| 
				
				tamil nadu
 & Tamil Eelam freedom struggle
 
 `De-ideologisation of politics is the tragedy of Tamil Nadu'
 Professor K.Sivathamby in Frontline, 8 November 2002
 [see also 1.திராவிடக் 
				கட்சிகளின் தமிழ்த் தேசியம் 
				- Sanmugam Sabesan, March 
				2005
 2.What 
				Caused Veerappan? - Guna, October 2000
 3.Caste & the 
				Tamil Nation and
 4.'Bharathy, 
				Periyar E.V. Ramasamy & Tamil nationalism' in Tamil 
				Heriatge - the Tamils are an Ancient People and
 5.
				Selected 
Writings - Karthigesu Sivathamby]
 
 The Dravidian movement, which has dominated politics in Tamil 
			Nadu for about four decades, faces an identity crisis. Nothing 
			signifies this crisis better than the competition among the 
			Dravidian parties � the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, the All India 
			Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and the Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra 
			Kazhagam � to forge an electoral alliance and share power with the 
			Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh-driven Bharatiya Janata Party, which 
			stands for whatever the Dravidian movement set out to fight against.
			 The Dravidian parties, which miss no opportunity to describe 
			themselves as the true inheritors of the legacy of E.V. Ramaswamy 
			Periyar, whose rationalist world-view rejected the Vedas and the 
			``revealed truth'' of the scriptures, do not hesitate to find common 
			cause with the BJP, which has declared that ``the guiding principles 
			of Bharat will come from the great teachings of Vedas, ancient Hindu 
			and Indian scriptures". 
 Social justice, the birth cry of the Dravidian movement, is a 
			concept that has not been accepted by a major section of the upper 
			castes that form the social base of the BJP. The Sangh Parivar's 
			world-view, based on the principle of ``one nation, one culture'', 
			is essentially opposed to linguistic nationalism and social 
			reformism, the two major currents that converged to make the 
			Dravidian movement a powerful political force in Tamil Nadu. In 
			fact, the BJP stands for the division of States into smaller units 
			for ``administrative convenience'', much against the principle of 
			linguistic reorganisation of States � a principle that flows from 
			the democratic need to reflect the pluralistic character of Indian 
			society and which forms the basis of the federalist political 
			arrangement envisaged by the founding fathers of the Constitution. 
			In recent times, the demand of some States for greater financial 
			devolution has not found resonance from the parties of the Dravidian 
			movement, which was the champion of State autonomy.
 
 The deviation of these parties from the tenets of Dravidianism is 
			not just a matter of political opportunism. According to Karthigesu 
			Sivathamby, a prominent Tamil scholar from Sri Lanka who has closely 
			studied the evolution of the Dravidian movement, it is the 
			culmination of a process that started in the 1940s. Ideological 
			shifts took place at different periods in the history of the 
			Dravidian movement, he says.
 The crucial one, according to him, was the break between Periyar 
			and C.N. Annadurai, who founded the DMK. After the split, the 
			movement saw major deviations � from atheism to universal theism 
			(`one god, one community'); social reformism to electoral politics; 
			separatism to national integration.  These deviations were the result of, among other things, the 
			changes that took place in the post-Independence politics of India 
			and the limitation of the Dravidian ideology itself in that it 
			lacked an economic perspective. ` `There was no ideological coming of age,'' in the Dravidian 
			movement, says Sivathamby, who has done two insightful studies on 
			the Dravidian movement � Understanding the Dravidian Movement: 
			Problems and Perspectives (in English) and The Relevance of the 
			Dravidian Ideology Today: A Historical Perspective (in Tamil). The 
			ideological shifts culminated in the deideologisation of politics, 
			he says in this interview he gave R. Vijaya Sankar in Chennai 
			recently. (The interview was done as part of a study on ``The 
			post-1967 phase of the Dravidian movement'' under the Appan Menon 
			Memorial Award).  An Emeritus Professor of Tamil in the University of Jaffna, 
			Sivathamby, along with the late
			K. 
			Kailasapathy, is considered as an outstanding Tamil scholar from 
			Sri Lanka. His areas of study include social and cultural history of 
			Tamils, culture and communication among Tamils, Tamil drama, Sri 
			Lankan and Tamil Nadu politics, and so on. He has published about 50 
			monographs and books on these subjects. His research on the Sangam 
			period in Tamil history is considered a pioneering work. In 
			recognition of his scholarly achievements in Tamil studies, the 
			Tamil Nadu government conferred on him in 2000 the Thiru V. 
			Kalyanasundara Mudaliar Award. Sivathamby is a Visiting Professor of 
			Tamil to universities in India (the University of Madras and the 
			Jawaharlal Nehru University), England (Cambridge), Finland and 
			Norway. Excerpts from the interview: 
 In what historical context did Dravidianism emerge as an 
			ideology?
 
				"When one retraces the steps of the Dravidian movement, the 
				first and the more important one was the emergence of a new 
				`class' conglomeration of various non-Brahmin castes of the then 
				Madras Province � the Pillais, the Nairs, the Kammas, the Kapus 
				and the Reddys. Their emerging interest was such that they would 
				have invented some glue to stick them all together. An 
				ideological glue was a socio-political or an ideological 
				necessity at that time. And the emerging concept of Dravidianism 
				� from its original, and acknowledged, meaning of a section of a 
				group of languages � provided that glue. 
 The other crucial factor is the impact of the British rule and 
				the type of social dislocations it had created. In British 
				India, in the ideological need to bring India into one cultural 
				concept, the role played by, or the role ascribed to, Hinduism, 
				the Sanskrit texts and the great revelational books, from Max 
				Mueller to the Theosophical Society, especially Annie Besant, 
				creates a new awareness which all historians have recorded.
 
 And there were two responses to that. One was the Thani Thamizh 
				(Pure Tamil) Movement. It was a sort of an elaboration of the 
				Aryan-Dravidian ideology because
				
				Maraimalai Adigal, its founder, was never against 
				translations. He wrote long English prefaces for his Tamil 
				works.
 
 But the more important response was the so-called rationalism, 
				starting from people like Iyothee Thaas. In fact, except for a 
				few people, no one has taken this seriously at the level of 
				modern Indian historians. This question has not been tackled 
				properly. There was a growing movement of rationalism, 
				especially coming from the underprivileged classes. There were a 
				number of caste groups, associations of the so-called lower 
				castes � early Tamilians... the Pariars, the Pallars, or the Adi 
				Dravidas. The new life, the new encouragement given, to the 
				so-called Brahmanism was a reaction to this.
 
 Now we come to the crux of the problem � the inability of the 
				Congress leadership in Madras to relate social problems to 
				political demands. So the social contradictions were swept under 
				the carpet. So much so, as one leading non-Brahmin Congressite 
				told me, Gandhi himself was responsible for the political 
				launching of the 
				Self-Respect Movement in Madras because he did not 
				understand the sort of inner desperations, the inner workings of 
				the mind of the people during the Vaikom struggle. Leaders like 
				Thiru Vi Ka (V. Kalyanasundara Mudaliar) on the other hand were 
				trying to relate the entire Tamilian history to the question of 
				socio-political liberation. So the lid was off with the Vaikom 
				satyagraha.
 
 By this time the rationalist movement, through its association 
				with the world socialist movement, was becoming more scientific. 
				It was not merely rationalism in the Ingersolian sense. It was 
				becoming more and more scientific... promotion of socialism, and 
				so on. And this is seen in the immediate tie-up of M. 
				Singaravelu Chettiar and Periyar.
 
 The moment the major political victory of the freedom fighters 
				was achieved, the social contradictions in Tamil Nadu came to 
				the fore. In 1944 the Dravidar Kazhagam was formed. In 1949 it 
				broke up and the DMK came.
 
 There was a sort of social ferment. There was a sort of unfelt, 
				unheard of, unrecognised strength of this whole movement. Nehru 
				dismissed the movement. But within four years it became an 
				important force. "
 Does it mean that it was the nationalist response to the 
			social question or the lack of it that mainly contributed to the 
			growth of the Dravidian movement?  
				"Nehru was being idealistic. The southern leaders of the 
				Congress failed to bring up this question. Some of the Congress 
				leaders themselves were very progressive in their political 
				views but were not so progressive on the social issues. 
 After India won Independence and embarked on the path of 
				development, the hegemony of the Congress was questioned and 
				provincialism came to the fore for the first time, in the Madras 
				Province. In the context of the Congress' failure to take into 
				account the traditional social differences and social oppression 
				prevailing in Tamil Nadu and give importance to the perspectives 
				on social differences, the Dravidian movement emerged as an 
				expression of the socio-cultural grievances of some sections of 
				society. This expression was fully politicised with the 
				emergence of the DMK. It brought about a change, new styles of 
				leadership and new forms of recruitment and political 
				mobilisation in the political trajectory of Tamil Nadu. It 
				created a new political vocabulary in Tamil Nadu."
 Was there a kind of duality in the Congress' approach... 
			politically progressive and socially conservative?  
				"Yes. So the explosion in the Dravidian movement has to be 
				understood in these terms. It emerged basically as a movement of 
				grievances. It can now be recorded that these grievances were 
				the result of, one, caste inequalities and, two, the problem of 
				sharing of the government positions that the British rule was 
				prepared to give because of these inequalities. The second 
				aspect is the politics of the Justice Party. The Justice Party 
				only wanted a share in government jobs and education. And 
				Periyar gave an ideological dimension to the Justice movement. 
				Looking retrospectively at Periyarism per se, when it is worked 
				down to its basics, it speaks for the honour of the individual 
				or the respect for individual rights. These questions should 
				have been accommodated within the Congress or elsewhere without 
				any problem. But that is where I think the class distinctions 
				that arose out of the process of modernisation in Tamil Nadu or 
				in Madras came into play. The professionals who came from these 
				classes confused caste and class. So the Dravidian movement grew 
				as a movement of grievances." Where did the movement flounder?  
				"It floundered when it rejected religion as a whole in the 
				course of its fight against Brahmanism. Religion has a social 
				necessity � religion in a traditional, unequal, hierarchical 
				society which Marx himself accepts. Religion is ``the sigh of 
				the oppressed...'' 
 ``...the sigh of the oppressed... the heart of a heartless 
				world... the soul of a soulless environment..'' If you take the 
				topography of Hinduism in Tamil Nadu, there is a sharp 
				distinction between the stone-built temples with high walls and 
				high gopurams (towers) and those that lie outside them � the 
				Karumari Amman temples, the Grama Devathas where you find 
				clay-made structures. When there was this total rejection of all 
				these higher forms of religion what happened was one of the 
				things that complicated the whole notion of Sanskritisation 
				which (M.N.) Srinivas speaks of. When that was rejected people 
				went in for Karumari Amman and other local gods. The Dravidian 
				movement could not do anything with that. The very same force or 
				medium which went against religion was responsible for bringing 
				up the Amman temples and local gods.
 
 The second problem was that the socio-political grievances for 
				which the Dravidian movement gave expression were not cemented 
				with a basic economic perspective. The grievances were not given 
				an economic orientation in as much as they were given a 
				political orientation. This became evident during the period in 
				which the Dravidian movement wielded political power. One can 
				notice that with the acquisition of political power, differences 
				among the leaders acquired more importance. Owing to its 
				inability to forge a politico-economic outlook, the leadership 
				took the path of populism.
 
 Thirdly, when the questions of marriage registration, the 
				question of increasing the quotas were neglected, they naturally 
				affected the mobility of the lower groups, which included 
				Dalits. But the Dravidian movement stood for the upward social 
				mobility of the middle groups, whereas it should have, in terms 
				of its own ideology of rejection of religion and going in for 
				the fundamental rights of all the people, included Dalits also. 
				"
 Periyar strived for shudra-Dalit unity 
				But it never happened. In fact the Mandal Commission Report 
				refers to this. It said Tamil Nadu will be the last place 
				(where) the whole issue of Dalit-Other Backward Class conflict 
				will come up. But when the conflict came it exposed various 
				things. 
 The Mandal Commission talked about this. It observed that as 
				long as Tamil Nadu remained in the grip of Tamil cultural 
				revival, a real movement of backward classes would not emerge 
				there and that as in other States, the conflict between Dalits 
				and Other Backward Classes would not hide the 
				Brahmin-non-Brahmin divide. This, according to the Mandal 
				Commission, was because Dalits in Tamil Nadu had readily 
				accepted the Self-Respect Movement. But the Mandal Commission's 
				perspective was proved wrong within ten years of its 
				implementation. The question is whether the Dravidian movement's 
				attempts at cultural revival has created a commonness among the 
				non-Brahmin castes of Tamil Nadu.
 Where exactly did the Dravidian movement fail?  "When all that has been written on C.N. Annadurai is now put 
			together, one could detect a major problem he faced. He was able to 
			gather all these social grievances into one major political demand 
			but was not able to resolve them internally, in terms of organising 
			the party. I've quoted (P.) Ramamurthy in my book. He (Annadurai) 
			tells Ramamurthy: "We have come to power much earlier than we 
			expected.''  The break between Periyar and the DMK was crucial 
			in this. 
 A major shift took place in the Dravidian movement with the 
			formation of the DMK in 1949. It was at this stage that the 
			Dravidian movement emerged as a movement that gave full expression 
			to Tamil national consciousness. It underwent the following 
			important ideological shifts:
 
				1. The decision to take part in electoral politics (1956);
				 2. Moving away from atheism and advocating the principle of 
				`one god, one community';  3. The abandoning of the demand for a separate Dravida 
				homeland (1963).  As a result of this, there was no � for want of a better term 
				I would say � ideological coming of age. At this point, looking 
				back, with my Marxist background, I feel that Periyar knew that 
				going beyond social reform into political action demanded 
				something more for which he was not ready. Because political 
				demand has its own trajectory. In that sense Periyar was a 
				Gandhian.  Gandhi, as assessed by E.M.S. Namboodiripad in his The Mahatma 
			and the Ism? What was Periyar's limitation? Why did he not travel 
			that extra mile?  
				"I had earlier thought, from a Marxist point of view, that he 
				should have immediately politicised the whole thing. But the 
				problem was that the politics of Tamil Nadu had undergone change 
				in the post-colonial period. This is where I think 
				post-colonialism as a concept has to be seen. All those forces 
				which in colonial India promised relief or salvation from 
				British rule now turned themselves into political parties and 
				groups. As we got rid of colonialism the only radical force that 
				was with us, Netajism, shot itself out or kicked itself out of 
				India. There were various sections within the Congress. Rajaji 
				himself had a group. The Congress (O) and (I) came. Politics was 
				turning inwardly. And the Communist movement was banned. 
 I now think that � I don't know to what extent this caught the 
				imagination of Periyar � the type of social grievances that he 
				articulated could not have been done politically at the time. So 
				Periyar kept out of politics. It was an irony. The man who 
				should have demanded political action did not do it. The others 
				who wanted political action, politicised culture."
 What does it mean and imply � the idea of politicisation of 
			culture?  
				You cannot understand the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, its 
				rise, its strength and its weaknesses without understanding the 
				whole idea of politicisation of culture. It is basically a 
				communication strategy � the platform speech, the rhetoric, the 
				theatre, the newspaper and the film. 
 The issues that were neglected because of social contradictions 
				earlier, now came to the forefront in free India. And these 
				issues were politicised � the Tamil pandit not getting 
				recognition, Tamil Pongal being considered Maha Sankranthi, and 
				Tamil not getting a place, and so on. The DMK did not intend to 
				revive Tamil religion. They did not want to revive religion but 
				Tamil culture � the reification of the Sangam period... the 
				reification of Silappadhikaram. Silappadhikaram is full of 
				magic. I don't think there is any other work of that period 
				which is so full of magic, wonders and miracle. But a political 
				reading was done into the text... that it symbolised the glory 
				of the three kingdoms � Chera, Chola and Pandya.
 
 And in this process of politicisation of culture and looking 
				into individual grievances without an economic concept, ideology 
				slipped. As long as you had a man who understood the whole thing 
				it was okay. Annadurai died. And once MGR (M.G. Ramachandran) 
				came to power, or had come to command power, ideology was in the 
				back seat.
 
 The emergence of the Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam led by M.G. 
				Ramachandran brings about some major ideological shifts in the 
				Dravidian movement. First, though a tactical one, was the AIADMK 
				taking itself into the larger national circle. It marked the 
				beginning of a break from the DMK's stand on State autonomy. It 
				also marked a major shift from the basic atheistic aspect of the 
				Dravidian ideology. Although measures such as the enhancement of 
				reservation in jobs and the nutritious mid-day meal scheme for 
				schoolchildren made a major social impact, the distinct 
				socio-religious perspective of the Dravidian ideology was 
				eroded.
 What about DMK president M. Karunanidhi?  
				The problem is, Karunanidhi symbolises Tamil, the rhetoric. 
				The tragedy of Tamil Nadu is, as I look at it as a student of 
				Tamil literature and as a Marxist, there has been a 
				de-ideologisation of politics. As a Marxist I would say that the 
				basic problem was that the whole Dravidian ideology was not 
				shaped in terms of economics. 
 And there all-India politics matters. It is very interesting � 
				in spite of all these things, West Bengal continues to thrive, 
				and Kerala has a common sense of purpose. The question is this: 
				What was the Bengali spirit that the Communists could tap? What 
				was the Malayalam spirit that they could work on. What was the 
				Bengali spring on which Jyoti Basu stood? And what was the 
				Kerala spring on which EMS (Namboodiripad) stood? And what 
				happened in Tamil Nadu? Dravidianism is no more a coherent 
				ideology. It has been deideologised. And the tragedy is, without 
				another proper ideology taking its place.
 
 There is another aspect. The beginning is not within Tamil Nadu. 
				The emergence of provincialism. The glue that the British 
				government and the Indian intellectuals gave for India, the 
				great Indian culture and all that, was not able to hold this 
				country together. Provinicialisation or regionalisation of 
				politics and the politics of ruling India leads to all sorts of 
				alliances. Now provincialism has become a part of Indian polity. 
				So now there must be some lowest common factor, highest common 
				factor, or lowest common multiple to bind them together.
 What will be this new binding factor and when will it emerge, 
			if at all?  
				That is an all-India problem, not a Tamil Nadu problem. 
				Because Tamil Nadu is now in India and India has Tamil Nadu as a 
				part. So will you have a movement which will sort of make its 
				appeal on the basis of a common pool of grievances � a common 
				pool that will make Indians alive to socio-political debates and 
				at the same time stay within India? This is the real challenge 
				that awaits India's politics. 
 Anti-Brahmanism and later anti-casteism was the bedrock of the 
				Dravidian movement, especially when Periyar was actively in the 
				field. More than half a century later, Tamil Nadu has been 
				witness to the most vicious kind of clashes between Dalits and 
				backward communities such as Thevars and Vanniars. Does this 
				signify the Dravidan movement's failure? Has the Tamil national 
				identity failed to transcend caste identities?
 
 When you look at the way the policy of reservation in jobs and 
				education has worked in Tamil Nadu (as at the all-India level), 
				it has strongly reinforced the permanence of caste groups and 
				caste consciousness. This has created a historical 
				contradiction. That is, the movement that sought to reject the 
				socio-cultural hegemony of a particular caste has strengthened 
				the caste consciousness of the low and middle castes among which 
				it should have maintained equality. This is why caste clashes 
				have become a persistent phenomenon in the contemporary history 
				of Tamil Nadu.
 
 Despite the struggle against the caste system, the system was 
				reinforced owing to the absence of a change in the basic 
				socio-economic system and to the persistence of certain 
				``relations'' in sectors that have seen change. This will 
				complicate the process of democratisation in the long run. But 
				we should not forget the fact that such a situation has arisen 
				as a result of the process of democratisation. Had the Dravidian 
				movement taken the process of ``democratisation'' of the 
				non-Brahmin communities to its logical conclusion, the process 
				would have reached the oppressed sections of Tamil society.
 
 When you look back, it is clear that the process of 
				democratisation is not complete. The historical task remains 
				incomplete. In its efforts to get rid of castes, ironically, the 
				Dravidian movement has only strengthened castes. Caste identity 
				has become one's second self in Tamil Nadu.
 Despite the process of de-ideologisation, the Dravidian 
			parties put together still constitute a strong force in electoral 
			terms.  
				The social grievances that the Dravidian movement gave 
				expression to are real. The raison d'etre of Dravidian 
				consciousness has been the insurmountability of these 
				grievances. Also the movement has shown the possibilities of 
				upward social mobility for the middle caste groups and the 
				Dravidian parties still command support from these sections.  If the grievances are real, is there a possibility of the 
			grievances being channelled into a separatist path again? 
				I rule out the possibility of Tamil 
				Nadu going back to separatism. History will not permit it. Tamil 
				consciousness emerged when it could not express itself within 
				India.  It took about 10 years for independent India to recognise the 
				importance of regional languages and reorganise the States on a 
				linguistic basis. Now one sees oneself not just as a Tamil but 
				as an Indian Tamil. Young students and their parents see 
				themselves and their upward mobility in terms of entire India. 
				Employability is no longer confined to Tamil Nadu. Also in 
				matters of demand and supply, the all-India market is a major 
				consideration. As things stand, the average enterprising 
				non-Brahmin Tamil (Nadu) parents feel that education in the 
				English medium is, ironically, the only deterrent against 
				Brahmanism, which would give them a place in the all-India 
				market; in such a situation, separatism cannot find a place. 
 |