The Making of a Sri 
			Lankan Tamil 
			Northeastern Herald, 1 November 2002  
			The Sri Lankan Tamils as a group of people with definitive traits 
			and characteristics that distinguish them socio-culturally and 
			anthropologically from other such groups are today better known 
			internationally than even the Tamils of south India. They are today 
			seen as a politically well integrated community though spread across 
			the world. 
			 
			They are very much concerned with the maintenance and fostering of 
			their cultural identity as Sri Lankan Tamils and are keen in 
			transmitting their traditions to their younger generation wherever 
			they live.A major feature of the feeling of oneness of this 
			community is that it cuts across religious barriers. In the 
			contemporary psyche of this society a Christian Sri Lankan Tamil is 
			as important an inheritor of Tamil culture as a Hindu Tamil. More 
			importantly this feeling of being Sri Lankan Tamil does not arise 
			from any notion of classical cultural heritage coming top down but a 
			consciousness that grows from within and arises from a shared 
			tradition of life.  
			 
			There is a certain degree of sturdiness and authenticity that 
			characterise this consciousness. The apparent diversities that one 
			sees in the community do not shake the essence of this unity. It 
			needs emphasis that the bedrock of the Sri Lankan Tamil identity is 
			the feeling that this island is the community�s mother country. And 
			that fact, namely its geography and history have shaped the cultural 
			traditions of the Sri Lankan Tamils. Their feeling is that they 
			belong to this island and nowhere else. And they are very proud of 
			it. It is this sense of pride that has made them use the term Eelam, 
			derived from the word Hela, and used in classical Tamil literature. 
			Not very many non-Tamil scholars know that the word Eelam has the 
			lexical meaning �the Island of Simhala�.  
			 
			It may come as a surprise to many that what is taken as the Sri 
			Lankan Tamil community is really a socio-cultural aggregate of 
			unevenly developed and, to a certain extent, once secluded, regions 
			of the present northeast. Quite often the regional specifics of 
			daily cultural existence of this community reveal marked differences 
			in spite of its basic commonness of social organisation, kinship 
			system and language. In fact a quarter century ago it was the 
			differences that were articulated more than the commonness. Starting 
			from the east, the following are the geographically easily 
			identifiable regions from which the Sri Lankan Tamil community 
			comes. 
			 
				 
				Batticaloa (including the Tamils of the Ampara district) 
				Trincomalee (reference is made here more to the residents of the 
				hinterlands than the townsfolk. 
				The Vanni (Tamil Vanni really consists of the old Vavuniya and 
				the Mullaithivu districts) 
				The Jaffna peninsula and the islands 
				The southwestern coast of Mannar and the Mannar Island.  
				The coast from Puttalam to Negombo.
  
			 
			Besides these, there are two important two important regions of 
			Tamil residence. They are Colombo (as the capital city) and the 
			upcountry region referred to as the Malayaham in contemporary Sri 
			Lankan Tamil. Today, the Sri Lankan Tamil identity draws itself 
			basically from the six regions. There is a general belief that 
			Jaffna is the most crucial region in the formation of Sri Lankan 
			Tamilness. The fact that there was a state formation from the 13th 
			to the 16th century in Jaffna lends credence to this belief. In 
			colonial times, especially in the British period, a Sri Lankan 
			response to colonialism and westernisation was conceptually 
			formulated first in Jaffna through
			Arumuga 
			Navalar who articulated the Hindu Tamil identity. Navalar cannot 
			be taken as anti-British. His concern was mainly with Hinduism and 
			the preservation of the Jaffna social order.  
			 
			One cannot therefore argue that despite his contribution to Tamil 
			writing, Navalar, can be taken as landmark in the rise of Sri Lankan 
			Tamilness. 
			Sir Ponnambalam Ramanathan who inherited his religio-cultural 
			legacy was opposed to democratising the Tamil society. (Today 
			democratisation constitutes the sheet anchor of Tamil solidarity). 
			The scripturalisation of Jaffna Hinduism by the Navalar school 
			peripheralised pre and non Sanskiritic Tamil forms of worship like 
			the rituals associated with Murugan and Kannaki amman.  
			 
			When the Youth Congress of Jaffna was established in the 1920�s its 
			appeal was based largely within the framework of Indian nationalism.
			 
			 
			In cultural terms the period of Navalar and thereafter show a steady 
			process of Sanskritisation as described by the Indian sociologist 
			M.N Srinivas (or �Agamaisation� in Navalar�s own words)in Jaffna. 
			This leads to a virtual erosion of the popular Tamil cults and 
			ritual traditions which constituted the strength of the culture of 
			the other Tamil regions.  
			 
			Due to the advantages Jaffna which enjoyed in social and political 
			terms, the Tamil problem was mainly articulated there. Until the 
			question of land became central to the Tamil question, the problems 
			of Jaffna tended to be presented and perceived as the problems of 
			the Sri Lankan Tamils. As for instance, the issue of state sector 
			employment was a problem mainly affecting Jaffna.  
			 
			The other major region, Batticaloa in a way stands in contrast to 
			the Sanskritic Hindu cultural traditions promoted by the Navalar 
			school in Jaffna. Even in those temples of high gods, rituals are 
			not that �Agamised� as in Jaffna. This quite evidently seen at the 
			Sivan Temple in Kokkaddicholai. Batticaloa retains the matriclan 
			Kudi system among all castes and the Muslims. In Jaffna the Kudi 
			system is dormant and is only perceptible among the less 
			Sanskritised caste groups. However, in Jaffna this Kudi system is 
			not as systematised as in Batticaloa. The region�s caste system is 
			less rigid and the cultic traditions are such that they do not 
			legitimise caste as in Sanskritised, Agamaised Hinduism. Thus there 
			is a better potential for social and political mobilisation which is 
			not possible to that extent in Jaffna. This political mobilisation 
			has been well demonstrated in the emergence of a primarily Tamil 
			educated youth taking up to politics and leadership.  
			 
			Given the fact that 
			Mr. S. J. V Chelvanayagam, the founder leader of the Federal 
			Party had to depend on a batch of Tamil educated youth from the 
			east, belonging to the rationalist movement there such as. S. E 
			Kamalanathan, S. D Sivanayagam, Saturday Kandasamy, Vettivel 
			Vinayagamoorthy, Ira Pathmanathan,, to mobilise the masses, the 
			pre-eminence of Batticaloa in Tamil politics was assured beyond 
			doubt. Quite in contrast to this political Tamil leadership in 
			Jaffna until the arrival of the militant youth was confined to the 
			English speaking professional leisure class, comprising mainly 
			lawyers. Except for K. Vanniasigham who was the master of wit and 
			irony, the young 
			Amithalingam inspired by the rhetoric of the Dravidian Movement 
			and M. Sivasithamparam, no major Tamil nationalist political leader 
			of Jaffna was a persuasive communicator in Tamil. 
			
 Batticaloa, with its comparatively better structured feudalism 
			aided by the geographical seclusion it enjoyed, especially in the 
			Paduvanakarai region, was able to retain a basic, uncorrupted 
			Tamilness.  
			 
			In contrast, the social history of Jaffna shows westernisation began 
			early in the 19th century and was very pervasive - very few places 
			in the peninsula were left untouched by inroads of modernity.  
			 
			It is a pity that the history of the Trincomalee district, 
			especially that of its hinterland, has not yet been properly 
			researched and recorded even in terms of the history of the entire 
			island. Post Magha Sri Lankan history has left it as a major blank! 
			 
			The traditions of the littoral villages of the Trincomalee, starting 
			from Thennameravady going down to Salli in the northern part of the 
			district and from Mutur to Verugal in its southern part is not yet 
			fully explored even though it is yet a repository of unique Tamil 
			traditions (perhaps it is not known to many that there are Tamil 
			speaking Veddhas living in this region). As in the case of 
			Batticaloa here too land tenure and social organisation kept 
			virtually intact many Tamil traditions and linguistic usage that had 
			eroded or vanished elsewhere.  
			 
			The Tamil Vanni was until the early sixties a closed book. Here too 
			there was less caste rigidity (because of the immense availability 
			of land) and marked continuity of non-Sanskritic Tamil rituals 
			especially those associated with birth, coming of age, marriage and 
			death. In fact this region was politicised only after the threat of 
			Sinhalization became real. And thus in the Vanni there was an 
			immediate fall back on the intrinsic Tamilness forgetting centuries 
			of Sinhala Tamil tranquillity in the region. The comparative 
			economic backwardness of the Vanni also made them to retain their 
			traditional Tamilness. 
			 
			Mannar presents a strikingly different picture. Here is a place with 
			a history of a wonderful balance among Hindus, Muslims and 
			Christians. This is perhaps historically the most important centre 
			of Catholic activity. Mannar served as a key transmitting point for 
			Catholicism in spreading the gospel among the Singhalese. There very 
			rich religio-literary/artistic traditions here which have not been 
			studied fully. They derive their historical roots from the Mathottam 
			(Mahatitha) days. The history of the pearl fishery of this coast 
			connecting it up to Tuticorin in south India on the one hand and 
			Chilaw on the other is has not been explored fully. The strong 
			Catholic tradition among the peasantry and fisher folk of Mannar has 
			strengthened their Tamilness. (Rather than retaining and co-opting 
			the social traditions of the past the Protestant Churches, through  
			modernisation/westernisation created a sense of Tamil awareness. 
			(c.f. the rediscovery of Tamil traditions by the American 
			Missionaries of Jaffna). Without going into the details of the 
			northwestern region where as mentioned in these columns earlier, 
			Sinhalisation which went along with Roman Catholicism and confining 
			ourselves to the present northeast, one should highlight three major 
			factors in the development of modern Sri Lankan Tamil consciousness. 
			They are: 
				1. The introduction of free education opened the flood gates 
				of talent and intellect from regions and groups which had 
				hitherto been kept out of education and upward social mobility.
				 
				 
				2. The introduction of vernacular education too helped these 
				regions and groups similarly and simultaneously.  
				 
				3. The defensive mechanisms that arose among all Sri Lankan 
				Tamils irrespective of their groups and regions due to the
				
				imposition of Sinhala only. 
			  
			Regarding point three, it would be useful to distinguish the two 
			important phases in the development of Sri Lankan Tamil 
			consciousness. The first came with the legislative enactments and 
			administrative impositions relating to the use of the Sinhala 
			language and the marginalisation of Tamil. This affected the 
			educated Tamils more than the Tamil peasantry, fisher folk and 
			artisans. In the second phase, begins when the state aided Sinhala 
			colonisation became a direct threat to the very existence of the 
			peasantry and fisher folk. It was at this point that Tamil awareness 
			was taken to the last Tamil man and woman.  
			 
			Speaking of the Sinhala impact, one should not forget the positive 
			influence of what happened in Sri Lankan Tamil theatre. It should be 
			said to the credit of Sarachandra that without his Maname 
			Vithiyanathan would not have lunched on his quest for the 
			rediscovery of the Tamil Kooththu. But what distinguishes this 
			interaction from the other impacts was that it was friendly and 
			acknowledging each other�s importance. While ancient political 
			history was being used to fight contemporary issues in Sri Lankan 
			politics, Tamil and Sinhala artists and scholars in the fields of 
			theatre and literature were speaking about the mutual contributions 
			of their respective cultures. These artists strove to construct what 
			the charlatans destroyed.  
			 
			Perhaps most crucial factor in the emergence of Sri Lankan Tamilness 
			was the arrival of the Tamil youth in the arena of politics. Coming 
			in first as a challenge to the political �mollifiers� among the 
			Tamils, they with the knowledge of Tamil only and with no chance 
			ever to learn Sinhala, demanded equal rights as sons and daughters 
			of this country. The tragic irony was that it was at this time 
			administrative and legislative barricades were put up, preventing 
			them from joining the national mainstream. The more those barricades 
			worked the more they felt their Tamilness, this time cutting across 
			the hitherto divisive castes and regions.  
			 
			And when the need for their political mobilisation arose the pattern 
			of recruitment showed that here were groups paying scant regard to 
			the taboos and social barriers and inhibitions which had weighed 
			heavily upon their preceding generations. The Sri Lankan Tamil 
			community had produced its own youthful dissidents and the state and 
			the security forces decided to treat them as they did the JVP. But 
			there was a distinction between a Sri Lankan government treating the 
			Sinhala miscreants and a Sinhala dominated state dealing with the 
			Tamil youth. This constituted the last straw on the already loaded 
			camel�s back. Sri Lankan Tamilness has not only become permanent but 
			started asserting its uniqueness.  
			 
			Supported by a rich tradition of art and literature which draw from 
			the resources of the variegated regions and subcultures of the 
			northeast, they are creating a new symphony which demands not only 
			close listening but deeper and sympathetic understanding.  
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