இலங்கையின் போர்குலத்தோர்
On Tamil Militarism ; a 11 part essay by D.P.Sivaram written in 1992
Part 4: Militarism and Caste in Jaffna
by D.P. Sivaram
[courtesy: Lanka Guardian, July 1, 1992, pp.9-10 and 14; prepared by Sachi Sri Kantha, for the electronic record]
Tamil
secessionism and Tamil militarism are two sides of the same coin. Both
are legacies of the attempt by the British to demilitarize Tamil society
in the 19th century. Tamil militarism arose from the
grievances of the disfranchised Tamil military castes. Tamil secession
was the result of the political ambitions of the classes which were
promoted by the British to consolidate the gains of demartialization.
Therefore it is necessary to understand the colonial strategies which
were aimed at depriving the traditional power and status of the Tamil
martial castes in Tamil society.
In those
regions of India where military service was confined to specific castes,
other castes had no desire to abandon their traditional occupations for
soldiering or for violence. Since the ability for violence was caste
bound, disfranchising or removing a region’s military caste could negate
its potential for violence and rebellion. The earliest attempt to thus
demilitarize Tamil society was made by the Portuguese in Jaffna. A brief
examination of their effort and its impact on the subsequent evolution
of society in Jaffna will help understand better the social and
political consequences of demilitarization in Tamilnadu two centuries
later under British rule.
The Maravar were the
traditional soldier caste of Jaffna when the Portuguese arrived. Once
they took control, they set about dismantling the feudal military system
of the peninsula. Military titles such as Rayer, Athirayer
were banned. The traditional soldier castes were seen as a threat to
Portuguese control. In 1627 Lancarote de Seixas, Captain Major of
Jaffna, put forward the idea that the peninsula’s security lay in having
none there, but cultivators. Thus began the rise of the Vellalas in
Jaffna. The Portuguese seem to have also favoured another caste called
the Madapalli. The Vellalas were not only cultivators, but a section of
them which had developed scribal skills, provided the local officials,
interpreters and karnams (accountants). Successive colonial
powers found Vellala scribal groups useful where Brahmins were not
forthcoming. Histories of Jaffna were written and presented to the
Portuguese, which showed the Vellala and the Madapalli as the original
and dominant community of the peninsula.
The Kailaya Malai and the Vaiya Padal,
the earliest works on the colonization of Jaffna, appear to be such
histories. They name the chieftains of Tamilnadu who had brought Tamil
colonists to the peninsula with them. All of them are described as
Vellalas. But eleven of them have Kallar and Maravar caste titles. The
Jaffna Maravar were able to resume their caste occupation under the
Dutch, who met troop shortages through Jaffna’s feudal military system
which the Portuguese had attempted to dismantle. The Dutch governor and
director of Ceylon, Thomas van Rhee informed his successor Gerrit de
Heere in 1697, that in the Jaffna peninsula "the Marruas are bound to
serve the Company as Lascoryns (native soldiers) and pay t[w]o Fanams a
year without anything more". But 93 years later, a Dutch census (1790)
of all males between the ages 16-70 in Jaffna recorded that there were
only 49 Maravar males in the peninsula, as against 1,570 Vellala males.
This was due to a widespread process in Tamil society where military
castes, finding their traditional status gone, simply adopted the
Vellala caste title and returned themselves as peaceful Vellala
cultivator, to the colonial census; and in time became endogamous
subdivisions of that caste.
In 1834, Simon Casie Chitty recorded in his Ceylon Gazetteer,
that Kallar, Maravar, Ahampadiyar and Palli (Vanniyar) were
sub-divisions of the Vellala caste. It is clear that the Tamil martial
castes of Jaffna had swelled the ranks of the Vellalas when faced with
unfavourable conditions under colonial rule, as they later did under the
British in Tamilnadu. This gave rise to the saying in the peninsula,
"Kallar, Maravar and Ahampadiyar came slowly, slowly and became
Vellalas." But, unlike their counterparts in Tamilnad, the Jaffna
Vellalas didn’t generally change their military caste titles. "In former
days the Vellalas had the titles of Rayan, Thevan, Kizhan and
Mazhavan."
Today, one of these military caste subdivisions of the Jaffna Vellala community, bearing the Kallar caste title Mazhavarayar
is a dominant land owning clan in the peninsula. The Mazhavarayar clan
is also connected with the history of Thambiluvil in the Eastern
province. The Mattakkalappu Manmiyam, a work which deals with the colonization of Batticaloa, mentions the mazhavar frequently
among the groups which peopled the Eastern province. Although the
‘vellalization’ of Jaffna’s Tamil military castes predates the same
process in south India, Vellala cultural hegemony was achieved in the
peninsula only during the early decades of the twentieth century. The
persistence of endogamous subdivision identities was one reason for
this.
The Vellalization of culture and
religion in the peninsula began with Arumuga Navalar’s attempt to
convert the Jaffnese from their folk religion which was dominated by the
heroes and godlings of the Tamil martial castes. The martial caste
elements also figures in narratives related to the founding of
Valvettithurai and Myliddy – Karaiyar caste villages on the Jaffna coast, which are key. Whereas the Sri Lankan karava (Karaiyar)
caste in general has claimed kshatriya status – that they are descended
from the Kuru dynasty – a strong narrative is found among the Karaiyar
of Myliddy which states that three Marava chieftains who were brothers
came with their caste-men from Tamilnadu, married among the karaiyar and
founded the village. Its dominant clan, known as Thuraiyar – the others are known as Panivar – was connected by marriage to Ramnad, the home country of the Maravar, until recent times.
The
martial arts of Maravar were popular among the Thuraiyar of Myliddy,
before their youth were introduced to modern methods of military
training in the last decade [i.e., 1980s]. A narrative related to the
founding of Valvettithurai, based on folk etymology states that the
village arose on land given to a Marava chieftain, called Valliathevan,
by the eponymous founder of the Tamil kingdom of Jaffna.
But a strong
tradition was prevalent among the Karaiyar of Valvettithurai that they
had fought the Portuguese as the soldiers of the last king of Jaffna,
Sankili. This tradition, as we shall see later, was greatly exploited by
TULF propagandists to mobilise people in that part of Jaffna. The
tradition seems to be related to the trade wars between the early
colonial powers and the Maravar kings of Ramnad.
The
Portuguese, Dutch and the British tried to wrest control of the
profitable rice and chank trade between Burma, Bengal and Ceylon which
was in the hands of the Thevars (title of the Ramnad kings) and their
Muslim and Tamil tradesmen, on either side of the Palk Strait, among
whom were many Karaiyar schooner proprietors of Valvettithurai, Point
Pedro and Thondamanaru. The British found that one Vaithianathan of
Jaffna was among the few confidantes of the Thevar, who were looking
after his chank trade in Calcutta. Karaiyar families carried on with the
rice and chank trade in collaboration with Muslims, Chetties and
military caste families on the south Indian coast from Ramnad to
Tanjore, even after the British finally wrested control of it from the
Maravar kings of Ramnad.
A large number of Thandayals
(traditional navigators – captains of ocean going craft) from
Valvettithurai, Point Pedro were employed in the Thevar’s domain of sea
trade. This became the basis of a vast ‘smuggling network’ between south
India, Sri Lanka and southeast Asia, after independence in1948. The
powerful Vandayar family (Maravar) of Tanjore maintained very close
relations with a leading business house of Valvettithurai until 1983.
Sometimes such connections between the coastal military castes of south
Tamilnadu and the Karaiyar of Jaffna were cemented through marriage.
Although Jaffna Tamil society was the earliest to have been
de-martialized, and was the only part of the south Indian Tamil region
where traditional Tamil military castes were completely subsumed by
Vellala identity, it has become the ground in which the most fierce
manifestation of Tamil militarism has taken root in modern times. How
was this possible? Three reasons can be identified.
(A)
The pro-colonial politics of the Jaffna Vellala was not formulated as
an attitude against traditional militarisms because the Tamil military
castes having assumed the Vellala identity early, were not present as a
social threat in the peninsula to the consolidation of colonial
authority, after the Portuguese period. Furthermore, the nature of the
Vellala caste composition in Jaffna was in itself not amenable to the
scribal-agrarian conservatism of the pure Vellala elites, which the
British found useful in Tamilnadu. The pseudo-Vellala component of
Jaffna was large. A fundamental distinction between the Vellala elite of
Tamilnad and Jaffna would illustrate the point.
Arumuga
Navalar campaigned against the activities of Christian missionaries and
his efforts received support from Ponnuchami Thevar, the chief Marava
noble of Ramnad. In former days, the Maravar had opposed the spread of
Christianity, by massacaring missionaries. On the other hand, in
Tamilnad, an ideologue of Vellala elitism – J.M.Nallasami Pillai, who
like Navalar worked for the propagation of saiva siddhanthism among the
Tamils, was closely associated with and supported by Anglican
missionaries in his efforts.
As we shall see
later, while Nallasami Pillai carefully and deliberately played down the
martial component of Tamil culture and history, attempting to establish
that Tamil civilization was constituted by the peace-loving Vellalas,
his counterpart in Jaffna, Mootootambi Pillai lamented the decline of
the peninsula’s martial heritage. He wrote in 1912,
"When
Sankili – the last king of Jaffna – fought the Portuguese, most of his
soldiers were warriors of Jaffna. Even the Portuguese have praised their
valour. The victory of the Portuguese was not gained through their
bravery, but through Kaakai Vanniyan’s treachery. Wasn’t it the warrior
of Jaffna who conquered the whole of Ceylon? The people (of Jaffna) who
are descended of those warriors have lost their martial traits and
become a despicable race, having been subjugated long under the
Portuguese and the Dutch and as a result having become weak and losing
their self-identity."
Mootootambi Pillai was
reflecting a sentiment that had been expressed in the Madurai Tamil
Sangam – established by the Marava noble, Pandithurai Thevar (the son of
the noble who had earlier helped Navalar) that the decline of the Tamil
nation was caused by the deterioration of its ancient and unique
martial heritage.
(B) The closure of the
avenues by which Vellala upward mobility and conservatism under
successive Sinhala governments in Sri Lanka. The colonial powers opened
these avenues to promote the class and culture of Vellala conservatism
as a bulwark and gurantee against the turbulence of Tamil feudal
militarism. The restrictions placed on university admissions and on
government jobs seriously undermined the class and culture of Vellala
conservatism and its politics of non-violence and compromise. The other
narrative that was contending at this juncture, for Tamilian identity –
Tamil militarism – began to assert itself as the bulwark built by
colonial powers against it crumbled.
(C) Non-Vellala pockets in the peninsula where the values of Vellala conservatism had made little impact.
Nantri: sangam .org
The Maravars are of the Mukkulathor warrior caste and the people of Veeramanickthevanthurai also trace their lineage as being Kshatriya. Maravars were the backbone of Later Pandya. The right for widows to remarry among Maravars was allowed by Maravarman Sundarapandian, looking at the plight of Maravar widows. Many Marvar women used to become widows at an early young age, as many Maravar men were members of suicide squads.
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