The
Tamils
Prof. A. Veluppillai,1996
1. Introduction.
The Tamils can be defined as people, having Tamil as their mother tongue.
Tamil language is a member of the Dravidian/ South Indian family of languages.
The four southernmost states of India- tamiz Nadu, kERaLa, karNAdaka, and
Andra Pradesh- are predominantly linguistically Dravidian, each state carved
out on the basis of predominance of the four major Dravidian languages.
The Dravidian languages are mother tongues of about a quarter of the Indian
population. Though about 80% of the speakers are found within the borders
of these four South Indian states, a number of Dravidian languages have
been identified in other parts of South Asia. Among the tribal languages
of Central India, almost extending to the borders of Bengal, distinct from
the Austro-Asiatic family of languages, many Dravidian languages have been
identified. The northern reaches of this family have been located in isolated
settlements in Nepal and Pakistan. The Brahui speakers are found in the
hills of Baluchistan, almost on the borders of Pakistan, Afghanistan and
Iran. So, the Dravidian family of languages is a South Asian family of
languages in one sense. About 22 languages are classified as belonging
to the Dravidian family and on linguisic criteria, sub-division as North,
Central and South Dravidian are made. Tamils alone number about 60 million
people.
South India and Sri Lanka have been homelands of the Tamils, from the
beginning of recorded history. The region, roughly covered by the modern
states of tamiz NAdu and Kerala are identified as ancient tamizakam up
to about 10th century AD. Even though some evidence exists for Tamil influence
, and Tamil presence in Sri Lanka is noticeable from very early times,
strong Tamil presence and influence in Sri Lanka, from about the 10th century.
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Tamils migrated to some British colonies
in search of employment and thus there are substantial Tamil populations
in Malaysia, Singapore, Mauritius, Fiji and South Africa. After the World
War II, a movement of Tamil professionals to UK, USA, Australia and New
Zealand is proceeding continuously. Due to the recent civil war type situation
in Sri Lanka, many thousands of Tamils in about 20 countries, with large
numbers in Canada, Germany, France, and Switzerland. Within the Nordic
countries, Norway and Denmark have more Tamils than weden.
2. Present Situation regarding religious affiliations of the Tamils.
Hinduism, Christianity and Islam are the major religions among the Tamils
in that order: Hindus are counted as forming more than 80% of the population
and the other religions are reckoned to be less than 20% of the population.
Some of the other religions like Jainism, Buddhism have relatively few
adherents. The Tamil Christians include both Roman Catholics as well as
the Protestants. The Muslims are mainly Sunni. The situation is fairly
stable, only Christian missions, said to be marginally successful in making
new converts. The general atmosphere is religious toleration and harmony.
The official policy of India is secularism,,,. Overall, Hinduism is
neither a missionary nor an exclusive religion. To put it in a negative
way, the Hindus withdraw into themselves and don't react except when they
feel threatened. Many scholars have commented on the tolerant attitude
of the Hindus. Some recent developments in India challenges this view.
But tamiz Nadu and the Tamils, generally keep up the Tamil tradition of
tolerance, There is no Hindu extremism worth mentioning among the Tamils.
No serious claim is put forward that Hinduism should have special privileges,
compared to other religions.
3. The Dravidian Hypothesis about the people of the Indus valley
ivilization.
The Tamils have legends that their ancient history extends up to about
ten thousand years, sea swallowing up their lands twice and kings establishing
new capitals and fostering Tamil in three successive academies. The legend
s first mentioned in the commentary of kaLavijal, which is assigned to
about 8th century AD. This legend is one of the reasons- one of the excuses-
for connecting up the Tamil civilization with some prehistoric ancient
civilizations, whose identity and continuity poses special problems.
The records of the Indus Valley Civilization have not been satisfactorily
deciphered. Material remains have been interpreted by archeologists. There
cannot be finality, till a satisfactory reading of the records. Material
remains are generally interpreted in the light of elements in the later
Hinduism. Siva worship in the form of pacupati and NadaRajA, Sakti worship
and some other deductions are made. In the 1950s, Father Heras argued for
the Dravidian identity of the Indus Valley people. In the 1960s, the Scandinavian
Institute of Asian Studies issued many announcements, trying to establish
this identity. This hypothesis is still defended seriously by Japanese
Professor Noboru Karashima, President of the International Association
for Tamil Research in 1994.
4. The Dravidian Identity of the Sumerians.
This is another hypothesis that is strongly advocated by certain scholars.
The Sumerian records have been deciphered and material remains have been
interpreted satisfactorily. Linguistic and cultural affinities between
the Sumerians and the Tamils, separated by much more than a millennia,
are pointed out. The late Professor A. catAcivam (A.Sathasivam) from Sri
Lanka and Dr. ulakaNAtan muttarAjan (Loganathan Muttarayan) from Malaysia
are examples. Eminent historians of the caliber of K.A. Nilakanda cAttiri
(Nilakantta Sastri), have pointed out similarities in temple worship. A
hypothesis, connecting the ancestors of the Dravidians, if not the Tamils.
to the Mediterranean area, is still advocated by certain scholars.
5. A study based on the historical times.
Literary, epigraphical and archeological sources existt for the study
of religious traditions of the Tamils for about 2000 years. As materials
exist for such a long period of time, it is only fitting that we pay just
passing attention to doubtful prehistoric connections and concentrate on
the historical period. Tamil is one of the two classical languages of India,
along with Sanskrit. There are Tamil literary texts and Tamil inscriptions,
dated roughly, round about the beginning of the Christian era. As in most
of ancient and medieval Indian texts, controversies exist on the exact
dates of early Tamil records and documents. We have to be dependent on
rough calculations and the most probable dates. Some distinct historical
periods: (1) 100 B.C to 300 A.D.; (2) 300 A.D. to 600 A.D.; (3) 600 A.D.
to 1200 A.D.; (4) 1200 A.D. to 1800 A.D.; and (5) 1800 A.D. to today.
5.1 cangkam (Academy) period.
The general designation for the early period is cangkam period, because
of the strong tradition that three academies existed in the remote past
and that what we get as early literary texts were those approved by those
academies. The main source for the early period is literary evidence. From
a study of the literary evidence, some scholars argue that the Tamil society
was secular then. It is only a relative term in the sense that when compared
to early North Indian literature and later Tamil literature, a distinctiveness
of relative secularism can be pointed out.
Some indigenous elements of religion, peculiar to the Tamils, have been
noticed in the earliest available stratum of Tamil literature. A portion
of this early Tamil poetry is identified as Heroic poetry. There were three
Tamil Kingdoms - cEra, cOLa and pAnhdija - and many independent chieftaincies
in the early period and there were intermittent and internecine wars and
battles for violent state formation. maRam (valour) was the celebrated
theme.
5.1.1. Nadukal (planted stone).
The worship for the fallen brave warriors is one of the popular forms
of worship in early Tamil poetry. tolkAppijam gives an elaborate description
in six stages in the planting of stone, beginning with looking for a suitable
stone and ending in the institution of formal worship. The portrait of
the hero is often decorated with peacock feathers. Some poems refer to
spears and shields erected around the planted stones. Offering of Naravam
(toddy = alcohol) to the spirit of the fallen hero, represented in the
planted stone, is mentioned in some verses.
5.1.2. veRijAdal (dance in ecstasy).
The dance in ecstasy is found mainly in the worship of murukan/muruku
(youth, beauty, god-head). He was the god of the hilly region. The name
of god or archetype was different in each landscape among the five different
landscapes of the Tamil land. mAjOn (dark male)/ mAl (great one) was the
god of the forest or pastoral landscape. koRRavy (lady of victory) was
the goddess of ferocious appearance for the arid or waste land. vEl (spear)
was the main weapon of murukan. He is a warrior-hero par excellence, but
is often mentioned in akam (love) poetry, the other main theme of the earliest
stratum of Tamil literature. Love-sickness of young girls in separation
from their lovers seem to be generally interpreted as caused by murukan
who needs propitiation in worship. The organizer and chief priest of the
worship was vElan (man with spear). A number of verses refer to the sacrifice
of the blood of ram and offering of toddy in the ritual. The veRijAdal
occurred in koRRavy worship also, Later, murukan was considered son of
koRRavy. A group dance of girls, known as kuravyjAdal, is also associated
with murukan worship. Some elements of ecstasy were also involved in this
dance. This dance occurred in mAjOn worship also. murukan has continued
to be very popular among the Tamils and he is frequently hailed as the
Tamil god. Kamil Zvelebil had chosen to name his first volume on Tamil
literature, as The smile of murukan. 5.1.3. cinyc cuRAvin kOdu (pregnant
Shark bone).
A solitary verse mentions this worship in the littoral region. On full
moon day, fishermen and families get drunk and worship. This may be the
peculiar worship of Nejtal, (littoral) landscape.
5.1.4. kanhdu (post, stone.)
This worship is often mentioned in connection with manRu (public meeting
place). Lighting of lamps by women is specifically referred to in some
verses. Floor of the manRu was smeared with cow-dung.
5.1.5. Influence of North Indian religious traditions.
Jaina monks lived in hills around maturai, the capittal of the pAnhdijAs
and in a few other places. Early Tamil Brahmi inscriptions of round about
the beginning of the Christian era, testify to this. Some kings and chieftains
were responsive to Brahmins and Vedic sacrifices. Many instances can be
quoted to show that beliefs in the existence of the ujir (soul), maRu piRappu
(rebirth) and vAnOr ulaku (world of celestial beings) existed among the
Tamils even in that early period.
5.2. Post-cangkam Period 300 A.D. to 600 A.D.
Politically in this period, the Tamils were under foreign kalabhra domination.
Their political history is characterized by many historians as a dark period.
Buddhism and Jainism appear to have prospered during this period. Some
notable literary works are assigned to this period. The early Tamil kAppijangkaL,
(epics) are assigned to this age, as for examples, cilappatikAram, a Jaina
epic and manhimEkaly, a Buddhist epic. aRam, the equivalent of Sanskrit
dharma , becomes the main theme of literary works. Eleven didactic works
were written in this period. Their main purpose seems to be reformation
of the society - bringing back values which were reversed during the Heroic
Age.
tirukkuRaL the most outstanding work in Tamil, belongs to this period.
This sets the tone of didactic works. According to Albert Schweitzer's
evaluation in his book, Indian Thoughts and its Development, tirukkuRaL
represents a synthesis of much of the best in Indian thought up to that
time with a positive approach to life. The positive approach to life ,
also called life-affirmation, seems to owe its influence to the literary
traditions of the Academy period. varnAcirama dharma, the central concept
of the Brahminical religion, prescribing different rules for the four-fold
castes and for the four stages of human life, has not even been mentioned
in this work. This work is of universal appeal. The Tamil society never
had the varnha system. There was no cattiryjAs, and the vycijAs. The ruling
kings and their ancestors, were sometimes eulogized and flattered as the
cattirijAs, but there was no consequent development from this position.
The non-Brahmin high caste Tamils resented the term - cUttirAs, the name
of the fourth caste. So, what we get in the Tamil works, equivalent to
the Sanskrit dharmasastras, is sAmAnija dharma applicable to every human
being. Religious affiliation of the author is not known.
ThiruvaLLuvar, the author, has kept himself clear of external trappings
of different religions. The Hindus, the Jains, and the Buddhists have claimed
this work as their own. Many Christian missionaries and British administrators
have praised this work, even tracing Christian influence in the work. This
work, consisting of 1330 verses, has been translated into many languages.
Other didactic works, follow the lead by tirukkuRaL. The authors are identified
as Jaina or Brahminical, mainly by their invocation verses. Otherwise,
there are no deep differences in the contents of these works. NAladijAr
the second most important work with 400 verses, ascribed to Jaina authorship
and with a noticeable slant to life-negation, had been translated into
English by G.U. Pope almost a century ago. tirukkuRaL and NAladijAr can
be said to constitute the ethical core of the religious traditions of the
Tamils. It is important to note here that varnAcirama dharma had not been
brought into Tamil literature. Though the Tamils also developed an evil
and pernicious caste system, in certain respects, quite distinct from the
varnha system, in subsequent periods, that system had no sanction either
in Tamil or in Sanskrit texts.
5.3. Bhakti Period 600 A.D. to 1200 A. D.
The Tamils were under the Pallava and the pAnhdija kingdoms during the
earlier half of this period and under the cOLa Empire during the latter
half of the same. The Tamil power reached its zenith under the cOLa Empire,
which also ruled many non- Tamil communities in South India and Sri Lanka.
In the history of religion and literature, this period is referred to as
the bhakti period. Bhakti is a Sanskrit word, meaning devotion. This Sanskrit
word and the Tamilicised form patti became popular quite late. The bhaktti
poetry seems to be a curious transformation of literary traditions of the
Academy period. Both akam tradition, dealing with love between man and
woman and puRam tradition, dealing with heroism and generosity of warriors
are combined in a strange manner and the position of man as well as hero
goes to god, while the position of woman and hero-worshipper go to the
devotee. A. K. Ramanujan has recently brought out a good translation into
English of some of these early poems. Though the origins of the concept
of bhakti are traceable in Sanskrit sources, bhakti movement as such originated
in the Tamil land. Personal relationship between the devotee and the god
was its main characteristic, and worship became a fervent personal experience
in response to divine grace. Religion for the devotees is no longer a matter
of contemplation of a transcendent, impersonal absolute, but of ecstatic
response to an intensely personal experience. This leads to a profound
sense of the devotee s own shortcomings and to a trustful recourse to the
god s forgiveness, with the whole personality being surrendered to the
deity. It is this position which inspired the scholar - missionary G. U.
Pope's evaluation - which seems to be somewhat superficial - of this religion
as the religion, closest to Christianity, among Indian religions. Norman
Cutler has worked on the poetics of Tamil devotion.
The vedic religion - the Brahminical religion - becomes a popular religion
of the Tamils, through the bhakti movement. The Sanskrit sources contributed
another important element for this religion. This religion owes a massive
debt to the Sanskrit purAnhAs and epics. The temple rituals, prescribed
in the Sanskrit AkamAs, became very important. From the very beginning,
sectarian differences are noticeable, may be because of the influence of
purAnhAs. Saiva and Vaishnava movements were presented to the Tamil people
as Tamil religions This was made possible by religious synchronism. murukan
becomes identified with Skanda and kArttikEja and related to Siva as a
son, koRRavy becomes identified with umA, Siva's consort and as murukan
s mother, and mAjOn becomes identified with Vishnu. Saivism is the form
of Hinduism, very popular among the Tamils.
The Saiva movement was relatively more involved in religious conflicts
and controversies. Saint Appar, a convert from Jainism to Saivism, converted
the Pallava ruler from Jainism to Saivism. His poetry seems to be a strange
mixture of Jaina world-view and Siva bhakti. Even though he expresses his
regret for having wasted much of his life as a Jaina monk, his poetry seems
to be a form of synchronism between Jainism and Saivism. The Jaina world-view
and Jaina didactic works become acceptable to the Saivites. Saint Campanthar,
a younger contemporary of saint Appar, converted the pAnhdija ruler from
Jainism to Saivism.. He defeated the Buddhists in another controversy.
As a Brahmin, he was a champion of Vedic religion against the Jains and
the Buddhists. There are plenty of polemical references about the Jains
and the Buddhists in his bhakti poetry. Saint Manikkavasagar was also said
to have defeated the Lankan Buddhists in a controversy, but there is no
trace of polemics in his compositions.
For about a millennium, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism were the three
important religions among the Tamils. The triangular contest for the loyalty
of the Tamils led to the growth of polemical literature to which adherents
of all religions contributed. The Buddhist contribution is seen in the
manhimEkaly and the kunhdalakEci, the Jaina contribution in the NIlakEci
and the Saiva contribution in the civagnAnacittijAr. But overall, conflicts
are rare, especially after Hinduism consolidated its position. The Saiva
or Vaishnava rulers, were generally generous to all the Hindus, irrespective
of their personal inclinations and also patronized the Jaina and Buddhist
religious establishments of their subjects.
A very important text for Tamil Saivism is the periya purAnham, the
Saiva hagiology of 63 NajanmAr, (saint lords), all of whom lived in South
India and attained heaven through their bhakti to Siva. This work influenced
vIra Saivism of Karnataka. Saint Manikkavasagar's devotional poems are
acknowledged as the most moving in Tamil literature. G. U. Pope brought
a translation of the tiruvAcakam into English. almost a century ago. Glenn
Yocum has published a study of tiruvAcakam recently. The devotional poems
of Saint cuNtarar, numbering about a tthousand verses, had been translated
by David Shulman recently. The Twelve Sacred Books of the Tamil Saivas
were complete in the 12th century A.D. For the vast majority of the Tamil
Saivites, the basic works of their religion are these Twelve Sacred Books.
They don't look to any Sanskrit work for guidance.
The Vaishnava bhakti movement was dominated by twelve AzvArs - those
who contemplate deeply on Vishnu. They were authors of tivvijapirapaNtam
(sacred composition) of four thousand verses. Compared to the saiva devotional
poems, the Vaishnava devotional poems make greater use of akam tradition
and less of puRam tradition of the classical period. Friedhelm Hardy had
brought out a fine publication recently on the history of this movement.
Some important saints are AdAL, kulacEkarar, tirumangky and NammAzvAr.
The works of the last one are very important and are sometimes referred
to as Tamil Vedas. Though less influential in Tamil land, the Vaishnavite
bhakti movement exerted great influence throughout India, during the later
periods.
The temple worship seems to be a prominent feature from the beginning
of the bhakti movement. Temples, built of durable material, first rock-cut
and then made of stone, made their appearance from the 8th century. Huge
stone temples were built by the cOLa Emperors and their successors throughout
tamizNAdu. The temples became the centres, around which many aspects of
life of the people were organized. Architects and sculptors were needed
in the construction activities. Music, dance, and drama were patronized
by the Hindu temples. These temples were generally rich, having been owners
of land other forms of wealthy. They employed people and helped them in
times of distress. The big temples are still great pilgrim centres to which
the Tamil Hindus from all over the world yearn to visit. Most of the big
temples in tamiz Nadu have myths of their own. David Shulman has made an
interpretation of these myths recently. The big temples are the main attraction
for the modern tourists in tamiz NAdu.
5.4. Age of Religious Philosophy. 1200-1800 AD.
The beginnings of philosophical speculations in India are traced to
the Upanishads, which originated in North India and which are in Sanskrit.
Buddhism dominated the philosophical field for many centuries and South
India began to make significant contributions. The definitely identifiable
contribution from tamizNAdu can be said to start from the 8th century A.D.
Many religious philosophical doctrines of South Indian origin have been
written in Sanskrit, may be because that language was the lingua-franca
throughout the South Asian sub-continent in that age. In the eighth entury,
Sanskrit the propounder of Advita (monoism) hailed from Kerala, a part
of ancient Tamil land. His Vedanta philosophy assimilated much of the world-view
of the Buddhists and gave it a new twist. He is said to have toured throughout
the sub-continent and engaged in debates with the Buddhists. What he had
taken over from Buddhism is said to have helped him o win over large number
of adherents of Buddhism which was already in decay in India at that time.
In the eleventh-twelfth centuries, Ramanuja, the propounder of (Visistadvita-qalified
monoism) hailed from the present tamizNAdu. He was strongly influenced
by the Vaishnava bhakti literature, based on the Puranic religion. He was
better received in Karnataka than in tamiz Nadu. Ramanuja wrote in Sanskrit,
so his impact among the Tamils is relatively limited. The history of Vaishnavism
in tamizNAdu becomes a little complicated as the later Vijayanagar Emperors
and the Nayak kings who were mainly Telugu origin gave it sustenance. They
patronized Sanskrit and gave importance to Sanskrit sources. Soon, there
was a schism in tamizNAdu Vaishnavism into vadakaly, (northern school)
and tenkaly, (southern chool) sects. The southern school, looks mainly
to the Tamil Vaishnava texts for inspiration.
The thirteenth and the fourteenth centuries saw the appearance of the
fourteen works of Saiva Siddhanta philosophy in Tamil.The basic Tamil work
is civagnanapOtam. There is still a big controversy on whether this work
is a translation of twelve aphorisms from an obscure or unattested portion
of (Rauravagama). Saiva Siddhanta is a South Indian religion, found among
the Tamils only. Besides the canonical fourteen works, there are subsidiary
works and commentaries in Tamil only. Agamas are accorded a special status
while the Vedas only a general status as basic works to the philosophy.
The importance given to the Agamas makes South Indian Saivism, a distinctive
form of Hinduism, in some respects. The Tamils try to derive the basic
framework of the system from their own Twelve Sacred Books.
The development of many philosophical schools led to development of
sectarian conflicts and later attempts to patch them up, especially by
mystic poets like Saint tAjumAnavar in the 18th century and Saint IrAmalingkar
in the 19th century. camaracam, (harmony) becomes the main theme. The former
praises the CLEVER cittar, (poets of powers) who found harmony between
Vedanta and Siddhanta. The latter founded cutta camaraca canmArkka cangkam,
a Society for Religious Wisdom of Pure Harmony.
5.5. Modern Period.
Islam and Christianity are important minority religions in this period.
Islam came to Tamils in two ways. Arab traders intermarried with local
eople and built up a community, who now speak Tamil or Malayalam. Muslim
invaders from the North had temporary success in the South and their descendants
speak Urdu. As in Vaishnavism, there is some split in the attitude of the
Muslims towards Tamil. Many of them are proud to claim Tamil as their language
and they have made substantial contributions to the development of Tamil
for more than six hundred years.
The Syrian Christian community, in the West coast, claims that they
were the descendants of native converts of the Apostle Saint Thomas, from
the first century A.D. They have preserved some copper plates, which according
to them, were received by Saint Thomas from native rulers of his time.
Modern epigraphists have dated the these plates in the ninth and the thirteenth
centuries. It is now clear that this community is enjoying certain privileges
in Kerala at least from the 9th century. Like the Christian trading community,
a small Jewish trading community also in the West coast, gained privileges
from the native Hindu rulers in the 10th century, as testified by a copper
plate in the possession of their descendants. Roman Catholicism was introduced
by the Portuguese in the 16th century. Protestantism was introduced by
the Dutch in the 17th century. The British ruled over the entire Tamil
homeland for 11/2 centuries - roughly from 1800 to 1950. Westernization
and Modernization are going on, especially from the beginning of British
rule and they are powerful forces even now. Christian missionaries have
been very active and have considerable success in proselytisation. There
was again Tamil polemical literature, reflecting a triangular contest among
the Hindus, the Roman Catholics and the Protestants, especially between
1850 and 1925.
As for Jainism and Buddhism, the former continues to flicker, while
the latter disappeared completely and has taken a new birth recently. Its
rebirth is as a religion of protest, as a religion of the down-trodden.
The people who became underprivileged and untouchable in the Hindu society
felt that even Islam and Christianity could not bring them salvation and
chose to accept Buddhism, on the advice of the late Dr. Ambedkar, their
leader. Only a section of the underprivileged community called Dalits in
India became converts. Their problem of integration into the rest of the
population cries for solution.
The appeals to fundamentals of Brahminical Hinduism, as it is understood
in North India, do not seem to have its echo among Tamils, because of the
character of Hinduism in tamizNAdu. A few months ago, Prof. Saraswathy
Vijayavenugopal, a folklorist from Madurai University in South India, in
a lecture in Uppsala, made the observation that there seem to be many folk
religions among the Hindu Tamils. Synchronization - continuing synchronism
of different religions - seems to be a living process within what is called
Hinduism among Tamils. The influence of political Hinduism, exemplified
by Bharatiya Janata Party and Vishva Hindu Parishad, which champion Brahminical
values, is negligible among Tamils. The last half century in tamizNAdu
is dominated by a powerful socio-political Dravidian movement, against
North Indian influences, including Sanskrit and Hindi domination, but particularly
Brahmin domination and oppression. among the Tamils in South India. Though
the movement is split into many political groups. of which two are the
two dominant political parties of tamizNAdu, there are still no indications
that parties which don't subscribe to the ideology of the Dravidian movement
can make headway in tamizNAdu. A small Brahmin community at the top is
very vulnerable. Christians, Muslims, Buddhists and Jains find comfort
in identifying themselves with the vast majority of the Hindus in the Dravidian
movement. A kind of secularism is fostered as the ideology of the movement.
tirukkuRaL is held up as the embodiment of Tamil Culture. The classical
Cangkam period literature is idealised as the iterature of the Golden Age
of the Tamils.
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