i would like to emphasize on the tambram portion, as i think, many a time, we interchange brahmin and tambram verbology, without undertanding the himalayan differences between the two.
to me, a brahmin caste addressed across india, is similar to muslims or christians spread across the world. a common god or practices. but definitely different in many a cultural aspect.
i have here referred two urls from senthilraja, an old friend of this forum.
ubashi-brahmins-and-vaidiha-brahmins/
here he analyzes the onset of tambrams' entry into the service of the english. as a community, we came in late. even in madras. it was the chetties naidus mudaliars and pillais who were the intermediaries between the english and the locals, whether they be muslim chieftains or landless labourers.
we remained aloof. till. till such time when we took to learning english. again we were not the first brahmins to do this. it was the bengalis who beat us to it.
the term babu to address a civil servant carried with it the scorn and contempt, which was attached to the bengali. we came in numbers post independence, and there are a few blogs, giving us the delight of experiencing those heady days immiediately, when the said ministry was one shed with a peon and a clerk (the madrasi) along with the secretary ( a north indian)... and how the madrasi moved up in ranks with the expansion of the central bureaucracy.
can-english-educated-brahmins-be-dharmic
interesting blogs both of these. what surprised me most was some points raised..and here i quote verbatim.
Those brahmins who adopted western elite life style, and discarded everything specific to brahmins (like sandhya vandhanam, rituals etc). How do we call them?? For politeness, Lets call them as Elite Brahmins.
Those brahmins who due to circumstances, happened to be corporate world, but wanted to follow the tradition. (Lets call them as Hindu brahmins)
Role of Kanchi Mutt: I think, writing this will make many people get offended. But it is the kanchi mutt, which first started facilitating english education of brahmins, and sent them to different government posts. That is why, we are seeing so many mylapore and Kumbakonam Brahmins in powerful posts. and it is they who are support base for this mutt. Will write more on this in separate post.
i will leave the public to chew on this pseudo sociology at their own convenience and comfort.
myself, as a result of this, wondered: what if, instead of following the lead of our bengali brahmin cousins, we stuck to vaideeha way of life, akin to our telugu or gujarati kins. true, both of these, are among the poorest, in their communities today. as opposed to us tambrams, who are mostly mid to upper middle class, or more.
would we have been more happy now? would all our boys found girls as there would be no female emancipation? would the rest of tamil community continued to have respect for us? would there have been no periyar?
it was a whimsical journey of fancy, of what ifs and what ifs.
i have always felt, that 'what could have been' to be among the saddest phrases in any language. however in this context, i found it a magical mystery tour of a fantasy, that i had not experienced before.
to me, a brahmin caste addressed across india, is similar to muslims or christians spread across the world. a common god or practices. but definitely different in many a cultural aspect.
i have here referred two urls from senthilraja, an old friend of this forum.
ubashi-brahmins-and-vaidiha-brahmins/
here he analyzes the onset of tambrams' entry into the service of the english. as a community, we came in late. even in madras. it was the chetties naidus mudaliars and pillais who were the intermediaries between the english and the locals, whether they be muslim chieftains or landless labourers.
we remained aloof. till. till such time when we took to learning english. again we were not the first brahmins to do this. it was the bengalis who beat us to it.
the term babu to address a civil servant carried with it the scorn and contempt, which was attached to the bengali. we came in numbers post independence, and there are a few blogs, giving us the delight of experiencing those heady days immiediately, when the said ministry was one shed with a peon and a clerk (the madrasi) along with the secretary ( a north indian)... and how the madrasi moved up in ranks with the expansion of the central bureaucracy.
can-english-educated-brahmins-be-dharmic
interesting blogs both of these. what surprised me most was some points raised..and here i quote verbatim.
Those brahmins who adopted western elite life style, and discarded everything specific to brahmins (like sandhya vandhanam, rituals etc). How do we call them?? For politeness, Lets call them as Elite Brahmins.
Those brahmins who due to circumstances, happened to be corporate world, but wanted to follow the tradition. (Lets call them as Hindu brahmins)
Role of Kanchi Mutt: I think, writing this will make many people get offended. But it is the kanchi mutt, which first started facilitating english education of brahmins, and sent them to different government posts. That is why, we are seeing so many mylapore and Kumbakonam Brahmins in powerful posts. and it is they who are support base for this mutt. Will write more on this in separate post.
i will leave the public to chew on this pseudo sociology at their own convenience and comfort.
myself, as a result of this, wondered: what if, instead of following the lead of our bengali brahmin cousins, we stuck to vaideeha way of life, akin to our telugu or gujarati kins. true, both of these, are among the poorest, in their communities today. as opposed to us tambrams, who are mostly mid to upper middle class, or more.
would we have been more happy now? would all our boys found girls as there would be no female emancipation? would the rest of tamil community continued to have respect for us? would there have been no periyar?
it was a whimsical journey of fancy, of what ifs and what ifs.
i have always felt, that 'what could have been' to be among the saddest phrases in any language. however in this context, i found it a magical mystery tour of a fantasy, that i had not experienced before.