Dravidian movement
Dravidian movement
manifestias.com/2018/11/13/dravidian-movement
MANIFEST IAS
Manifest Pedagogy
Personality based tangential topics
Usually when we study personalities, we focus on prelims aspects and at the most mains
question on the personality itself if it can be fitted in the syllabus. But recent times UPSC
has been asking issues in the syllabus surrounding the personality. For example, the
world history question in CSE 2018 on indentured labor was asked because of the death
of V.S.Naipul, A Nobel laureate and Indian origin writer whose writings deals with cultural
alienation, identity dilemmas of colonial migrants. Hence we have taken Dravidian
movement as an issue because of death of Karunanidhi.
In news
Death of Karunanidhi, the Most Prominent Dravida.
Placing it in syllabus
Modern Indian history from about the middle of the eighteenth century until the present
– Significant events, personalities, issues.
Dimensions
1. Origins of Dravidian identity
2. The establishment, reforms and limitations of Justice party
3. V. Rama swami Naicker life and ideas
4. Activism and role of Dravida parties post-independence.
Content
Origins of Dravidian identity
The British divide and rule policies found their expression in the Aryan invasion theory
and giving credence to the idea that Dravidian language speakers are the original
inhabitants of India.
Bishop Robert Caldwell was a missionary and linguist, who academically established the
Dravidian family of languages. Robert Caldwell used the term Dravidian to separate the
languages spoken in South India from other, more Sanskrit-affiliated languages of India.
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Caldwell asserted that the Tamil speakers were “indigenous Dravidian” people, distinct
ethnically and, most critically for him, religiously, from their high-caste oppressors, whom
he referred to as “Brahmanical Aryans”.
The historical research and the dating of Sangam Age and its contrast with the Vedic
literature was also used in arousing a consciousness of difference and parity with the
Sanskritic culture of north.
The Dravidian movement also claimed that Brahmins were originally from the north and
that they had imposed Sanskrit, religion, and their heritage on the people of South India.
Justice party
Formation
The Justice Party was a political party in the Madras Presidency of British India. It was
established in 1917 by T. M. Nair and P. Theagaraya Chetty and was the first backward
class mobilization which created social change and political empowerment.
Political ideology
1. It opposed Brahmins in civil service and politics, and this anti-Brahmin attitude
shaped many of its ideas and policies.
2. It opposed Annie Besant and her Home rule movement, because it believed home
rule would benefit the Brahmins.
3. The party also campaigned against the non-cooperation movement in the
presidency. It was at odds with M. K. Gandhi, primarily due to his praise for
Brahminism.
4. Its mistrust of the Brahmin dominated Congress led it to adopt a hostile stance
toward the Indian independence movement.
5. By petitioning the imperial administration which was more than willing to oblige
they got reservations for the non-Brahmins through the Government of India act of
1919.
6. This attitude of justice party gave it a pro colonial tinge.
7. It did not send representatives to the Central Legislative Assembly, the national
parliamentary body. After it won the provincial elections under government of
India act of 1919. Because of its ideological tropes of anti-Hindi and anti-Aryan
ideology.
Achievements
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Gave reservations to various communities in government jobs.
Legislation that allowed Dalits to use all the public space without discrimination.
Temple entries to non-Brahmins were allowed.
Marriages without Brahmin priests and increased acceptance of inter-caste
marriages called self-respect marriages.
The abolition of Devadasi system.
The party also played a vital role in allowing women to contest elections paving way
for Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy to become the first woman legislator in India.
Initiating the mid-day meal scheme.
Ramaswami Naicker
He represented alternative political traditions in the age when Indian national congress
was attempting to establish a unitary ideal of nationalism against colonialism.
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6. He participated in Vaikom Satyagraha of 1924, a mass movement to demand that
lower caste persons be given the right to use a public path in front of the famous
Vaikom temple.
7. Social reform by the abolition of existing caste systems, religious practices for
which he advocated inter-caste self-respect marriages without the need for
Brahmin priest.
8. Equality with stress on economic and social equality formed the central theme of
the Self-Respect Movement and was due to Periyar’s determination to fight the
inequalities.
9. He argued that women needed to be independent, not mere child-bearers, and
insisted that they be allowed an equal share in employment. He considered birth
control to be important for women’s freedom. The Self Respect Movement
sanctioned property as well as divorce rights for women.
10. He appealed to people to give up the caste suffix in their names, and to not
mention caste. He instituted inter-dining with food cooked by Dalits in public
conferences in the 1930s.
11. He aimed for every human being to act according to reason, and shall not be
subject to slavery of any kind or manner.
12. A sense of pride and valorization of Dravidian and Tamil antiquity.
13. Periyar also propagated the positive identity of non-Brahmans as members of a
‘Dravidian nation’ entitled to sovereign independence from the Indian union and
strengthened an exclusionary regional nationalism.
Periyar declared that the Self-Respect Movement alone could be the genuine freedom
movement, and political freedom would not be fruitful without individual self-respect. He
demanded that self-respect should precede Swaraj. He took over the justice party and
renamed it as Dravida Kazhagam.
Post-independence role
The DMK was formed in 1949 by some of the ambitious followers of Periyar under the
leadership of C N Annadurai. Unlike Periyar this group had deep seated political
ambitions.
The DK and DMK movement, started initially as a protest against the domination of the
Brahmans in Tamilnadu, was given a new dimension after India’s Independence when
the attack was directed against the alleged domination of North India.
Main demand of the DMK was establishment of a separate Dravida Nadu / Dravidistan
consisting of the four southern states.
The passing of the 16 th constitutional amendment in 1962 which made the advocacy of
secessionism a crime made DMK change its constitution and drop the demand for
secession.
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The party stance changed from the demand for secessionism to greater state autonomy
while limiting the powers of center making Indian federalism into a bargaining
federalism.
Efforts by the Indian Government to make Hindi the sole official language after 1965
were not acceptable to many non-Hindi Indian states, who wanted the continued use of
English. The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), a descendant of Dravidar Kazhagam,
led the opposition to Hindi.
To allay their fears, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru enacted the Official Languages Act
in 1963 to ensure the continuing use of English beyond 1965.
The text of the Act did not satisfy the DMK and increased their skepticism that his
assurances might not be honoured by future administrations. As the word “English may”
did not give any guarantee of continued future usage.
As the day of switching over to Hindi as sole official language approached, the anti-Hindi
movement gained momentum in Madras State with increased support from college
students.
On 25 January, a full-scale riot broke out in the southern city of Madurai the Congress
Government of the Madras State, called in paramilitary forces to quell the agitation; their
involvement resulted in the deaths of about seventy persons (by official estimates)
including two policemen.
The agitations of 1965 led to major political changes in the state. The DMK won the 1967
assembly election and the Congress Party never managed to recapture power in the
state since then.
The Official Languages Act was eventually amended in 1967 by the Congress
Government headed by Indira Gandhi to guarantee the indefinite use of Hindi and
English as official languages. This effectively ensured the current “virtual indefinite policy
of bilingualism” of the Indian Republic.
As there is no real contradiction between regional and national identity and as Indian
national integration is based on respect to cultural pluralism and the guiding ideal of
Indian constitution being unity in diversity the nation was able to absorb these pressures
without any violence.
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