TAMIL DIGITAL
RENAISSANCE பனை
ஓலையில்
இருந்து,
கணிப்பொறித்
திரை
வரை...
நான்காவது
தமிழ்
உதயமாகிறது
Nadesan Satyendra
May 1998, revised March 2007
"..The print revolution brought Tamil from the
ola leaves to paper, from the select few literati
to the many. The digital revolution is bringing
Tamil from paper to the computer and the
internet. Swaminathatha Iyer and
Thamotherampillai heralded
the Tamil renaissance in the
19th century. Today, a Tamil
digital renaissance is taking place - and is
helping to bring Tamil people together not simply
culturally but also in political and economic
terms..." Nadesan
Satyendra, May 1998
The agricultural revolution and the
river valley civilisations led to the rise of
the early cities of the Tamil people. The
mercantile expansion of the maritime powers of
Europe, led to the colonisation of the Tamil
homeland both in South India and in Eelam (known as
Ceylon to the British and as Sri Lanka to the
Sinhalase). The colonisation was led by Great
Britain, France, Portugal, and the Dutch. The
industrial revolution fuelled that expansion, led
to the breakdown of feudalism and the birth of
nation states in Europe - and, at the same time
stifled industrialisation and the organic growth of
nations in the colonial empires.
It was with the departure of the colonial
rulers, in the aftermath of the Second World War
that the nations of the fourth world have begun to
assert their identity. The Tamils are one such
nation.
Today, the third wave - the digital revolution -
is rendering State boundaries increasingly porous.
It has enabled the building of net communities and
is helping to bring a new sense of togetherness to
Tamils living in many lands and across distant
seas.
The paper presented by Scott
Crawford and Kekula Bray-Crawford at the Internet
Society Conference in 1995, provides useful
insights on Self Determination in the Information
Age and so does Piet Bakker in New
Nationalism: The Internet Crusade.
"The swiftly evolving information and
communication technologies and networking
infrastructures are playing an expanding role in
supporting the self-determination of peoples and
emergent nations...." Scott
Crawford and Kekula Bray-Crawford on Self
Determination in the Information Age,
1995
"Although it is sometimes argued that the
nation state is becoming less important and
we�re heading towards a global
village, evidence is also pointing the other way.
Nationalism is flourishing �
almost every armed conflict in the modern world
has nationalistic roots. One of the
most visible aspects of the new nationalism is
the spread of nationalistic online
activities...."Piet
Bakker in New Nationalism: The Internet Crusade,
2001
Alex Salmond, Scottish National Party Leader
has rightly remarked -
"As our world has become more complex and
inter-connected, the need for nations to be
independent with a direct say in regional and
global affairs has become more important - not
less. In 1945, there were only 51 members of the
new United Nations. In our new century, there are
nearly 200 independent UN members - and more than
30 of these have emerged since the end of the
Cold War. Thus in the modern world, the processes
of independence and interdependence are mutually
supportive and reinforcing. The political
imperative to share the same state for reasons of
building a large domestic market, or great power
projection, is a fundamentally outdated 19th-and
20th-century concept."
Dr.N.Kannan has explored some aspects of the
virtual reality of the Tamil world in a thoughtful
essay in Tamil. For more than 70 million Tamil
people, Nicholas Negroponte's 'being digital' is already taking on a
whole new meaning - and, it seems, may do so
increasingly in the years to come.
The low transaction cost of setting up in
cyberspace has fuelled an exponential growth in the
world wide web. The digital revolution is a great
leveller - but it is not only that:
"When the printing press was invented it
didn't merely level the playing field to make
information more freely available to all levels
of society, rather it revolutionised society by
providing a new, cheap method of disseminating
information to far more people than could be
accommodated by the handwritten copying of
manuscripts in monasteries. In the information
age the internet provides the opportunity to pass
on vast quantities of information at little
incremental cost to every form of trader,
investor and market counterpart. The old hegemony
of existing institutional investors, exchanges
and brokers is doomed to collapse under the 'new
reality'. Just as the clerics lost power after
the printing press, the information revolution
undermines the power of established financial
institutions." (Patrick Young & Thomas
Theys - Co-authors of the Capital Market Revolution
)
The digital revolution is undermining the power
of not only established 'financial' institutions,
but other institutions as well. It has begun to
give democracy a new dimension and the politically
awakening fourth world has found a new
instrument for self expression.
At the sametime, John Harrington's essay titled
'The Media, Framing, and
the Internet: Dominant Ideologies Persist '
introduces a necessary note of caution.
"...in earlier times violence and the threat
of physical force was used to maintain order. But
today control is pursued through very different
avenues; most effectively.... through cultural
control, or 'controlling the common sense'....
the dominated are encouraged to see the world as
the powerful do, using the various media in this
manner is obviously an excellent and efficient
means of control..."
Again, as Dr.Sathyabalan points out, there is
a need to recognise the impact of the market
economy and globalisation on the future of Tamil
language and Tamil culture.
"We cannot protect Tamil unless we
understand the economic logic of the so-called
'development' that the West seeks to sell to us.
That economic logic begins from the concept and
ideology of the market. Economics is linked to
exchange (irrespective of what is exchanged)...
The crux of the matter is that exchange is always
dominated by the powerful and therefore it is
more favourable to them since they can determine
the terms and conditions of that exchange/trade.
This is one of the key reasons for the poor and
poor nations becoming vulnerable, losing their
assets and becoming indebted.... While we may
take many initiatives towards promoting Tamil, we
should also oppose ... the attempt to globalise
cultures and commoditise our lives. This is
crucial to protect Tamil in the years to
come."
On the one hand, the digital revolution is
rendering State boundaries increasingly porous to
money, information and goods. On the other hand,
the existing world order, criminalises the movement
of persons to better their livelihood - and labels
those who do so as 'economic refugees'.
The remarks of Jeremy Seabrook, who has devoted
his life to writing about poverty and resistance in
both North and South, are not without a particular
urgency:
"Globalisation permits money and
goods to move around the world unimpeded,
yet criminalises the other
indispensable element of production, labour, when
it seeks to move to where it can command a decent
livelihood. And in the process, the
treasures of the earth are mined, ravaged and
consumed at an accelerating rate. Globalisation
is imperialism by another name; the world market
is an extension of the global imperial adventure
of the nineteenth century; and the majority of
the working class are now located not in the
tenements of Berlin and Glasgow, the immigrant
apartment blocks of Chicago and New York, but in
the terrible slums of Asia, the favelas of Latin
America, the townships of Africa...
The story of labour holds sober
lessons. It shows that it is not only as workers
that people need emancipation from the totalising
dogmas of neo-liberalism, but as consumers too,
as complete human beings. There is
a new urgency to the need to formulate a
richer form of
liberation than that envisaged by the
revolutionaries and pioneers of labour...
(Jeremy Seabrook in the
New Internationalist,
January/February 1999)
To the Tamil nation, of more than 70 million
people, struggling to be recognised, the digitising
of information whilst enabling easier means of
communication across state boundaries will also,
hopefully, help them, as a people, to formulate 'a
richer form of liberation than that envisaged by
the revolutionaries and pioneers of labour'.
The Digital Media continues to serve
as a 'force multiplier' in the Tamil Eelam
freedom struggle.
Digitisation opens up new economic opportunities
and economic markets of value to the Tamil people.
Tamil entrepreneurs are already tapping into this
market to profit by serving a felt need. Their
efforts will cement the growing togetherness of
the Tamil people to the extent
that they are also mindful of the need to
serve.
"I believe that leadership
is not a position. It's a combination of
something you are (your character) and something
you do (your skills and competence). In addition,
I believe the best model for leadership is that
of a servant leader, who
leads by serving the needs of people...."
(Ken Melrose Chairman and CEO of The Toro
Company, a Fortune 500 Company)
Tamil magazines, internet
newsgroups, mailing lists and websites
continue to multiply month by month. The classics of
Tamil language and literature are being
digitised and made available to hundreds
of thousands who had not read them before. A fresh
impetus has been given to new writers and poets,
musicians and
dancers.
The Wellcome Library in London has
mounted records in its online catalogue for around
2800 Tamil books on medicine and allied topics that
it purchased on microfilm from the Roja Muthiah
Research Library in Chennai. The collection is
publicly available for research, and the Library
would like to encourage the use of this collection. The Library
is privately-owned and is open, free of charge to
all researchers into medical history and allied
topics.
The decision of the Indian government (in New
Delhi) to privatise ISPs has encouraged this
growth. India with a large reservoir of science
graduates, software programmers, and system
analysts may be in a position to take advantage of
the digital revolution, though it had missed out on
the industrial revolution. The decision to
privatise was taken in November 1997 and was
implemented an year later in November 1998. In
1999, India had only 500,000 Internet users but
toady there are several millions.
Amongst the languages of India, Tamil has
already developed a considerable presence in the
Internet. Much research has gone into the
development of Tamil fonts and software
and the move towards standardisation of font
encoding will increase interoperability. Part
of this effort has come from those involved
in the struggle for Tamil Eelam, and the
need to secure international recognition of the
justice of that struggle. The rest
has come from dedicated individuals living in
many lands.
Tamil Nadu's Information Technology
policy statement in November 1997 set guidelines
for the state's role in the digital revolution and
promises to provide better connectivity and
facilitate better infrastructure. The declared
initiatives "included according 'industry status'
to software units; putting on par government and
private IT ventures; the setting up of Tanitec, the
IT institute; mooting a venture capital corpus for
IT industries and the 50 per cent 'floor space
index' relaxation for IT projects."
The state's proposal for
setting up a T-Net information backbone connecting
all district headquarters in the state, using the
cable TV network was an important breakthrough.
This was followed in February 1999 by Tamilnet'99 - an international
Tamil conference on the use of Tamil in Information
Technology and the announcement of the move to
establish a Tamil Internet Research
Centre.
"The 75 million-strong Tamil speaking
population worldwide has received a boost in
cyberspace, thanks to a $1.25 million local
language initiative launched by the Tamil Nadu
government to promote online content.... Several
semi-commercial efforts have thus far been
launched to globally coordinate Web publishing
and online business among the Tamil population,
such as ChennaiOnline, International Tamils Motivational
Movement, TamilNet and TamilNation...A
global Tamil village is in the making," said
Ramasamy Chidambaram Pillay, Minister for
Education and Science, Mauritius..." Tamil Nadu Implements Tamil
Language Net Plan, 1999
In June
1999, the Tamil Nadu government made order standardising
Tamil font encoding standard and unveiled a new
standardised Tamil keyboard. The Electronic Corporation of Tamil Nadu
website illustrates the growing role that the
internet has begun to play in Tamil Nadu and the
remarks of the Tamil Nadu
Chief Minister M.Karunanithi at the
Inaugration of the Tidel Park for IT Industries in
Chennai, July 2000 underlined the importance of
that growth:
"Out of the 23,000 engineers who
graduate every year from Tamilnadu, 13,000
are from information technology-related
disciplines, coming from institutions of
excellence such as Indian Institute. of Technology,
Chennai; Anna University; PSG College of Technology,
Coimbatore, etc. Software exports from
Tamilnadu have increased from a mere Rs. 36
crore in 1994-95 to a phenomenal Rs. 400
crore in 1997-98 and continues to grow at a
CAGR of over 70%. The hardware exports in
the year 1997-98 are in excess of Rs. 700
crore. With over 15,000 professionals
presently working in Tamilnadu, we have one
of the largest pools of software
professionals in the country."
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The Third International Tamil
Internet Conference 'Tamil
Internet 2000' held in Singapore launched
the International Forum for Information
Technology in Tamil (INFITT). The words of its
Executive Director, Mr.Arun
Mahizhnan at Tamil Internet 2000 sought to
encapsulated the elements of the Tamil digital
revolution:
"...As
with any journey, one has to start with the
first step - usually a small step. In the
Tamil diaspora's case, we have
taken several long strides in the short time
so far. We now have to chart the course for a
long journey. However, in true Internet
spirit, market forces will decide the fate of
this peregrination. The Tamil community is
fortunate, as it is resource rich in terms of
knowledge, technology, culture and creativity
which are critical success factors in the
webworld. Perhaps the three elements that
will shape Tamil Internet are community,
content, and commerce. In a world of
simultaneous aggregation and disaggregation,
the Tamil community should take advantage of
aggregation to leverage its
not inconsiderable strength of 65 million
members..." |
Tamil Internet 2001 in Kuala
Lumpur, Tamil Internet 2002 in San
Francisco, Tamil Internet 2003 - Chennai
and Tamil Internet 2004 - Singapore
reflect the continuing efforts of
INFITT to nurture the Tamil digital
revolution.
The Vanni Institute of
Technology was established by the International Tamil Technical
Professionals' Organization in June 2003 in the
town of Kilinochchi in Tamil Eelam. Its object was
to teach the latest technology to the people of
Tamil Eelam, generate high-tech employment in the
region and prepare them to compete in the
international market.
Many Tamil software professionals (in the so
called 'developed world') are looking at
returning to their homeland as the political and
economic climate becomes more attuned to their own
aspirations - for themselves and their children.
The digital revolution may be laying the
foundations for a reverse brain drain in the years
to come.
At the same time, masses of people in Tamil
Nadu, Malaysia, in Tamil Eelam and in the island
of Sri Lanka will benefit from their interaction
with the Tamil diaspora - an interaction which
has only just begun and an interaction which will
be a two way process. Digitisation is enabling
the Tamil diaspora to link back with its roots
more easily - nourish those roots and in turn be
nourished by the invigorating contact with the
ground. Globalisation and localisation are taking place at the
same time.
Mark P. Whitaker of the University of South
Carolina argued in 2004 -
".. Tamilnetcom, an Internet news
agency put together by a group of Sri Lankan
Tamils to address the Tamil diaspora and
influence English-speaking elites, subverted
international news coverage during Sri Lanka's
civil war by making "ironic" use of the
discursive styles of journalism and
anthropology... (and) that this constituted a
particular form of autoethnographic popular
anthropology that challenged professional
anthropology, and in some ways sought to replace
it."
In April 2005 Red Hat launched a Tamil version
of the Linux operating system -
"..Red Hat India, a provider of open source
solutions has launched a Tamil version of its Red
Hat Enterprise Linux operating system ..
In addition to the operating system, the Red Hat
Enterprise Linux version 4-Tamil includes office
suite with a word processor, spreadsheet,
presentation tool as well as a web browser
(Firefox) and e-mail client. ..Red Hat is
targeting the government and educational
institutions for marketing its software... The
cost for the entire Linux version-4 Tamil suite
subscription cost is Rs 1,950, which includes
telephonic and web-based technical support for
the first year and upgrades for seven
years..."
In the same month Microsoft
launched its Tamil interface in Tamil Nadu
-
"Microsoft India has launched Office Tamil
2003, a Tamil language interface that provides
users a complete range of applications. The
product was officially launched by M Karunanidhi, former chief
minister of Tamil Nadu, and Dayanidhi Maran,
Union minister of communication and information
technology..."
And Tamil Language Computing Initiatives
Launch at Chennai on 15 April 2005 was
marked by the Release of Free
�Tamil Software Tools &
Fonts�.
The Kanini
Project, Tamil Nadu led by major Tamil writer
Sujatha Rangarajan is aimed
at providing a 100% Tamil desktop PC with open
source applications to the Tamil community.
In
March 2007, Tamil Nadu finalized a tender for
40,000 Lenovo dual boot desktops which can be
installed with both Novell's Suse Linux and
Microsoft's Windows XP Starter Edition.
According to C. Umashankar, managing director of
Electronics Corporation of
Tamil Nadu (Elcot), the desktops will be
deployed across schools and government departments
in the state.
The print revolution brought Tamil from the ola
leaves to paper, from the select few literati to
the many. The digital revolution is bringing Tamil
from paper to the computer and the internet.
Swaminathatha Iyer and Thamotherampillai heralded the
Tamil renaissance in the 19th
century. Today, a Tamil digital renaissance
is taking place - and is helping to bring Tamil
people together not simply culturally but also in
political and economic terms.
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