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Vanniars against racisms

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kunjuppu

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this is a situation familiar to us as tambrams ie villification of the whole community based on stereotypes. even yesterday, i saw a movie, kuttipuli, where the woman played by saranya goes begging for alms as a vendudhal, and at a poonal clad house, the man dumps garbage in her paathram, and looks disgusting too. i did not like it, but apparently this is a norm in tamil cinema, even though it has no relevance to the story.

so, when a new blog called 'vanniars against racism' was started, i took an interest in it, and now i am hooked to it, solely because of the well written and erudite posts.

many of what he says, i can relate to and sympathize. also this man is in a peculiar position - belonging to a villified community, and his personal sympathies are with the opposed group, and is dismayed by the wholesale branding of a community as casteist.

to say anymore would not do justice to his posts...even though they are long, i will post them one by one, so that the public here, can enjoy the pleasure of a well written well thought through and erudite output. atleast i think so. hope you will too..

here is the initial salvo

To make it clear, we are against Caste. We completely reject the caste system and abhor the caste Hierarchy. Unfortunately, in Tamilnadu, everyone gets tagged with a caste from their birth to their death. Every measure to absolve the caste tag from one’s life has failed miserably. Conversions to Christian religion didn’t eradicate caste. Caste got carried over to Christianity itself. People call themselves as Christian Vanniyar, Christian Nadar and Christian Mudaliar and so on…

To make the long story short, even though we hate caste, we could not remove that caste tag completely from ourselves. That’s the only reason we call ourselves as Vanniyars. Except for that tag we consider ourselves as a simple human being born to love one another and lead a peaceful life.

Today Vanniyars of Tamilnadu have become a prey to the selfish interests of power hungry Vanniyar politicians who use the Vanniyar caste hegemony as a tool to further their political interests. A hate campaign has been unleashed by the Vanniyar political leaders to reap electoral gains. Our Dalit brothers who has faced various discriminations for hundreds of years are forced to face a new form of discrimination. Caste Honor and caste pride were unleashed to pit one people against another.

In this vicious propaganda, moderate and liberal voices of Vanniyars were overwhelmed by the Fundamentalist voices of Vanniyar Sangam and PMK. People such as Dr.Ramadoss, Dr.Anubumani Ramadoss and Mr.Kuduvetti Guru proclaim themselves as the only saviors of Vanniyars. Mainstream political parties such as AIADMK and DMK instead of standing up against the PMK are playing Drama to safegaurd their Vanniyar votebank. In these political circumstances, there is an urgent need to liberate the Vanniyars from the clutches of the Talibanism of Vanniyar Sangam and PMK.

We therefore the liberal voices within the Vanniyar community has decided to standup against this Talibanism. Although we hate to call ourselves as Vanniyars as we are against caste and Casteism, we were forced to take-up this route only to counter the malicious propaganda unleashed by the PMK.

We seek the support of all the like-minded groups of Tamilnadu to stand with us in our fight against Casteism.


copied verbatim from http://vanniyarsagainstcasteism.blogspot.ca/

more in coming days....and i promise you, this gets only better.

as part of tamil hindu society, though of a different caste, this not only makes interesting reading, but the effects will reverberate to all members of the society, i think, in ways, that we have not even imagined. only the future will tell.

thank you.
 
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Dear Kunjs,

Thanks for this link for this blog...one more to add to my list..I am pretty busy in TB forum and also readings and adding comments in a Dalit blog(but that blog is not too active) and now a Vanniyar blog to add.
 
thanks renu. this guy writes so well..the next post is about the rise of dalit economic power and its ramifications on village life..

the-raise-of-dalit-economic-power

some excerpts here for those who are unable to read the full post...and we here in this forum can relate to many stuff this gentleman speaks about.

I always thought that as our population become more educated and the economic parity improves among different sections of the society, Casteism will slowly erode from our social life. My own life changed due to the emergence of the IT industry in Tamilnadu.

I saw the life style change among so many of my friends who happened to be Vanniyars and Dalits and other caste. We got introduced to so many different people who came from different parts of Tamilnadu.

We become friends for so many years not even knowing each other’s caste. We used to meet on social get-togethers, enjoy a weekend beer and never discussed about each other’s caste.

Only when one of our friend looks around matrimony we will know his/her caste. I started considering that Caste has become something that was ceremonial for someone who could not get a girlfriend or boyfriend.

Dating websites always existed in the western world for someone who could not get a girl friend or boyfriend and our matrimonial was considered as one such thing albeit with its own Indian modifications. We used to make fun of people who were spending hours together on matrimony. We used to joke to them to look around office to easily get one.

Love is not so easy thing to happen to everyone. So, for someone who could not get a girl, the fallback option was on the parents arranged marriage. Even when caste riots were happening in our society, I always thought that the world is changing and it’s only a matter of time when the young educated population takes a lead role in our social life.

I always considered the cappuccinos, pizzas and burgers which became part of our modern life were not just life style changes but growing parity among our population resulting in social equality. Tamilnadu was looking progressively modern breaking off from the orthodox shambles.

............................

Dravidian social movement always aimed for social justice for the empowerment of the marginalized sections of the society. And for the past many decades since independence, the various progressive social schemes enacted by various Tamilnadu governments has resulted in a thriving educated population. Dalits of previous generations mostly worked as farm labors in an Agrarian society.

However since Independence Dalits (Pariahs of North Tamilnadu) used Education as a tool to overcome the caste discrimination. Educated Dalits moved on to the cities with their new jobs. As Tamilnadu became industrialized and with the arrival of Multinational companies the young educated current generation Dalit youth started seeing the raise in their economic wealth.

Dalits who were until recently a marginalized and victimized section of the society started competing with the other sections of the society in Education and in other aspects. They were no more the once discriminated farm labors who depended on their caste Hindu Masters for their entire life. But with the new wealth they refused to continue as a labors. Tamilnadu Agrarian society which depended on the Dalit women and men for their labor force slowly realized that their labor force is dwindling.

There was a huge demand for the labor force and naturally the labors demanded more wages and respect much to the disdain of the Caste Hindus. Dalit youth found jobs in cities and brought back their earning to their villages. They built better houses in their villages. With the emergence of the Thirumavalavan’s VCK in the late 1990s and early 2000s Dalits of the North Tamilnadu found a charismatic young leader.

Thirumavalan didn’t just bring in a political party but he brought in a strong Dalit Nationalism. He stormed the political arena of North Tamilnadu. The Dalit community which never clamored for political power started to dream big. Though Thirumavalavan never became a major force in Tamilnadu in the likes of PMK, he was definitely a force to reckon with in the North Tamilnadu.

Local VCK leaders started competing in the political arena of North Tamilnadu local politics. From councilors to panchayat leaders, VCK started gaining a foot hold in the social spectrum of North Tamilnadu. In a sphere which was virtually a playground for caste Hindus this new player was unacceptable. From sharing the dais to sharing the shadow political spoils this new player’s sudden raise of power was indigestible to Vanniyars and other caste Hindus.

.....................

Dravidian movement always thought Education as a tool for economic and social progress. But the grudge of Vanniyars against Dalits goes beyond Education. I was talking to my relative who is a doctor and he is thrilled about the recent turn of events. There is a prevalent view that VCK and Dalits have to be taught a lesson. Their economic power has to be curtailed. Dalit Nationalism should be wiped out. Vanniyar hegemony should prevail. We are definitely facing a caste war.

Dravidian movement thought that Dalit economic power will bring them out of Casteism. But today that very same economic power is putting them into yet another Casteism cycle. Dravidian movement thought intercaste marriage will eradicate caste. But the same intercaste marriage is further alienating the communities.

Dravidian movement thought caste based reservation would bring economic and social progress. But the same economic and social progress is bringing competing social groups.

It seems to be an endless cycle. Today we are facing Neo-Casteism. It may not be the two tumbler system. It may not be that of Dalits forced to carry chapels on their head (it may exist, but not more prevalent). But there are many new weapons playing out there which the Tamilnadu intellectual and civil society is yet to comprehend. New thoughts are the need of the hour.

My vision of modern Tamilnadu has been wiped out for ever. Tamilnadu looks in total shambles.

(From our Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=176506622524065&id=175698392604888 )
 
Dear Kunjuppu,

I read your two copy-pasted posts. To me it appears the gentleman who has written these posts has for some reasons pulled his pu nches unnecessarily when it came to analysis of the causes. He has papered over the role of dravidian politics in promoting and institutionalising caste divisions. My thoughts on this:

1. Dravidian parties (the DK, DMk and ADMK and other splinters) never were sincere about their anti caste fervour. They always played to the gallery for votes and cadre support.

2. The other day in an interview to Vikatan a PMK leader has said that DMK is a Mudaliyar dominant party, AIADMK is a thevar dominant party, MDMK is a Naidu dominant party etc. just like the PMK which is a vanniar dominant party. I think this candid admission speaks volumes for the sincerety of the dravidian politicians.

3. In DMK all the leaders were from higher level castes. Nedunchezhiyan, Anbazhagan, Mathiyazhagan, Krishnaswamy,Annadurai were all Mudaliyars. Madurai muthu, MK, and a few others were Pillais. Many powerful ministers and local chieftains were Naidus and Naickers and Gounders. In all these I used to search for a dalit face and used come up with disappointment.

4. A simple analysis leads you to conclude that the parties depended on these powerful castes for cadre, muscle power, money power and vote banks and sacrificed their ideological fervour for casteless society. Dalits were initially apolitical because they had no time for politics. All their hours were taken up in keeping the body and soul together by toiling in the fields and farms. The economic revolution and the forces that were unleashed by it has changed the environment as correctly interpreted by the author of your posts. That has led to a lot of clashes in rural TN.

My feeling is that the writer could have been a little more candid in analysing the role of dravidian politics. he has unnecessarily minced his words perhaps because he was an ex-dravidian partyman.

Just some thoughts. Thanks
 
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dear vaagmi,

re post #4, the writer is a beneficiary of the affirmative actions and reservations. that the vanniars were bypassed in the quota process, till ramadoss campaigned and won them special privileges by classifying these as most backward class.

if there is a sliver of a vanniar middle class now, it is thanks to dr ramadoss. as tambrams, most of us, cannot even imagine not only the poverty, but the sense of hopelessness or ignorance, among the rural poor. even though as tambrams, we have been impacted, i think social justice and enhancement of all communities across board is needed for the good of the society.

otherwise, the socio cultural elite, such as us, will have been sent to guillotine long ago, just as it happened in france, russia or china. so, in that context, i sympathize and understand where the writer is coming from. his antecedents are dravidian and what is shocking to him, is that instead of the evoparation of caste, with the rise of education and wealth, the opposite has happened.

one could say, that with the rise of dalit economic power, the next step, ie demand for political power followed. not easy to accept , for the old time pannayars and panchayats.

let me tell you a story that happened around early 1960s. all the parties are dead now. the mylapore hindu permanent fund was a healthy well run chit fund dominated by brahmins and mudaliars. it so happened, and this from long back memory, that seats were reserved in the fund board for the local councillor. .. and in the election, the local goonda became the councillor, and soon found himself seated next to the high and mighty of mylapore society :)

but these were also legal luminaries, and much as hatred whisper campaign was started, there was nothing they could do to get rid of this guy from the affairs of the fund. i remember, our maid, a staunch dmk fan, mentioned about the promotion of this goonda to the fund board, with a slight twinkle in her eyes, much to the chagrin of my dad :)

...anyway, today i have given another chapter of vanniars against racism...

what i find with this analysis, as with many a history of sri lankan tamils situation - is the fall of a dominant community through new laws and manipulations. when a sl tamil tells me about how they constituted 90% of ceylon's bureaucracy and judiciary, and how it was 'unfair' that 'merit' was replaced by ethnic cronyism, i try telling them, the situation of tambrams, and at the same time, my belief, unless the pot is equally shared by all the constituents, social upheaval will result and blood will be shed... but the sl tamils are another thread, to be discussed another time, another place.

all in all it makes good reading, re contemperory tamil nadu, and the socio political currents flowing there. while as a community we may not be a player anymore, the impacts of any sudden or violent changes will affect us. so i think, it is good to be informed and try to evaluate our risks and opportunities out of such events.

thank you.
 
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The politics of caste in Tamilnadu – The journey of Dr.Ramadoss and Thol. Thirumavala

i have a friend from a village in deep southern tamil nadu. there are no brahmins here. only nadars, gounders and dalits. according to her, it is a normal past time for nadar/gounder youths to gang up after a few drinks, and chase and beat up the dalit boys. she kept mum when i asked about the dalit girls.

ilayaraja, who came from nearby, has mentioned such small scale pogroms happening regularly when he was young...

in this article, by vanniars against racism, has dwelt on the personality of dr ramadoss and thol thirumavalavan.

/caste-politics-ramadoss-thirumavalavanl

some choice excerpts which interested me..

For hundreds of years caste has determined our people’s way of life, their ideologies and beliefs. Even in today’s modern world when urbanization and globalization of our society brought so many modern tools, we use the same modern tools to sustain the divisive caste in different forms. Matrimonial websites and classifieds in even Marxist leaning newspapers continue to promote caste in caste’s own Sanctum sanctorum which is marriage.

When caste cannot be broken in the marriage the chances of it getting broken elsewhere appears remote. Popular Tamil journalist and columnist Gnani Sankaran righteously called for a campaign against the tools that promote modern day casteism such as Matrimony websites. There are “n” number of matrimonial websites which first started as Tamil Matrimony and went on to become Vanniyar Matrimony, Mudaliar Matrimony and so on.

In the modern Chennai where cookie cutter apartments are raising every day, builders are building apartments only for a particular caste and didn’t feel shy about giving ads in the newspapers and other popular media calling for only a particular caste. Caste went global when Tamils migrated from Tamilnadu to distant lands such as America.

Caste only functions such as Kongu Pongal were organized even in America (Kongu America - HOME) where American law proclaims equality despite of color, nationality or ethnicity. It seems that even in modern world and modern society Tamils can never win over the caste malaise which is inherent in the Tamil society. Even this modern facebook tool is used to promote caste and people like our group are using the same tool to oppose caste.

Caste was inherent part of the society for the all the wrong reasons for hundreds of years. Caste is so influential in the Tamil society that it even determined the ideological leanings. Except for few rare people like Mr. Chinnakuthoosi Thiyagarajan Dravidian movement’s ideology forced majority of Tamil Brahmins to Indian Nationalism and left wing Brahmins to Communism.

Left leaning Brahmin intellects used communism to project that class is the problem in the society when Dravidian movement was projecting that caste is the problem with Brahmins at the top of the caste hierarchy. Brahmins accused the Dravidian movement as a movement of Non-Brahmin upper class elites. Right wing Brahmins promoted Indian jingoism to negate the Dravidian movement’s Dravidanadu separatism.

Though Dravidian movement proclaimed themselves as representing the Non-Brahmin castes the fact of the matter is Dravidian movement mostly represented the upper castes among the Non-Brahmin castes. The downtrodden sections of the backward castes and Dalits went largely unrepresented by the Dravidian movement.

The reservation meant for the other backward classes were largely enjoyed by the upper castes. As a result the most downtrodden sections of the society felt that the Dravidian movement and the Dravidian political parties such as DMK and AIADMK are not catering to their needs.

In 1980 Vanniyar Sangam was formed by Dr.Ramadoss to fight for a separate reservation for Vanniyars. In North Tamilnadu the Vanniyar community felt that its aspirations for rightful reservation in Education and Jobs are being overlooked by the Dravidian movement and political parties. North Tamilnadu comprises many backward districts of Tamilnadu with predominately Vanniyar and Dalit population.

With very few job opportunities there was an active Naxal movement in the North Tamilnadu during 1980s. North Tamilnadu was also a hotbed of Tamil Nationalism. The Cashew forests of North Tamilnadu was the home to movements such as Tamilnadu Liberation Army (TNLA). These movements predominately had Vanniyars in its rank and file. There was a desperate need for Educational and Job opportunities as poverty was rampant in North Tamilnadu during that time.

Dr.Ramadoss felt a need for Educational quota to overcome the poverty that was prevalent in those time. Hence Vanniyar Sangam’s single point agenda was reservation for Vanniyars. Vanniyar Sangam demanded 20% quota for Vanniyars in Tamilnadu and 2% in the central government jobs. Vanniyars who were in various political parties were consolidated under one umbrella called Vanniyar Sangam. Dr.Ramadoss focused mainly on getting the reservation for Vanniyars.

Hence Vanniyar Sangam quickly grew in strength. In 1987 Vanniyar Sangam launched one week road blocking agitation demanding 20% reservation in Tamilnadu. This agitation hit national headlines as the road transport from South Tamilnadu to Chennai was completely blocked. There were shootings by the police to quell the agitation in which more than 10 agitating Vanniyars were killed.

The success of this agitation put Dr.Ramadoss in firm control of the Vanniyar community. He was respected as a leader who was committed to the upliftment of the Vanniyars.

n the early days Vanniyar Sangam was against entering the electoral politics. Dr.Ramadoss even called for boycotting the 1989 Assembly elections. There was a mass boycott of elections by Vanniyars in 1989. Though the election boycott was a success Vanniyar Sangam realized that it is not going anywhere with its demand of 20% reservation for Vanniyars.

After nearly a decade of various agitations and more than 10 lost lives, the reservation for Vanniyars appeared a distant dream. Dr.Ramdoss came to a conclusion that starting a political party is the only way to get the quota for Vanniyars and hence PMK (Pattali Makkal Katchi) was born in July 1989.

..................


While Thirumavalavan had a favorable opinion of Periyar many Dalit intellects didn’t share the same. Dalit intellects such as Mr.Ravikumar (Writer and Leader of VCK) accused that “Periyar was someone who was jealous of the constitutional safeguards that were given to the dalits”.

He went on to say “Periyar was not the leader of all Tamils. He worked solely for the cause of the non-Brahmin upper castes”. This accusation stunned the Tamil intellectual community. It was also alleged that Periyar overlooked the Kizhavenmani Dalit massacre as one orchestrated by the Communists rather than to condemn the massacre. Kizhavenmani Dalit massacre was a shocking episode in the long history of caste discrimination in Tamilnadu in which 42 striking Dalits who demanded higher wages were burnt to death for striking against the landlords.

.............


Two major communities Vanniyar and Dalits both of them felt letdown by the Dravidian movement and Dravidian political parties, found their own political path.
 
Dear Shri Kunjuppu,

After reading some of the blogs, I am slowly getting a doubt whether this blog is simply an attempt to put up a facade to show to the world that all vanniyars are not casteist and that only "some" among them are the culprits. This may give some political mileage to the leaders of vanniyars, I believe. But I am a novice as far as TN politics is concerned. So, other well-informed members may be able to say whether my hunch is correct or not.
 
Dear Shri Kunjuppu,

After reading some of the blogs, I am slowly getting a doubt whether this blog is simply an attempt to put up a facade to show to the world that all vanniyars are not casteist and that only "some" among them are the culprits. This may give some political mileage to the leaders of vanniyars, I believe. But I am a novice as far as TN politics is concerned. So, other well-informed members may be able to say whether my hunch is correct or not.

dear sangom,

he is providing an alternate pov. he is an educated fair skinned guy working in the usa(from his own statements) and is finding his antecedents now strange to him, after being exposed to a more egalitarian and equitable environment, i guess.

i admire his writing skills, and to me, that is the pleasure that i wish to share. people, ofcourse, will have their own opinions re validity of his arguements. as expected, he has been receiving his share of hate mail in FaceBook from his fellow vanniars.

here is NDTV take on the whole affair.. how i wish these north indian journalists learn to pronounce our names correctly. embarassing and ear jarring to hear our names being mutilated...but a good presentation otherwise..

[video]http://www.ndtv.com/video/player/truth-vs-hype/truth-vs-hype-ilavarasan-when-prejudice-turns-fatal/283826?pfrom=home-lateststories[/video]

ps.. one of the credits at the end of this report was to 'sreenivasan jain', an unusual combination. so looked up in the wikipedia..and found that this ndtv reporter is the grandson of m.a.srinivasan (iyengar) and son of devaki jain (daughter of m.a.srinivasan). apparently inter caste marriages were in vogue even 2 generations ago :)
 
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Sangom said:
Dear Shri Kunjuppu,
After reading some of the blogs, I am slowly getting a doubt whether this blog is simply an attempt to put up a facade to show to the world that all vanniyars are not casteist and that only "some" among them are the culprits. This may give some political mileage to the leaders of vanniyars, I believe.
Your observation regarding the motive is probably correct although it is not necessary that the bloggers themselves have any political affiliations.

I think it is worthwhile to think why the façade was(is) necessary!
 
There are many inexactitudes here in this blog.

1. It is not as if vanniyars were rudderless earlier and Ramadoss came on the scene it was all bright sunlight for the community. Do you remember the name Padaytchi? He was the original leader of the Vanniyar Sangam and he was a head ache to Kamaraj. Kamaraj placated him. Ramadoss only followed on the footsteps of this Ramaswamy Padayatchi. He just refurbished the Vanniyar Sangam.

2. It is not correct to say Ramadoss got reservation for the vanniyars. What he did was getting them a higher percentage of the quota.
 
2. It is not correct to say Ramadoss got reservation for the vanniyars. What he did was getting them a higher percentage of the quota.
The real problem then was that a significant majority of the BC quota was cornered by few upper castes and the recommendation of ambashankar commission/sattanathan commission etc regarding introduction of creamy layer or pruning up of backward classes were thrown to the winds. This led to the agitation spearheaded by Ramadoss. A new category MBC was created, and this quota was taken away from the open competition, as dravidianists care two hoots about castes classified as general class. Ramadoss was instrumental in achieving this, and vanniyars who are, since, classified as MBC are naturally grateful to him.
 
here is NDTV take on the whole affair..

[video]http://www.ndtv.com/video/player/truth-vs-hype/truth-vs-hype-ilavarasan-when-prejudice-turns-fatal/283826?pfrom=home-lateststories[/video]
Thanks K, good reporting, the interview with the older Dalit/Vanniyar couple who predicted the politicians cannot stop love from happening was really great ..
 
Thanks K, good reporting, the interview with the older Dalit/Vanniyar couple who predicted the politicians cannot stop love from happening was really great ..

yes. the ending :).

after 20+years of IC marriage, not only was it heartwarming, but touching, to see the faith these two sisters had in the concept of love. to put it in common parlance, they may not be not book read, but i would say educated and wise far beyond many many people i know.

including myself.
 
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Caste and politics in Tamil Nadu - Article by HUGO GORRINGE -

here is another interesting and somewhat lucid look at how caste and politics have played out in tamil nadu. it is an academic article and while it may have some inevitable biases of a human, it is a free flowing narration of the past century. ofcourse references to 'he who must not be mentioned (HWMNBM) has been deleted. which explains for the gaps :)

i do pardon for the almost full reproduction here, but this is a study which demands either whole (almost) or nothing..and gives a balanced view of the evolution of tamil politics, without any polemics or hysteria re brahmins or brahminism..but rather lists the sequence of events as seen by the author in a rather dry but flowing manner

i am more fascinated by the author's conclusions re the disintegration of hierarchies and it reverberations re dalits vs OBC.
.

TAMIL NADU has a Janus-faced attitude towards caste. Occasionally, as Hindi-belt states have been rocked by disturbances over caste based reservations, it has appeared as if caste considerations are less politicized in the South. Regional and linguistic nationalism, the long history of caste based affirmative action and the legacy of anti-caste campaigns arguably account for this. Simultaneously, however, caste remains central to Tamil politics. From this perspective, the dominance of Backward Classes and the paucity of upper castes best explains the acceptance of OBC reservations.

Over the past 150 years there have been contrasting trends towards cross-caste ethnic mobilization and caste based assertion. Recently, Vasanthi – former editor of India Today’s Tamil edition – argued: ‘Every section of society now clings to its caste label with pride. With a caste based political party being born every day, each group is in need of political protection and asserting its identity’.1 That this should occur in the home of Dravidianism is puzzling, and this paper will examine the interplay between caste and politics in the state.

Caste and kinship in South India only really extended beyond the boundaries of the village and the control of village headmen in the 19th century. Indeed, British administrators found that strong vertical ties of obligation and patronage precluded solidaristic group action and compelled them to work with caste patrons. Positions of economic power and status were maintained through patron-client ties and coercion rather than community feeling. Thus, where patrons stood to gain, they could dictate social and political alliances for followers which were ritually polluting or economically counter-productive.2

Caste relations, this reminds us, were structured by power and built into the agricultural production process, which assigned different castes specific roles. When colonial rule laid the basis for a centralized, commercial economy, it weakened the economic logic of caste and assimilated the traditional compartments into a larger territory. The pre-eminence of the caste headman withered as employment opportunities and education expanded aspirations and networks. Communities bound by marriage, kinship and locality were replaced by state-wide caste associations united by political affiliation as much as blood ties. This transition from a hierarchy of inter-dependent social categories to a universe of ‘essentially identical’ competing blocs is what Dumont3 terms ‘substantialization’. It involves, Barnett argues, shifting the basis of caste from codes of behaviour that governed everyday interactions to ‘blood purity’ or descent.4

Elements of competition and mobility long existed within the caste system, but the processes of social change described above increased scope for mobility and emphasized the mutability of caste. Well before the introduction of democratic governance, therefore, social processes facilitated the mobilization of communities as political actors. Similarly, commercialization meant not just the increasing use of money in the economy, but the monetization of social relationships. New opportunities for employment and the importance of an English education led to a physical transition of elites to the centre of government administration.

Motivated by these possibilities, families widened their marriage circles to encompass those with a similar outlook and education from within their expanded caste category.5 This socio-economic transformation opened up new choices and created new political configurations. Railways, the press and the weakening of patron-client ties further encouraged group action. The introduction of a limited franchise in the second and third decades of the 20th century opened up new channels to power and influence that were adopted and used creatively by the new citizens.

Less privileged castes similarly sought to escape from relations of dependency. One challenge to caste hierarchy that indicated the shifting constellations of caste power came from the Nadars. Previously considered degraded, Nadars met with economic success in the 19th century and adopted the practices of the higher castes.6 In donning the sacred thread, transgressing multiple other caste regulations and confronting higher-castes with violence, the Nadars demonstrated the possibility of social mobility and signalled that hierarchy was susceptible to social mobilization. The accelerated growth of urban areas more generally reflects this desire for change.


The Nadar challenge did not occur in a social vacuum, but exploited emerging possibilities for education, employment, and legal and political contestation. They drew on new forms of knowledge created by the British to reconceive how they both saw and presented themselves to others. Confronted by complex systems of social relations and stratification, and increasingly prominent as a controller of people and resources, the British state required knowledge about society and means to discipline new political subjects and citizens. The attempt to impose such order, however, fostered increased interaction with the people and this exchange profoundly affected the nature of the classificatory enterprise.



First, by asserting that each caste conformed to certain characteristics, and that everyone belonged to a caste, administrators avoided, and arguably precluded, the painstaking problem of differentiating between individuals. This, though, also ‘crystallized’ the caste system.’7 In mapping society, colonial powers unwittingly assumed the royal prerogative of determining the hierarchical position of castes within their jurisdiction. Petitions demanding a change in caste rank, thus, were now submitted to British officials, and the potential to renegotiate one’s caste position animated caste competition and consciousness. The Nadars, for instance, initially lobbied to be recognized as Kshatriya or warrior castes. In the 1930s, however, following the introduction of quotas based on communal categories by the Madras government, they petitioned to be counted as Backward Classes (castes).8

Whilst Nadars initially mobilized on caste lines, both they and others tapped into British unease over the preponderance of Brahmins in office, and appealed to widespread resentment of Brahmin domination and arrogance.9 The combination of these factors facilitated the emergence of a politically active and important ‘non-Brahmin movement’ which included both socially dominant castes and the untouchables who had mobilized as ‘adi’ or original Dravidians. The non-Brahmin movement rejected Sanskritization (the emulation of higher castes) as a path to mobility and created a rhetorical divide between the over-privileged Brahmin minority and the majority of the population, but they could not paper over the divisions that the category sought to dispel.



The main objective of the elite-led movement appears to have been the prestige and patronage that was conferred by assuming government office. Despite campaigns for temple reforms by the Justice Party – the political manifestation of non-Brahminism – the more deprived members of the category felt neglected. In the 1930s, therefore, the non-Brahmin movement split into Forward and Backward Classes. The Backward Classes League, formed in 1935, noted that privileged and dominant castes monopolized leadership positions and rewards and demanded a more equitable distribution of resources. Non-Brahminism, which united disparate castes against Brahmin dominance, thus foundered upon internal caste inequalities.

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... Both the Justice Party and the DK voiced secessionist demands and the anti-caste elements of the Dravidian and non-Brahmin movements have largely been superseded by this emphasis on regional and, following the linguistic reorganization of states in 1950s, linguistic nationalism. Two legacies of the non-Brahmin movement, however, still shape Tamil politics and its relationship to caste.

The first is the institutionalization of communal or caste based politics and the belief that social and ritual hierarchies could be challenged and renegotiated through political mobilization. The second legacy, which stems from the assertion of Backward Caste members and Periyar’s anti-caste egalitarianism, was the early institution of affirmative action programmes for Backward Castes and Classes. Since 1947, when state governments gained the discretion to implement reservations for the Other Backward Classes (OBCs), Tamil authorities have provided generous benefits to this category.11 Communal categories were thus established as effective and new organizational forms were directed towards securing economic benefits, jobs, or special concessions.



The principal political parties in the state all grew out of the non-Brahmin movement, particularly the organizations launched by Periyar. The most enduring of these organizations are the Dravida Kazhagam (DK) and its two offshoots, the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK – Dravidian Progressive Federation) and All India Anna DMK (AIADMK). It is these offspring that have dominated Tamil governments since 1967. Dravidian mobilization placed caste and ‘race’ divides at the centre of Tamil politics, portraying Independence as the replacement of one elite (British) by another (upper caste, ‘Aryans’). The strength of this Dravidian rhetoric is reflected in the changing composition of Congress candidates. In 1954, when the Nadar Kamaraj replaced a Brahmin as chief minister, only 5% of members of the Legislative Assembly were Brahmins, as opposed to 17% in 1937.12

Despite this nod towards Dravidian concerns, the Congress saw its vote share steadily eroded by the DMK. This regional nationalist party, which played on language nationalism (rather than insisting upon it) and espoused populist/socialist policies that were mediated to the electorate through cinema and an effective party organization, took power in 1967. In 1972, the film star M.G. Ramachandran (MGR) formed the AIADMK, in response to DMK ‘corruption’. It wrested power from the DMK in 1977 due to MGR’s popularity and populism (as typified by the free school meal). Since then, the two parties have alternated in power. Both claim to represent all Tamils and emphasize regional concerns and social justice issues in a populist vein, but numerous studies suggest that Dravidian parties have used Tamilness to avoid enacting politically sensitive election pledges on land reform, dowry and caste. Pandian argues that Tamil voters have fallen into ‘the image trap’, accepting Dravidian claims and not recognizing that ‘progressive’ reforms resemble ‘charity from above’ and/or disproportionately tax the poor.13



Post-independence, caste concerns animated Tamil politics, and pro-Congress Dalits clashed violently with the All India Forward Bloc led by BC leader, Muthuramalingam Thevar, in September 1957. Caste riots spread through central districts of the state following the murder of Dalit leader, Immanuel Sekharan, who campaigned against caste dominance. Within a decade, however, mobilization against the imposition of Hindi as a national language, the artful use of cinema and populist programmes resulted in a seeming diminution of caste conflict as Dravidian parties attracted cross-caste support. It took time for this apparent consensus to be shattered since the regional-cultural emphasis successfully masked the narrow (predominantly BC) Dravidian core.

During the 1980s, consciousness raising groups highlighted the implicit casteism of the Dravidian parties, but it was only when such mobilization turned violent that it was reflected in institutional politics. In the late 1980s, the sizable BC Vanniyar population demonstrated forcefully to demand recognition as a Most Backward Caste (MBC) and proportional access to reservations. The culmination of this campaign of extra-legal mobilization was the political assimilation of the Paatali Makkal Katchi (The Toiler’s Party – a Backward Caste group) into the mainstream and the validation of extra-institutional agitation. As one respondent noted:

Now there is the PMK – a Vanniyar party. In the beginning there was no violence that they did not engage in. They blocked roads, chopped down trees … So what it seems like is that one can only become a political party by taking part in violence first, now that is the route we must follow.14



The PMK and Dalit parties which seemed to introduce caste concerns into Tamil politics, thus, arguably arise from the cosy relationship between dominant BCs and the two Dravidian parties. Honours have been heaped on Muthuramalingam Thevar, for instance, whilst lower caste politicians are perceived to lack recognition and respect. The continuing under-representation of Dalit politicians in cabinets and ministry portfolios questions Dravidian pluralism. Caste politics in this period, furthermore, has been synonymous with outbreaks of caste violence. Lower caste (especially Dalit) assertion has challenged the social status of higher castes and incurred disproportionate, forceful retaliation (or ‘extravagant revenge’) against any caste transgression or resistance).15 Dalit assertion has also led to conflict with state authorities (in 2011, police fired on demonstrators in Paramakudi killing seven Dalits) emphasising that access to political institutions is not straightforward. An unintended consequence of MBC and Dalit activism, therefore, is that social fault lines have assumed a collective, caste character and rendered violence a recognized, albeit censured, feature of the political repertoire.



Such mobilization has challenged the capacity of Dravidian parties to represent all castes. In the two decades up till the 2011 elections, therefore, the AI/DMK had to stitch together coalitions to secure political power. This has had the dual effect of prompting caste specific demands, such as earmarking 3% of Scheduled Caste reservations for Arunthathiars – the lowest of the main SC castes in the state – and the creation of more caste parties. 2009, for instance, witnessed the formation of the Kongu Nadu Munnetra Kazhagam (Kongu Land Progressive Federation) which predominantly represents the interests of the dominant BC Gounders. The KNMK emerged following Arunthathiar assertion in western districts which challenges both the status of Gounders, but also their supply of pliant agricultural labour. The KNMK offers an example of defensive mobilization and ‘reverse casteism’ in which Dalits are accused of preferential treatment, so it is not surprising that 2010 saw violent clashes between the groups.16

The caste competition and status that have animated the KNMK and others are particularly salient at the panchayat level, where local patrons directly encounter the elevation of lower caste individuals and feel threatened by Dalit assertion and the SC/ST Prevention of Atrocities Act. As a consequence, panchayats reserved for SC candidates have witnessed violence, threats and cancelled elections. Furthermore, many elected Dalits have found it impossible to carry out their work due to upper caste interference. Dalit panchayat presidents have been murdered, made to sit on the floor, denied access to offices, or pressured into rubber-stamping the decisions of others. Even where caste discrimination has diminished and relations between castes are less marked by hierarchy, status concerns matter and find political expression.


It is clear that caste remains an important political resource, but it would be mistaken to view caste identities as ascribed. Rather, they are complex constructs that draw upon yet differ from earlier categories. Institutional incentives, the fact that state-provisions are distributed to caste categories, offer one important reason for the number of caste based parties.17 Jaffrelot accepts this but also points towards the structure of political institutions and the struggle for political accommodation.18 Such accounts, however, cannot explain the differing contours of caste mobilisation across India. In emphasising instrumental concerns, they downplay the ideological, social and emotional aspects of caste politics.

Dalit parties offer the clearest example of ideological mobilization with their emphasis on social justice and equality. Dalit political participation has often increased vulnerability rather than material advancement; so the institutional incentive argument has limited purchase, though the demand for sub-reservations demonstrates that it is not without value. Multiple factors increase the importance of caste within politics, including political entrepreneurs.19 It was the emergence of Dalit middle class leaders that amplified Dalit assertion. Equally, changes in political economy have seen the dominance of upper castes challenged by lower castes who are no longer prepared to tolerate indignities or forego the promise of education for their children.


Occupational mobility, access to state benefits and consciousness raising by movements has altered caste dynamics, increased competition between groups and enhanced the political salience of caste identities to the extent that Communist parties which previously focused on seemingly caste-less ‘workers’ have begun to tackle caste discrimination. Furthermore, as the socio-economic gap between castes narrows, status considerations are sharpened with lower castes decrying humiliation and BCs defending their social standing and claiming reverse discrimination. The land of non-Brahminism, thus, witnessed the registration of the ‘Non-Dalit General People’s Welfare Association’ in March 2012.

Despite this, Dravidian parties still secure cross-caste support and Tamil nationalism continues to unite competing caste parties. Caste concerns, thus, must be repeatedly politicised. Additionally, the political recognition accorded to caste categories can mean that various (non-caste) social conflicts are framed in caste terms. Caste relations are changing in Tamil Nadu but declining dependency has fostered a spirit of questioning and competition which help explain the multiplication of caste parties in the home of Dravidianism. Although the AIADMK swept to power in the 2011 State elections, therefore, we may safely conclude that caste considerations and parties will animate Tamil politics for the foreseeable future.

Courtesy : CASTE MATTERS - a symposium on inequalities, identities and disintegrating hierarchies in India

633, May 2012, Caste Matters

Link to the article - 633 Hugo Gorringe, Caste and politics in Tamil Nadu
 
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