basic tenets. .."
more
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6.
Professor Hart in Forum on Brahminism & the Tamil Nation
"..Yes, of course Brahmins have had their own political agenda to
push. They have been responsible for many things that I feel are
entirely unconscionable. But is this any different from the other
high castes? I have heard many many stories of high non-Brahmin
castes killing and abusing Dalits. You can't blame the Brahmins for
this. In fact, the most pernicious example of the caste system was
in the Tamil areas of Sri Lanka, where there are virtually no
Brahmins and never have been....Tamil culture has not suffered
because of one group. It has suffered because of the caste system
and
because of its
treatment of women... Let's promote inter caste marriage,
let's get rid
of dowry and give women independence and self-respect, and above
all, let's avoid a victimization complex which only plays into the
hands of those who have a vested interest in continuing the
inequities that exist in Tamilnad. If every Brahmin were to
disappear from Tamilnad, the Dalits and others who are exploited
would benefited not one iota..."
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3.
Sanmugam Sabesan - சாதி ..
"‘சாதியம் என்பது மனித
குலத்திற்கு எதிரானது. அடிப்படை மனித உரிமை மீறலாகும்.’ என்று ஐக்கிய
நாடுகள் சபைக்கு பரிந்துரை செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளது. இதனை நாமும் முழுமையாக
வரவேற்கின்றோம்
நான்கு வருண உருவாக்கம்
குறித்துப் பேசுகின்ற ‘இருக்கு வேதத்தின்’ புருஷ சூக்தத்தில், புருஷன்
என்கின்ற உடலை நான்காக வகுத்து நான்கு வருணங்கள் தோற்றுவிக்கப்
பட்டதாகக் கதையாடல் அமைக்கப் பட்டுள்ளது. படைப்புக் கடவுள் பிரம்மாவின்
வாயிலிருந்து பிராமணனும், நெஞ்சில் இருந்து சத்திரியனும்,
தொடையிலிருந்து வைசியனும், பாதத்திலிருந்து இவர்கள் மூவருக்கும் சேவை
செய்யும் அடிமையாக சூத்திரன் என்பவனும் உருவாக்கப் பட்டார்கள். இந்த
சூத்திர சாதியை சேர்ந்தவர்கள்தான் திராவிடர்கள் என்பது பின்னால்
விளக்கப் படுகின்றது.
இந்த நான்கு வருணத்தையும் (நான்கு சாதி அமைப்புக்களையும்)
தாண்டியவர்கள் மிகக் கேவலமாக சண்டாளர்கள்- தீண்டத் தகாதவர்கள் என
அழைக்கப்பட்டு, ஒதுக்கப்பட்டு, ஒதுக்கப்படுகின்றார்கள். இவர்கள்
‘தலித்துக்கள்’ என்று இப்போது குறிக்கப் படுகின்றார்கள். ‘தலித்’ என்ற
சொல் எப்படி வந்தது என்பதை முதலில் பார்ப்போம்..."
more
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4. 'In the rainy season,' the woman began,
`it is really bad. Water mixes with the shit and when we carry it (on
our heads) it drips from the baskets, on to our clothes, our bodies, our
faces. When I return home I find it difficult to eat food sometimes. The
smell never gets out of my clothes, my hair. But this is our fate. To
feed my children I have no option but to do this work.'
Narayanamma began cleaning human excrement at 13. She is
now 35. The stench is nauseating, overpowering. First, she sweeps the
shit into piles. Then, using two flat pieces of tin, she scoops it up
and drops it into a bamboo basket which she carries to a spot where a
tractor will arrive to pick it up. No gloves. No water to wash with. She
hitches up her sari tightly so that it does not trail on the ground or
touch the shit. Still, it is almost impossible to go through a whole
day's work without some of it inadvertently getting onto her clothes and
person.
After 20-odd years of cleaning toilets. Narayanamma
clings to a dignity which is markedly at variance with the work she
does. She is dressed neatly, immaculately clean. Jasmine adorns her
oiled and well groomed hair.
Narayanamma and 800,000 other toilet cleaners are on the
lowest rung of the caste system in India. They are despised by everyone.
They experience absolute exclusion from the cradle to the grave.
They are the other face of India; the one that
nobody likes to see. It is in sharp contrast to the progressive,
technological, we-have-the-bomb-and-are-no longer-the-Third-World
face.
Chennai railway, station says it all. It has a hot
spot for laptops to download mail, mobile phone chargers,
international food counters offering burgers, chocolate mousse and
chow mein next to hot dosas and chicken tikka. Yet, a few metres
away, sweeper women clean shit in the most primitive manner
possible, lifting it out of the railway track with a stick, broom
and pieces of tin. Why does this unacceptable, utterly obscene
dichotomy exist. Because hardly anyone wants it to change.
Caste permeates every pore of Indian society in hidden,
insidious ways. It is so complex, few Indians begin to understand it
completely, although it is present in our lives in subtle and not-so
subtle ways. Even though the caste hierarchy is a Hindu construct,
conversion does not always help: Buddhists, Christians, Sikhs and
Muslims often still cling to their caste identities when searching for
marriage partners...
When the British ruled India they left caste well alone
to avoid unrest. In some ways they even reinforced it, finding Brahmins
useful as an army of clerks and administrators who served the British
Empire faithfully.
Today, in India, the Untouchables call themselves
`Dalits', which means `Broken People'. There are almost 180 million
Dalits in India alone and at least another 60 million around the world
who face caste discrimination of various kinds.
On a daily basis, Dalits have to deal with the fact that
they will not be served food in many eateries. They must sit outside and
drink their tea at a distance from the other customers. Special
`Untouchable' cups are placed on the shelf outside. The Dalit customer
has to take his or her cup, place it on a counter carefully without
touching the waiter. The tea will then be poured from a safe, non
polluting distance and the Dalit must pick up the cup, drink the tea,
wash the cup and place it back on the secluded Dalit shelf outside. This
is known as the 'two-glass' system.
In one recent survey of 22 villages in Tamil Nadu, 16
practised the `two glass system'; 14 villages had the `chappal' system
where Dalits have to remove their footwear when they enter the caste
part of the village; and in 17 villages Dalits were forbidden to enter
the village temples. In four villages Dalits had come together to combat
these practices and they have largely been abolished....
... Academics talk of lack of political will to
describe successive governments' failure to protect Dalits.
Translated, this means police officers stand in the background and
watch upper-caste mobs burn Dalits alive, because the village
considers they are getting too big for their boots. Feudal landlords
are aided by corrupt civil servants and government officials in
maintaining the status quo. So they approve and abet in the
exploitation of Dalits, turn a blind eye to bonded labour, and the
terrorizing, killing, rape of Dalits who protest. Meanwhile everyone
mouths the rhetoric of the Constitution and government documents
hypocritically pay lip-service to it...
Caste discrimination also remains alive and well
wherever the Indian Diaspora has migrated.. ...Perversely caste
discrimination in Diaspora communities in the West has become worse in
the last few years; as communities have grown larger, caste distinctions
become more pronounced...
Discrimination in Detail
-
In India, Brahmins, who are 3.5 per cent of
the population, hold 78 per cent of the judicial positions and
approximately 50 per cent of parliamentary seats.
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Mass rapes often form part of the tactics of
intimidation used by upper-caste gangs against lower castes. The
Home Ministry reported that, between 2000 and 2001, there was a
16.5 per cent increase in reported rape cases.
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Each year, inter-caste violence claims hundreds
of lives; in 2001 it was especially pronounced in Uttar Pradesh,
Bihar, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, and Andhra
Pradesh.
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In India, among the millions of bonded labourers
(estimates range widely between 20 to 65 million for 2001), the
Government found 85 per cent to be Dalits or from lower castes.
These included a large number of children.
-
Dalits and adivasis (indigenous peoples) form
the largest proportion of those who drop out of school. In rural
areas, between the ages of five and nine, 36.1 per cent of Dalit
boys and 48.4 per cent of Dalit girls dropped out.
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About 75 per cent of Dalit communities live
below the poverty line.
-
Two-thirds of the Dalit population is
illiterate.
-
Half are landless agricultural labourers.
-
Only seven per cent have access to safe drinking
water, electricity and toilets.
from Mari Marcel Thekaekara on the Stink of
Untouchability in the
New
Internationalist, July 2005
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5. Untouchability &
Caste Relations in Rural India - the Case of Southern Tamil Villages -
A. Ramaiah
"Justice and equality are the two subjects often talked about by
most of the nationalists and leaders of various political and
ideological streams across the world including India....everyday
social life is still governed substantially by the hierarchical
attitude and sentiments carried over from the past. The awe for
those who are superior by birth or social position (higher caste)
and the contempt towards social inferiors (lower castes) are equally
wide spread in the rural and urban areas and among the educated and
the uneducated... What is most important of all is reconsidering the
suggestion of Dr. Ambedkar that a socially distinct community should
be allowed to settle in separate villages so that within such
villages there is no scope for any one to label another as
untouchable or lower caste. Only in such separate villages can the
so-called lower caste people also experience freedom which India got
five decades before. Besides, a fire spewing urge to fight for their
rights, self-respect and dignity and a strive for coming together
across their religious, regional, linguistic, sub-caste and
ideological differences have to be consciously nurtured. Unless this
is achieved, the empowerment and the emancipation of enslaved
Indians would continue to remain a distant dream.”
more
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6.
Pfaffenberger, Bryan - Caste in Tamil Culture: The Religious Foundations
of Sudra Domination in Tamil Sri Lanka
"...The caste system of South India, epitomized (as are most
things South Indian) by the social formation of the Tamil-speaking
lands is if anything even more rigid and redolent of the
hierarchical ethos than that of North India. And yet - here, of
course, is the uniquitous paradox with which South Indian presents
us - the Tamil caste system comprises features which are not only
unknown in North India but are also without any clear foundation in
the Sastric lore. So divergent is the southern system that one is
tempted to say, with Raghavan (n.d.:117), that the Sastras have
"little application" to the Tamil caste system, which should be
analyzed in purely Dravidian terms...But to do so is to forget the
fundamental challenge with which Dravidian culture presents us,
namely, to see it as a regional variant of the Gangetic tradition of
Hinduism. We are obliged to observe, for instance, that the highest
and lowest ranks of the Tamil caste hierarchy - that of the Brahman
and of the scavenging Paraiyar Untouchables -are perfectly
explicable in Sastric terms. .."
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7..K.Nambi Arooran in
The Origin of the Non-Brahmin Movement, 1905-1920
".. although non Brahmins from the two main Dravidian language
groups - Tamil and Telegu - joined the non-Brahmin movement the use
of Dravidianism as a political weapon was mostly confined to the
Tamil non-Brahmins... At the same time when Dravidian consciousness
was taking shape not only the question who were Dravidians but also
the question who were non-Brahmins came to be widely asked. The
leaders of the Justice Party claimed that the term ` non-Brahmins'
denoted all other than ` Brahmins'. But the leadership of the party
came mostly from the ` advanced ' or ` forward ' non-Brahmin Hindu
castes which according to one estimate formed about 19 per cent of
the population."
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8. Nadesan
Satyendra in the Tamil Heritage
"...in the end, Periyar
E.V.Ramasamy, the undoubted father of the Dravidian movement failed
to deliver on the promise of Dravida Nadu. E.V.R. failed where
Mohamed Ali Jinnah succeeded. It is true that the strategic
considerations of the ruling colonial power were different in each
case - and this had something to do with Jinnah’s success. But,
nevertheless, if ideology is concerned with moving a people to
action, the question may well be asked: why did E.V.R’s ideology
fail to deliver Dravida Nadu?... Support for the positive
contributions that E.V.R. made in the area of social reform and to
rational thought, should not prevent an examination of where it was
that he went wrong. Again, it may well be that E.V.R. represented a
necessary phase in the struggle of the Tamil people and given the
objective conditions of the 1920s and 1930s, E.V.R was right to
focus sharply on the immediate contradiction posed by 'upper' caste
dominance and mooda nambikai. But in the 21st century, there may be
a need to learn from E.V.R. - and not simply repeat that which he
said or did..."
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9.
திராவிடக் கட்சிகளின் தமிழ்த் தேசியம்
- Sanmugam Sabesan, 2005
“திராவிடன் என்ற மரபு
இனத்தை தி.மு.க முன் வைத்தது, தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கோட்பாட்டிற்குப்
புறம்பான நிலைப்பாடு. தமிழன் என்ற தேசிய இனத்தை மட்டும் முன்
வைத்திருக்க வேண்டும். அது மட்டுமல்ல பிற்காலத்தில் இக்கழகம் நாட்டால்
இந்தியன், இனத்தால் திராவிடன், மொழியால் தமிழன் என்று கூறிக்
கொள்ளத் தொடங்கியது. இது தேசிய இனவரையறைக்குப் புறம்பான உளறல்
மட்டுமல்ல, தமிழ்த் தேசியத்தை ஊனப்படுத்தும் போக்கும் ஆகும்.”
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10.Dravidian
Movement & Dalits - Gail Omvedt ...
"In Tamil Nadu there was a movement in the name of
anti-Brahmanism under the leadership of
Periyar.
It attracted Dalits, but after 30 years of power, the Dalits
understand that they are as badly-off - or worse-off - as they were
under the Brahmans. Under Dravidian rule, they have been attacked
and killed, their due share in government service is not given, they
are not allowed to rise.'' So says Dr. Krishnasami, leader of
the militant movement of the Dalit community known as ``Devendra
Kula Vellalas'' of southern Tamil Nadu and founder of a new
political party, Puthiya Tamilakam. This sense of disillusionment
with the Dravidian parties is pervasive among not only the Dalits
but also many militant non-Brahmans as well. The anti-caste
movements of the past, in Dr. Krishnasami's words, have failed to
achieve their main goals.
Mr. Thirumavalavan of the Liberation Panthers speaks of
discrimination and atrocities against those who fight against the
evil and adds: ``Castes keep their identity just as before, they
don't intermarry, there are no longer any
self-respect marriages.'' Like Dr. Krishnasami, he does not
reject the goals of the movement, arguing ``the Dalit struggle
has to be for the liberation of a nationality,'' and Hindutva
should be opposed through Tamil nationalism. He feels that
the existing Dravidian parties have betrayed the Dalits."
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11.On Hinduism, Caste,
& Indian 'Democracy' - Dr.Iniyan Elango, 1999
"..Hinduism
espouses the division of people into hierarchically placed groups
called “castes”. These castes are placed in a stepladder of
ascending superiority and descending inferiority. People who are
born into these castes should follow the ordained caste professions
and marry only within their caste through arranged marriages. The
beneficiaries of this system were the various Brahman castes who by
virtue of their birth were free to follow intellectual pursuits at
the advent of British colonial education making them modern India’s
intellectual, scientific, and bureaucratic class. The various
“Vysya” (trading) castes, placed below the Brahman castes and the
Royal (“Kshatriya”) castes, have enjoyed the monopoly in trading
activities for centuries, by virtue of their birth, thus becoming
modern India’s corporate and business class. The “Shudras” are the
various lower castes in the hierarchy who are considered as Hindus
and members of caste Hindu society...Rape is the most common risk
faced by a Dalit woman in the Hindu society. The English language
dictionary even now carries the word "Pariah" (which is the Tamil
name for the large population of Dalits living in Tamil Nadu in
India) to convey the meaning of "outcast". "
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12.
Racial Origin of Caste -Senthil Veliappa
"...The Vedic system of apartheid is one of the most dehumanizing
on record. Some Vaishnava apologists refuse to believe that caste is
racial in origin, and claim that it is due to profession. Such
people also claim that `conversion' to Hinduism is allowed and that
a person of one caste can become a person of another caste. This
arises due to their deliberate confusion of two distinct terms,
`varna' or race, and `jati' or professional guild. The fact is that
`varna' in Sanskrit denotes skin color, and implies race, while
`jati' is the professional guild which a person belongs to.."
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13.
Towards a Non
Brahmin Millenium - V.Geeta, S.V..Rajadurai
"..In a context when Brahmins claimed that
birth was no more a badge of status and then went ahead to act and
speak as if it was, non-Brahmins, comprising a range of castes and
communities, including both those who owned land and those who
laboured on it, claimed the contrary. They called attention to
practices of discrimination, humiliation and negation suffered on
account of their always already lowly birth, and came to articulate
a philosophy and practice of rights which would help them combat
inequality and humiliation..."
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14. Adheedhan
Ravikumar on Iyothee Thass & The Politics of Naming, August 2005
On 3 September, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is all
set to inaugurate National Center for Siddha Research in Chennai.
The research centre was originally to be named after Pandit C.
Iyothee Thass (1845-1914), a renowned practitioner of the Siddha
form of native Tamil medicine, and also a pioneer of the Tamil Dalit
movement. However, the name of Iyothee Thass has been dropped. The
foundation for the project was laid on March 27, 1999 by the then
Tamil Nadu chief minister M. Karunanidhi in the presence of then
Union Health Minister, Dalit Ezhilmalai, of the Pattali Makkal
Katchi (PMK). It was at the behest of Dalit Ezhilmalai that the
institute was named after Iyothee Thass.
After seven years, Iyothee Thass's name does not
figure anywhere. Dalit organizations are protesting. Se. Ku.
Tamilarasan of the Republican Party of India (RPI), a sitting MLA,
has announced a black flag demonstration against the prime minister
and union health minister Anbumani Ramadoss if they refuse to name
the institute after the Dalit leader.
The last decade of 20th century marks a significant
chapter in the history of Tamil Nadu as the Dalits waged a fearless
war against the shudra repression in the sociopolitical realm. The
caste war which started in the southern districts slowly spread to
the northern districts. The Vanniars designated a Most Backward
Class were the main perpetrators of atrocities against dalits in the
northern districts. To take the sting off allegations of being
casteist and anti-Dalit, the PMK, a party of Vanniars, made Dalit
Ezhilmalai a Union minister in the BJP-led government. Within a
year, Ezhilmalai demonstrated that he had a mind of his own and
started functioning independent of his political masters. It was
during Ezhilmalai's ministership and with his patronage that a
section of Tamil Dalits rediscovered Iyothee Thass.
The Dalit thinker's writings were reprinted in five
volumes through a publishing house called Dalit Sahitya Academy
owned by Ezhilmalai. Thass emerged as an icon of Dalit assertion in
the ideological sphere. Though the medical knowledge of Iyothee
Thass was recognized by many of his contemporaries, including
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott of the Theosophical Society and Thiru.
Vi. Kalyasasundaram, a famous Tamil scholar, the attempt made by
Dalit Ezhilmalai to name the Siddha research institute after him
must be understood in the context of the political assertion of
dalits in the 1990s.
Iyothee Thass is perhaps one among the several
Dalit icons whose names have been blacked out by mainstream history.
..
more
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15.
Early Evidence of Caste in South India - George L.Hart
"At first glance, caste seems a phenomenon which, if not simple,
is at least amenable to explanation and description; yet, as the
vast number of writings on the subject and their many different
points of view indicate, this is not the case...The modern form of
the caste system seems to have been the result of changes introduced
by the Brahmins and by kings who fostered the Hindu system...As
important as the Brahmins and the Brahmanical religion were, they
were not the creators of the caste system in South India. They
influenced the system profoundly, no doubt, but caste is found in
most of its manifestations before the Brahmins became prominent. Its
origins must be seen in the belief system that developed with the
agricultural civilization of South India: that sacred power in its
natural state is dangerous and demands groups outside of society
proper to control it. .."
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16..Rise
of Caste in Dravida Land
"...the DMK did keep the plank of cultural nationalism alive
until the killing of Rajiv Gandhi in Sriperumbudur. Ever since, the
spectre of Tamil nationalism evokes the ghosts of Sivarasan and
Dhanu, the suicide bombers of the LTTE. The cracking up of the
anti-Brahmin umbrella happened alongside the decline of cultural
nationalism as an emotional issue in Tamil Nadu. Improved literacy
and decline in the number of poor brought to the fore new political
and economic aspirations. The success of Vanniyar Sanghom, and later
its political outfit, the Pattali Makkal Katchi, was an eye opener
to others on power play.
The emergence of an educated class
among Dalits - Pallars in the south and Parayars in central Tamil
Nadu - has led to caste consolidation in these areas. The riots
during the mid-90s have polarised Dalits and dominant OBC groups
including the Thevars leading to the emergence of vote blocks.
Various elections since 1996 have demonstrated that these vote
blocks can decide poll outcomes. The DMK and the AIADMK had no
option but to agree to accommodate the new interests if they were
serious about winning elections... Alliterative oratory punctuated
with gems from classical texts will not be able to match the
arithmetic of castes..."
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17. The
Legend of Nandan: Nandan Kathai - Indira Parthasarathy , 2003
"Accounting for over 80 per cent of the landless agricultural
workers and doing menial jobs for the rest of society, Dalits have
been victims of class-related economic exploitation by upper-caste
landholders. Contrary to the expectations generated among people
during the freedom struggle, Independence has not brought any
significant change in their lives. Dalits' attempts at upward
mobility are often scorned and there has been no let-up in the
violence against them. In a gruesome incident that took place at
East Venmani in Tamil Nadu's Thanjavur district on December 25,
1968, 44 Dalit agricultural workers, including women and children,
were burnt alive by the land-owners of the village because they
demanded higher wages.."
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18.
Dalits at the Indian Institutes of Technology
"Nandanar, a dalit rebel-activist of the bhakti period, sought
access to the Shivaloganadar temple in Tiruppungur and the Nataraja
temple in Chidambaram, to which the 'untouchable' Pulaiyars provided
hereditary services (supplying leather for percussion instruments).
For this, the Brahman clergy derided him. The Tamil saivite
tradition went on to appropriate the political resistance of
Nandanar in the great Hindu habit of 'assimilation'. In Sekkizhar's
Peiryapuranam, a 12th century saivite hagiography, the dalit martyr
is made to undergo a 'conversion' - he gains access to worship only
after his caste-oppressed pulaiya body is 'purified' by the
sacrificial fire, and lo! he emerges as a Brahman sage - tuft, caste
thread, and all. Siva is shown to accept the dalit after he
undergoes a trial-by-fire. In reality, Nandanar was burnt to death.
Incinerated. Today, many dalit students at the Indian
Institutes of Technology have to survive a 'Preparatory Course' fire
and come out unscathed if they have to do B. Tech. Not much has
changed. The dalits fought for temple-entry; today they fight for
entry into IITs - temples of technology..."
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see also
Forum on Caste & the Tamil Nation.... |
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