In recent times, an alarming narrative has emerged within the Malaysian blogosphere, suggesting a historical event that appears to be a misinterpretation or perhaps a deliberate misinformation campaign. The claim revolves around a so called Malay prince named Manabharana from Srivijaya, purportedly attacking and conquering the Chola kingdom. This misleading story has gained traction and is spreading like wildfire across various social media platforms. The need to address and rectify such inaccuracies is crucial not only for the sake of historical accuracy but also for fostering a responsible and informed online community. To delve into the matter, it is essential to clarify that historical records reveal the existence of multiple individuals named Manabharana throughout history. However, a nuanced understanding reveals that all these figures were Tamils (Damila) hailing from the Pandya kingdom, with references to their exploits documented in Tamil inscriptions and Sri Lankan chronicles
Part 9: Bharathy and the Legitimation of Militarism
by
D.P.
Sivaram
[courtesy:
Lanka
Guardian,
October
1,
1992,
pp.6-8;
prepared
by
Sachi
Sri
Kantha,
for
the
electronic
record]
One
of
the
main
figures
of
the
Indian
revolutionary
movement
in
Tamilnadu
at
the
turn
of
the
[20th]
century
was
Maha
Kavi
Subramaniya
Bharathy.
One
of
its
sympathisers
was
the
Tamil
scholar
M.Raghava
Aiyangar,
who
was
the
court
pundit
of
the
Maravar
kings
of
Ramnad.
Subramaniya
Bharathy
has
been
one
of
the
most
powerful
influences
in
Tamilian
cultural
and
political
life
in
the
twentieth
century.
The
fundamental
idea
of
modern
Tamil
militarism
–
that
the
Tamils
were
a
martial
race
and
that
the
rejuvenation
of
their
martial
traditions
is
necessary
for
national
liberation,
was
enunciated
by
these
two
Brahmins
in
the
first
decade
of
the
twentieth
century.
This
idea
has
informed
Tamil
scholarship
as
well
as
the
narratives
of
militant
Tamil
nationalism
since
then.
It
has
been
reproduced
in
many
forms
but
its
fundamental
structure
has
remained
the
same.
This
narrative
has
been
a
basis
of
the
vocabulary
of
Tamil
nationalism
in
(a)
The
Indian
revolutionary
movement
in
Tamilnadu,
(b)
The
Indian
National
movement
in
Tamilnadu,
(c)
The
DK’s
secessionist
and
Anti-Hindi
movement,
(d)
Caste
revivalist
movements
in
Tamilnadu,
(e)
The
DMK,
(f)
The
Federal
Party
in
Sri
Lanka,
and
(g)
The
armed
Tamil
separatist
movement
in
the
North
and
East
of
Sri
Lanka.
Subramanya Bharathy |
Current
(establishment)
literature
in
the
West
on
the
use
of
history
in
national
liberation
organizations
and
terrorist
groups,
refers
to
what
these
organizations
endeavour
to
disperse
among
their
members
and
their
people
as
‘the’
authentic
reading
of
the
nation’s
past
and
present,
as
projective
narratives
which
are,
it
is
claimed,
"stories
that
not
only
recall
the
past,
but
also
teach
how
to
behave
in
the
present."
"Narratives
of
this
sort
tell
individuals
how
they
would
ideally
have
to
live
and
die
in
order
to
contribute
properly
to
their
collectivity
and
its
future."
It
has
been
argued
in
an
analysis
which
draws
attention
to
the
frequent
use
of
these
projective
narratives
by
the
Armenian
Secret
Army
for
the
Liberation
of
Armenia,
that
the
members
of
the
Army
are
not
marginal
outcastes
from
Armenian
society,
but
that
projective
narratives
transform
them
into
"paradigmatic
figures
of
its
deepest
values."
(Gerald
Cromer:
1991).
The
projective
narratives
that
shaped
militant
Tamil
nationalism
and
its
idea
of
nationl
liberation
were
formulated
as
a
reassertion
of
feudal
Tamil
militarism
and
its
traditional
cultural
hegemony
in
Tamil
society.
This
was
so
because
they
were
eseentially
linked
to
the
Indian
revolutionary
movement’s
idea
of
reviving
India’s
traditional
martial
heritage
as
a
precondition
for
national
liberation.
The
importance
of
chiefly
Bharathy
and
to
lesser
extent
Raghava
Aiyangar
in
the
rise
of
modern
Tamil
militarism
lies
in
the
fact
that
they
initiated
a
political
reading
of
the
ancient
Tamil
text
Purananooru,
in
particular-
an
anthology
of
predominantly
heroic
poems
–
and
a
heroic
Tamilian
past
in
general,
as
basis
of
a
Tamilian
concept
of
national
liberation.
Their
reading
was
conceived
as
part
of
the
Indian
revolutionary
movement’s
ideology
of
national
liberation
through
armed
insurrection.
It
must
be
emphasised
that
they
saw
the
Tamil
martial
tradition
from
a
pan-Indian
perspective.
To
them
the
heroic
Tamil
past
was
a
reflection
of
a
great
Indian
martial
heritage,
whereas
the
Dravidian
school
vehemently
rejected
the
pan-Indian
perspective
as
a
myth
promoted
by
Brahmin
interests.
Therefore
the
politics
of
the
views
propagated
by
Bharathy
and
Raghava
Aiyangar
have
to
be
located
at
two
levels;
the
pan-Indian
and
the
south
Indian.
At
the
first
[pan-Indian]
level,
the
following
factors
have
to
be
considered;
(a)
British
recruitment
policy
and
its
theory
of
martial
races,
(b)
the
cultural
and
political
reaction
to
it
among
the
educated
Indian
middle
classes
in
Bengal
and
west
India.,
(c)
the
kshatriya
revivalism
of
Bal
Ganghadar
Thilak,
(d)
Japan’s
victory
over
Russia
in
1905.
At
the
south
Indian
level,
the
following
factors
shaped
the
two
men’s
thinking;
(a)
the
movement
for
elevating
the
status
of
Tamil
language,
(b)
the
rediscovery
of
the
Sangam
anthologies,
(c)
the
status
and
role
of
feudal
Tamil
militarism
in
Tamil
society.
The
shift
in
[military]
recruitment
to
the
northwest
of
the
subcontinent
toward
the
latter
part
of
the
19th
century
was
accompanied
by
the
martial
races
theory
which
sought
to
elaborate
the
idea
as
to
why
some
Indian
people
–
Rajputs,
Sikhs,
Punjabi
Muslims
–
were
martial,
while
others
–
Marathas,
Bengali
upper
castes,
Mahars,
Telugus
and
Tamils
who
had
once
been
the
predominant
groups
of
the
British
Indian
army
–
were
not
martial.
Lord
Roberts
of
Kandahar,
the
commander
in
chief
of
the
Indian
army,
1885-1893,
had
made
disparaging
remarks
about
the
martial
character
of
the
Tamils
[and]
Telugus
who
had
once
formed
the
backbone
of
the
army’s
largest
group
of
infantry
units.
"Each
cold
season
I
made
long
tours
in
order
to
acquaint
myself
with
the
needs
and
capabilities
of
the
men
of
the
Madras
Army.
I
tried
hard
to
discover
in
them
those
fighting
qualities
which
had
distinguished
their
forefathers
during
the
wars
of
the
last
and
the
beginning
of
the
present
century…and
I
was
forced
to
the
conclusion
that
the
ancient
military
spirit
had
died
in
them."
It
was
reasoned
that
long
years
of
peace
in
the
south
had
had
a
softening
effect
on
them.
There
were
protests
and
petitions
from
the
de-recruited
classes
including
Tamils
and
Telugus.
A
need
to
prove
their
ancient
martial
character
arose
among
many
classes
that
were
thus
affected.
At
a
Congress
session
in
1891,
two
Telugu
Brahmins
invoked
the
ancient
Hindu
law
giver
Manu
in
support
of
their
contention
that
they
were
traditionally
a
war-like
race,
to
refute
Lord
Robert’s
alleged
slights
against
the
Telugu
people.
These
sentiments
had
been
already
exacerbated
by
the
Arms
Act
of
1878
which
prohibited
Indians
from
possessing
arms
without
permission.
This
was
seen
as
a
loss
of
self
respect.
Raja
Rampal
Singh
protested
against
it
at
the
second
session
of
the
National
Congress
in
1886,
"…But
we
cannot
be
grateful
to
it
(the
British
Government)
for
degrading
our
natures,
for
systematically
crushing
out
of
us
all
martial
spirit,
for
converting
a
race
of
soldiers
into
a
timid
flock
of
quill
driving
sheep."
(Cohen;
1990,
chapters
1,
2)
The
Marathas
had
also
been
particularly
affected
by
these
developments.
Thilak
arose
as
a
national
leader
among
them.
He
propagated
the
view
that
the
kshatriya
class
which
had
been
disfranchised
by
the
British
had
to
rise
again.
They
were
the
traditional
defenders
of
the
realm
and
internal
order.
National
emancipation
could
be
achieved
through
the
rejuvenation
of
that
class
and
the
traditional
Indian
social
order.
U. V. Swaminatha Aiyar |
Thilak’s
ideas
played
an
important
role
in
the
rise
and
dispersion
of
the
Indian
revolutionary
movement.
The
movement
got
a
big
boost
in
1905,
when
Japan
defeated
Russia.
The
victory
demonstrated
a
point
–
that
Asian
martial
spirit
could
prevail
over
European
military
might.
Hence,
for
the
revolutionaries
(the
Raj
classified
them
as
terrorists)
India’s
emancipation
lay
in
the
revival
of
its
traditional
martial
values.
The
impact
of
Japan’s
victory
over
Russia
on
the
Indian
revolutionary
movement
in
Bengal
and
west
India
has
been
examined
(in
detail,
in
Dua:
1966).
At
this
time
Subramaniya
Bharathy
was
the
editor
of
a
nationalist
Tamil
paper
called,
‘India’.
He
was
an
ardent
follower
of
Thilak
and
the
revolutionary
movement
and
was
one
of
the
few
in
Madras
who
were
bold
enough
to
propagate
its
ideas
through
his
paper.
On
Thilak’s
fiftieth
birthday,
he
wrote
an
editorial
(14.7[July]
1906):
"The
present
condition
of
the
country
makes
it
necessary
to
have
Veera
Poojai
(hero
worship)…Veera
Poojai
is
indispensable
for
a
country’s
progress.
The
people
of
our
country
who
have
always
keenly
observed
Veera
Poojai,
should
not
be
slack
at
a
time
when
it
is
most
needed."
A
note
in
the
paper
says
that,
Thilak’s
birthday
was
celebrated
in
Madras
at
Bharathy’s
house
at
Lingaya
Chetty
street
and
that
a
pooja
had
been
held
for
India’s
martial
goddess
–
Veera
Sakthi
–
Bhavani
(the
goddess
worshipped
by
the
Maratha
warrior
king
Shivaji).
The
revolutionary
movement
was
spreading
the
Shivaji
festival
in
many
parts
of
India
to
rekindle
the
martial
spirit
which
according
to
them
had
been
systematically
crushed
out
of
the
Indian
nation
and
were
establishing
gymnasiums
to
improve
its
physical
power.
Bharathy
wrote
an
editorial
titled
in
English
as,
‘The
Outrage
of
the
Arms
Act’,
reminiscient
of
Raja
Rampal
Singh’s
outburst
–
"An
evil
Viceroy
called
Lord
Lytton
introduced
this
Act
in
1878.
The
people
should
have
opposed
it
then.
It
is
totally
against
divine
law
to
make
a
great
country’s
people
cowards
who
cannot
wield
weapons."
(1.12[Dec]
1906)
Again
he
wrote
an
editorial
titled,
‘Are
Indians
Cowards?’,
on
Japan’s
martial
example.
"A
few
Asiatics
soundly
beat
hundreds
and
thousands
of
Russians.
This
is
enough
to
show
the
valour
of
the
Asians.
The
warrior’s
heaven
–
Veera
Swarkam
–
is
better."
(29.12
[Dec.]
1906)
He
[Bharathy]
was
opposed
to
those
who
upheld
the
value
of
English
education.
The
ideas
of
the
revolutionary
movement
had
to
be
rooted
in
Tamil
culture
and
its
deepest
values;
and
they
had
to
be
spread
among
the
ordinary
Tamil
masses.
This
could
be
done
according
to
him
only
by
adopting
a
simple
style
of
writing
Tamil.
This
view
underlies
his
poems
and
songs
through
which
he
propagated
the
idea
of
the
rejuvenation
of
the
Tamil
martial
spirit
as
part
of
the
India’s
heroic
reawakening
and
liberation.
"Amongst
us,
the
Tamils,
manliness
is
gone,
valour
is
gone.
We
don’t
have
a
country.
We
don’t
have
a
government.
Will
Saraswathy
(the
goddess
of
learning)
appear
in
this
country
in
such
a
situation?"
"Tamil
Nadu
has
not
lost
its
wealth,
independence,
physical
strength,
and
mental
strength
and
has
descended
to
a
low
state.
Hence
good
poets
disappeared
from
this
country."
In
his
Puthiya
Aathisoody
(a
book
of
moral
aphorisms
for
children),
he
wrote,
"Dismiss
fear.
Do
not
fail
in
courage.
Learn
the
art
of
War."
Thilak’s
idea
that
the
kshatriya
class
of
India
that
had
been
disfranchised
by
the
British,
had
to
reasert
itself
in
the
struggle
for
the
nation’s
emancipation
was
more
real
and
immediate
to
Bharathy,
because
he
came
from
a
Brahmin
family
from
Tinnevely
in
the
deep
south,
that
had
served
the
Poligars
of
Ettayapuram.
He
was
hence,
acutely
aware
of
the
traditional
status
of
the
Maravar
in
Tamil
society
and
what
had
befallen
them
under
the
British.
The
great
famine
of
1876
had
brought
untold
suffering
upon
the
people
in
the
deep
south
and
had
led
to
a
further
decline
in
the
standing
of
the
poorer
sections
of
the
Maravar.
They
were
constantly
harassed
by
the
police
which
was
formed
by
Brahmins
and
other
non-military
castes.
The
poet,
a
Brahmin
who
had
given
up
the
holy
thread,
hated
Brahminism
and
his
castemen
who
were
servile
to
the
English.
To
Bharathy,
the
kshatriyas
of
Tamilnadu
were
the
Maravar.
(This
view
seems
to
have
been
common
to
Brahmin
families
that
had
served
the
Marava
chieftains
and
kings.
See
also,
Dirks;
1982;
p.662).
In
a
note
to
his
‘Paanjali
Sapatham’,
he
says,
"Maram
means
valour
–
Veeram.
Maravar
are
kshatriyar.
Understand
that,
in
our
country,
the
class
that
is
known
now
as
Maravar
are
kshatriyar."
His
‘Maravan’s
song’
(Maravan
Paattu)
relates
the
predicament
of
the
traditional
Tamil
military
castes
under
British
rule
and
urges
the
reassertion
of
the
Maravar,
and
their
martial
reputation.
He
portrays
his
own
castemen
in
the
police
as
a
wretched
and
greedy
lot,
abject
before
the
English
master,
framing
criminal
cases
against
the
Maravar
and
fleecing
them
under
various
pretexts.
"Alas,
we
have
to
dig
the
soil
today
to
earn
our
wage.
The
might
of
our
swords
and
spears
are
gone!
A
bad
name
has
come
upon
us
in
this
world…The
times
when
we
made
war
with
bows,
blowing
our
chanks,
are
now
a
thing
of
the
past…Can
we
bring
disgrace
upon
our
great
warriors
of
yore
by
selling
our
honour?
Aren’t
we
the
valourous
Maravar?
Should
we
lead
this
useless
life
anymore?"
Thus
the
revival
of
traditional
Tamil
militarism
–
in
its
caste
and
broader
cultural
forms
–
was
essentially
linked
to
Bharathy’s
project
of
propagating
and
kindling
Tamil
nationalism
among
the
masses
as
a
means
of
national
liberation.
The
project
has
continued
to
be
at
the
centre
of
all
political
schemes
that
have
invoked
Tamil
nationalism
from
his
time.
Bharathy’s
convictions
received
a
boost
in
September
1906,
at
the
time
when
the
activities
of
the
revolutionaries
were
gathering
momentum.
It
came
from
a
talk
given
by
U.V.Saminatha
Aiyer
on
a
poem
from
the
Purananooru
–
an
anthology
of
heroic
Tamil
poetry.
U.V.Saminatha
Aiyer,
after
many
years
of
research,
had
discovered
and
published
the
Purananooru
in
1894.
It
was
considered
to
be
one
of
the
most
ancient
Tamil
works.
It
is
said
that
"the
publication
of
Purananooru
created
a
revolution
in
Tamilian
thinking."
(P.S.Mani;
p.105.
Bharathiyarum
Thamil
Pulavarhalum,
1981,
Madras.
"They
–
the
Tigers
–
are
writing
the
new
Purananooru",
Ulahath
Thamilar,
1.5[May].1992)
The
talk
gave
Bharathy
what
he
was
looking
for
–
a
sound
basis
for
propagating
the
idea
of
reviving
the
martial
spirit
among
the
Tamils
to
achieve
national
liberation
through
violence.
He
wrote
an
editorial
on
the
subject
titled
in
English
as
‘Ancient
Tamil
Lady
of
Ever
Sacred
Memory’,
on
8.9[Sept].1906.
The
political
life
of
Purananooru,
the
foundation
text
of
Tamil
militarism,
begins
in
this
editorial.
It
was
a
time
when
very
few
Tamils
knew
about
Purananooru
or
the
Sangam
corpus.
He
says,
"A
Tamil
work
called
Purananooru
was
written
many
centuries
ago.
It
does
not,
like
later
works,
relate
Puranic
fables.
It
tells
of
the
condition
of
Tamilnadu
in
those
times,
the
wars
of
the
kings
and
many
other
natural
events.
A
poem
from
this
work
was
expounded
by
U.V.Saminatha
Aiyer
of
the
Madras
Presidency
College.
There
are
some,
who
out
of
ignorance
think
that
there
is
no
use
in
learning
Tamil
and
that
it
cannot
inspire
patriotism.
Aiyer
spoke
on
this
poem
to
refute
their
erroneous
notions.
The
poem
is
about
the
mother
of
a
warrior
(Rana
Veeran).
The
woman
had
sent
her
son
to
the
battle
field,
thinking
that
he
will
either
die
in
war
for
his
mother
country
or
come
back
victorious.
A
liar
came
and
told
her
that
her
son
had
taken
fright
and
run
away
from
the
battle
field.
On
hearing
this
the
old
woman
exclaimed,
‘Did
I
bring
up
a
coward
to
whom
his
life
was
more
important
than
the
love
for
his
nation?
I
shall
go
to
the
battle
front
and
if
he
has
done
so,
I
shall
hack
these
breasts
that
gave
him
suck
and
will
die
there.’
Determined
thus
the
old
woman
went
to
the
field
and
was
overjoyed
to
find
her
son
slain
in
battle.
She
was
at
peace,
because
her
son
had
given
his
life
for
his
motherland.
The
woman’s
name
is
not
known
now.
But
only
if
Lord
Isvara
blesses
the
continent
of
Baratha
with
many
such
mothers
in
these
times,
a
solution
to
all
our
problems
could
be
found."
Bharathy
draws
a
parallel
here
to
the
story
of
a
Japanese
mother
who
had
lost
all
her
sons
in
the
war
but
was
found
crying
that
she
did
not
have
more
sons
to
send
to
the
battle
front.
There
were
books
on
Japan’s
victory
over
Russia
like,
‘The
Russo-Japanese
War’
in
circulation,
particularly
among
the
revolutionaries
and
their
sympathisers
at
that
time.
The
theme
of
the
heroic
Japanese
mothers
who
nurtured
the
martial
spirit
in
their
sons
during
the
1905
war
was
emphasised
in
these
books.
Japan’s
victory
over
Russia
had
inspired
another
nationalist
minded
Brahmin
to
write
Parani
poems
(A
form
of
Tamil
war
poetry
sung
for
a
warrior
who
slays
1,000
elephants
in
battle)
hailing
its
martial
example.
This
was
M.Raghava
Aiyangar,
who
was
the
editor
of
the
Madurai
Thamil
Sangam’s
journal
‘Senthamil.’
References
1.
Bharathi
Kavithaikal;
1982,
Vanavil
Pirasuram,
Madras.
2.
Bharathi
Tharisanam
(‘India’
essays,
1906),
vol.1,
New
Century
Book
House,
Madras.
3.
Nicholas
B.Dirks;
The
pasts
of
a
Palayakarar
–
The
ethnohistory
of
a
South
Indian
Little
King.
Journal
of
Asian
Studies,
vol.XLI,
no.4,
August
1982.
"Many
of
my
informants
(Brahmins
as
well
as
Maravars
and
Kallars)
have
told
me
that
the
Mukkulathors
–
the
three
Tamil
military
castes
–
are
really
the
kshatriyas
of
Southern
India."
Dirks
deals
with
the
Poligars
(Palayakarars)
of
Othumalai,
who
belong
to
the
Kondayam
Kottai
subsection
of
the
Maravar,
the
group
to
which
most
of
the
Southern
feudal
military
chieftainsbelonged.
The
Sethupathys
–
the
kings
of
Ramnad
–
belong
to
the
subsection
known
as
Sembi
Maravar.
4.
R.P.Dua;
1966.
The
Impact
of
the
Russo-Japanese
(1905)
War
on
Indian
Politics,
S.Chand,
Delhi.
5.
Gerald
Cromer;
In
the
Mirror
of
the
Past
–
The
use
of
history
in
the
justification
of
terrorism
and
political
violence.
[Journal
name
is
missing
here,
due
to
author’s
or
printer’s
slip],
vol.3,
no.4,
winter
1991.
Letter
of
Correspondent
C.R.A.Hoole
[Ontario,
Canada]:
Tamil
Military
Caste
[Lanka
Guardian,
September
15,
1992,
p.12]
D.P.Sivaram’s
claim
that
Bishop
Caldwell’s
writing
served
to
"demilitarize
Tamil
society"
(August
1)
discloses
a
fixation
on
Tamil
martial
prowess
and
warrior
bravery.
The
fixation
is
more
explicit
in
Mr.Sivaram’s
account
of
the
‘Tamil
military
castes’
(May
1
–
July
1).
The
account
cannot
however
be
taken
as
an
accurate
reading
of
Tamil
history.
It
may
be
better
understood
as
a
charter,
providing
historiographical
legitimacy
for
the
present-day
glorification
of
warrior-heroes
who
earn
fame
and
honour
through
gruesome
deeds.
Crucial
to
his
argument
is
the
assertion
that
the
pre-British
society
was
dominated
by
martial
values
and
only
subsequently
"under
active
British
patronage
the
Vellala
caste
established
its
dominance,
and
its
culture
became
representative
and
hegemonic
in
Tamil
society"
(May
15,
p.18).
Against
this
view,
it
may
be
pointed
out
that
centuries
before
the
Bishop
launched
his
so-called
pacification
programme,
the
brahmans
and
their
Vellala
allies
initiated
a
process
of
agrarian
expansion
that
not
only
brought
large
tracts
of
land
under
cultivation,
but
its
people
under
the
sway
of
brahmanical
values
(B.Stein,
1980;
B.Beck,
1979).
Kallar
and
Maravar
during
the
Chola
times
progressively
converted
their
lands
to
peasant
agriculture
and
also
adopted
Vellala
titles.
This
process
has
been
described
as
"Vellalization"
or
"brahmanization"
and
gave
rise
to
the
Tamil
proverb,
"Kallar,
Maravar
and
Agambediyar
becoming
fat,
turn
into
Vellalar".
The
caste
society
as
we
know
it
today,
began
to
emerge
from
process
in
the
tenth
century,
with
its
left-hand
and
right-hand
structural
divisions.
It
would
then
follow
that
the
dominant
values
of
the
Tamil
society
in
the
eighteenth
and
nineteenth
centuries
are
typically
caste
values
that
is,
"hierarchy"
and
"consensus"
–
in
opposition
to
"conflict"
(M.Moffat,
An
Untouchable
Community
in
South
India,
1979).
In
this
context,
the
Kallar
and
Maravar
who
continued
to
inhabit
the
remaining
marginal
or
peripheral
tracts
at
this
time,
may
be
seen
to
represent
a
classical
ethosthat
was
receding
into
oblivion.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
Kallar
and
Maravar
remained
an
irritant
to
the
British
Raj,
as
they
had
been
to
the
Chola
and
Pandya
overlords.
On
the
other
hand
because
they
existed
outside
the
larger
caste
society,
neither
a
Kallan
nor
a
Maravan
could
during
the
time
become
a
paradigmatic
figure
worthy
of
imitation
by
the
vast
majority
of
the
Tamils.
In
short,
Mr.Sivaram
has
exaggerated
their
influence
on
the
Tamil
society
during
that
period.
Letter
of
Correspondent
T.Vanniasingham
[Canada]:
Maravar
Militarism
[Lanka
Guardian,
October
15,
1992,
p.21]
Please
permit
me
to
say
a
few
words
about
Mr.Sivaram’s
essays
on
Tamil
military
castes.
In
his
account
he
is
illegitimately
glorifying
them.
He
seems
to
be
implying
that
they
were
treated
unambiguously
with
awe
and
veneratio,
at
the
time
of
their
exploits.
Tamil
literary
documents
of
the
period
are
not
reliable
on
this
score.Poets
and
bards
were
hired-hands
in
the
service
of
chiefs
and
could
be
paid
to
praise
and
exaggerate
their
struggles
and
victories.
In
any
case
there
are
other
Tamil
poems
that
portray
the
Maravar
as
blood-thirsty
savages,
uncouth,
undisciplined
and
lawless
who
lived
by
robbing
unarmed
travellers.
The
Silapathikaram
for
instance
mentions
them
as
practising
"the
glorious
art
of
stripping
travellers
of
their
wealth
–
for
the
brave
Maravar
virtue
lies
in
the
heartlessness
of
plunder."
There
is
no
doubt
that
they
established
kingdoms
of
their
own
–
and
at
other
times
they
were
mercenaries
in
the
pay
of
other
kingdoms.
In
fact
there
were
many
ruling
castes
in
ancient
Tamil
society.
The
Maravar
were
one
such
group.
These
many
castes
were
always
in
contention
for
power
and
the
Maravar
won,
at
times.
They
were
not
overpowering
and
dominant
all
the
time
and
over
the
entire
territory.
In
this
respect,
Mr.Diulweva’s
claims
(Lanka
Guardian,
1
Sept.’92)
were
quite
correct.
In
fact
it
is
possible
to
show
that
they
were
a
"fierce
maravar
tribe
–
who
prefer
to
die
a
glorious
death
on
the
battle
field
to
a
village
funeral
pyre,"
as
the
Silapadikaram
puts
it,
they
lacked
a
theory
of
government
and
civil
society.
For
them
a
civil
society
is
not
something
that
people
live
in
but
something
that
one
robs
and
devours
because
the
Maravar
never
produce
anything.
Long
before
the
British
came
to
suppress
them,
they
had
shown
an
inability
to
govern
a
civil
society
of
many
castes
for
any
extended
period
of
time.
Governance
needs
intelligence,
political
wisdom,
historical
knowledge,
forebearance
and
a
capacity
for
trust,
all
of
which,
if
we
are
to
judge
by
the
descriptions
in
the
ancient
Tamil
texts,
the
Maravar
conspicuously
lack.
A
readiness
to
kill
and
be
killed,
as
we
know
only
too
well,
is
not
the
way
to
create
a
civilized
society.
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