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Anti-Hindi agitation of 1937–40

The Anti-Hindi imposition agitation of 1937–40 is a series of protests that happened in Madras Presidency of British India during 1937-40. It was launched in 1937 in opposition to the introduction of compulsory teaching of Hindi in the schools of the presidency by the Indian National Congress government led by C. Rajagopalachari (Rajaji). This move was immediately opposed by E. V. Ramasamy (Periyar) and the opposition Justice Party (later Dravidar Kazhagam). The agitation, which lasted for about 30 months, was multifaceted and involved fasts, conferences, marches, picketing and protests. The government responded with a crackdown resulting in the death of two protesters and the arrest of 1,198 persons including women and children. The mandatory Hindi education was later withdrawn by the British Governor of Madras Lord Erskine in February 1940 after the resignation of the Congress government in 1939.

1937–40 Anti-Hindi agitations of Madras
Part of Anti-Hindi agitations of Tamil Nadu
Front page of Periyar E. V. Ramasamy's periodical Kudiyarasu (3 September 1939). The headline reads "Veezhga Indhi" (Down with Hindi)
Date11 August 1937 - 21 February 1940
(2 years, 6 months and 11 days)
Location
Tamil-speaking areas of
Madras Presidency, British India
(present-day Tamil Nadu, India)
Caused byA policy statement and a government order (G.O) issued by the Madras Presidential Government to make the teaching of Hindi language compulsory in secondary schools
GoalsTo make the government withdraw the order
Methods
Resulted in
  • Resignation of the Government (1939)
  • Withdrawal of the order by Madras Governor Lord Erskine (1940)
Parties

Electoral parties
* Justice Party
All-India Muslim League


Non-electoral organizations
* Self-Respect Movement
* Tamilar Padai (rallying)
* Karanthai Tamil Sangam


Tamil scholars, Saivite scholars, industrialists and general public

Government of Madras (1937-39)
* Madras Police


Electoral parties
Indian National Congress (partially)


Non-electoral organizations
* Hindustani Seva Dal
* Hindustani Hitashi Sabha
Lead figures
Casualties
Death(s)2 (Natarajan and Thalamuthu)
Arrested1,198
DetainedPeriyar (1 year ; released in 6 months)
Annadurai (4 months)
Palladam Ponnusamy (6 weeks)
FinedPeriyar fined ₹.1,000

Background edit

The Republic of India has hundreds of languages. According to the Census of 2001, there are 1,635 rationalized mother tongues and 122 languages with more than 10,000 speakers.[1] During the British Raj, English was the official language. When the Indian Independence Movement gained momentum in the early part of the 20th century, efforts were undertaken to make Hindustani as a common language to unite various linguistic groups against the British Government. As early as 1918, Mahatma Gandhi established the Dakshin Bharat Hindi Prachar Sabha (Institution for the Propagation of Hindi in South India). In 1925, the Indian National Congress switched to Hindustani from English for conducting its proceedings.[2] Both Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru were supporters of Hindustani and Congress wanted to propagate the learning of Hindustani in non-Hindi speaking Provinces of India.[3][4][5] The idea of making Hindustani or Hindi the common language was not acceptable to Periyar, who viewed it as an attempt to make Tamils subordinate to North Indians.[6]

The Indian National Congress won the 1937 elections in Madras Presidency. Rajaji became the Chief Minister on 14 July 1937. He was a supporter of propagating Hindi in South India. Even before the elections, he had expressed support for Hindi in a newspaper article (Sudesamithran, 6 May 1937): "Government employment is limited. All cannot get it. Therefore one has to search for other jobs. For that and for business, knowledge of Hindi is necessary. Only if we learn Hindi, the south Indian can gain respect among the others."[7] On 11 August 1937,[8] within a month of coming to power, he announced his intention to introduce Hindi language teaching in secondary schools by issuing a policy statement.[7] This move followed lobbying by pro-Hindi organisations like Hindustani Seva Dal and Hindustani Hitashi Sabha. These organisations had earlier convinced many Justice Party led local governments to introduce compulsory Hindi in schools in the early 1930s.[2] Periyar and the opposition Justice Party led by A. T. Panneerselvam immediately opposed the move. An Anti-Hindi conference was organised on 4 October 1937 to protest the announcement. On 21 April 1938, Rajaji went ahead and passed a government order (G.O) making the teaching of Hindi compulsory in 125 Secondary schools in the Presidency. Rajaji's persistence was viewed by Hindi's opponents as an attempt to destroy Tamil and promote Hindi. They started statewide protests against Rajaji and Hindi. The agitation was marked by protest marches, anti-Hindi conferences, observing an anti-Hindi day (1 July[9] and 3 December 1938[10]), fasts against government policies, black flag demonstrations and picketing of government offices and institutions. It was active in Tamil speaking districts of the Presidency - Ramnad, Tirunelveli, Salem, Tanjore and North Arcot.[7] The agitation lasted till the order was withdrawn in February 1940. Two persons -Natarajan and Thalamuthu- lost their lives. Around 1,200 people including Periyar were imprisoned.

Support for the agitation edit

 
(From right to left) : B. R. Ambedkar, Periyar and Jinnah at Jinnah's residence in Bombay (8 January 1940)[11]
 
Frontpage of Kudiyarasu dated 20 November 1938. The story is about the Tamil Nadu Women's Conference

The anti-Hindi agitation was backed by Periyar's Self-Respect Movement and Justice Party. The Justice party was led by older, established leaders like Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu and Pannirselvam, who did not have reputations as agitators and derived their power from patronage. Their representatives in the Madras Legislature demanded that the Hindi teaching be made optional.[12] The more militant agitators led by Periyar did not have any patronage, but derived their influence from activism and politics of agitation. Periyar eventually became the president of the Justice Party during the course of the agitation. The agitation was also supported by Tamil scholars like Maraimalai Adigal, Somasundara Bharathi, K. Appadurai, Mudiyarasan, K. A. P. Viswanatham and Ilakkuvanar. In December 1937, Tamil Saivite scholars were among the first to announce their opposition to the Hindi teaching in the Saiva Sidhandha Maha Samaja conference at Velur.[13] Women also participated in the agitation in large numbers. Moovalur Ramamirtham, Narayani, Va. Ba. Thamaraikani, Munnagar Azhagiyar, Dr. S. Dharmambal, Malar Mugathammaiyar, Pattammal and Seethammal were some of the women who were arrested for participating in the agitation.[14] On 13 November 1938,[15] the Tamil Nadu Women's Conference was convened to demonstrate women's support for the movement.[16][17] Despite the anti-Brahmin sentiments of the backers of the agitation, a few Brahmins like Kanchi Rajagopalachari also participated in the movement.[18] The Tamil speaking Muslims in the Madras presidency supported the agitation (in contrast to the Urdu speaking Muslims, who supported the propagation of Hindi). P. Khalifulla Sahib, a Muslim League member representing Trichy in the Legislative Assembly, declared "I may at once say that I am a Rowther myself; my mother tongue is Tamil and not Urdu. I am not ashamed of it; I am proud of it.. We have not been told why Hindi after all has been chosen as the common language of India".[7] Financial support for the agitation was provided by industrialists and landlords like W. P. A. Soundarapandian Nadar and G. D. Naidu.[19] Acknowledging the agitation's popular support, Lord Erskine, the then Governor of Madras wrote to Viceroy Linlithgow in July 1938 that "Compulsory Hindi has been the cause of great trouble in this province and is certainly contrary to the wishes of the bulk of the population..."[7]

Fasts edit

On 1 May 1938, a young man named Stalin Jagadeesan went on a fast demanding the withdrawal of compulsory Hindi teaching. He became a symbol for the anti-Hindi agitators. In an interview published in Periyar's magazine Viduthalai he declared that his fast was to prove that Tamil Thai (lit. Mother Tamil) still had loyal sons. On 1 June, another man named Ponnusamy began a fast in front of Rajaji's house. Periyar did not approve of fasting as a form of protest. But other leaders of the agitation like C. N. Annadurai used Jagadeesan as an example. Annadurai declared in an anti-Hindi meeting that "If Jagadeesan dies, I am ready to take his place, and die along with ten others. As soon as Jagadeesan dies, you should also be prepared to die". Jagadeesan's fast was called off after ten weeks.[18][20]

Picketing and processions edit

 
Front page of Periyar E. V. Ramasamy's periodical Kudiyarasu (3 September 1939). The headline reads "Veezhga Indhi" (Down with Hindi)

A major feature of the agitation was the picketing of government offices and the schools where Hindi was being taught compulsorily. A boycott committee was formed on 1 June 1938 to coordinate the picketing. Rajaji's house in Mambalam, the Board High School at Tiruvarur and the Hindu Theosophical School at Triplicane, Madras became popular targets for the picketers. In that month Periyar started playing an active role in the agitation and the movement heated up. In November an anti-Hindi procession in Madras city turned violent and developed into a riot with protesters stoning the offices of Indian Express, Ananda Vikatan, Dina Mani and Tamil Mani. With Periyar's fiery speeches motivating them, the agitators gained response from the Police. The agitation which started relatively small, began to gain momentum.[19]

Tamil brigade edit

In August–September 1938, a protest march was jointly organised by the Self-Respect movement and the Muslim league. It was flagged of by Periyar and Khaliffullah. The marchers who called themselves Tamilar Padai (lit. Tamil brigade), started from Trichy on 1 August 1938. They were led by Kumarasamy Pillai and Moovalur Ramamirtham. In the next 42 days, the marchers covered 234 villages and 60 towns. They addressed 87 public meetings and received widespread coverage in the press. They reached Madras on 11 September 1938 and were arrested for picketing government offices. The march succeeded in raising anti-Hindi and pro-Tamil support in smaller towns and villages they covered.[2][7][10]

Natarajan and Thalamuthu edit

Two persons died during the agitation and were claimed as martyrs by the agitators. Their deaths fueled the protests further. Natarajan was arrested On 5 December 1938. He was admitted to the hospital on 30 December and died on 15 January 1939. On 13 February 1939, Thalamuthu was arrested with others for picketing the Hindu Theological High School in Madras. While imprisoned, he fell ill on 6 March and died on 11 March. The government claimed that his death was due to Cellulitis and Amoebic dysentery and he was already in poor health when he died.

When the issue was raised in the Assembly, Rajaji dismissed it casually. The agitators were incensed by the government attitude and turned the dead men into martyrs. Their funeral processions in Madras were attended by hundreds of mourners and witnessed fiery speeches denouncing the government. Annadurai proclaimed that Natarajan's name and deeds should be inscribed in gold in the history of the world. The agitators praised their sacrifices and claimed that the dead men had refused early release in exchange for ending their activities. In an interview given to the Sunday Observer on 27 January 1939, Natarajan's father K. Lakshmanan said when his son was hospitalized he refused to apologize to get an early release.[18][21][22]

Anti Brahminism edit

The anti-Hindi movement viewed the Hindi legislation as an attempt by Brahmins to impose Hindi and Sanskrit over Tamil.[23][24] Rajaji's earlier attempt to translate an English Language Physics book into Tamil using Sanskrit words was viewed as proof of his preference of Sanskrit over Tamil. The anti-Hindi movement portrayed the Brahmin-dominated Tamil Nadu Congress party as a stooge of "Hindi Imperialists" from the North. The resistance of the Brahmin Tamil scholars for removing Sanskrit words from Tamil was viewed by some in the agitation as proof of Brahmin complicity in the attempt to destroy Tamil.[25] Rajaji was identified as an enemy of Tamil. Dravidian movement newspapers carried cartoons depicting Rajaji hurling a dagger at Tamil Thai and disrobing her. Similar banners were displayed in the processions taken out by anti-Hindi agitators. In an anti-Hindi meeting organised in August 1938, Pavalar Balasundaram accused the Brahmin community of "killing Tamil Thai". Rajaji's dismissal of Natarasan's death in the Assembly was denounced as "Aryans laughing while Tamils shed tears for their hero". Rajaji complained that the agitators were describing their opponents "by caste, by their sacred thread, by the tuft of the hair on their head".[2][19][26][27]

Government response edit

The ruling Congress Party was divided on the Hindi issue. While Rajaji and his supporters stuck to their position,[28] Sathyamurti and Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan were against it. They wanted Rajaji to make Hindi optional or to provide a conscience clause for allowing parents to withhold their children from Hindi Classes. Satyamurti also disagreed with the use of Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1932 against the anti-Hindi agitators.[29] In a letter written to Mahatma Gandhi on 7 July 1938, he wrote:

I personally believe that where a parent or guardian swears an affidavit before a magistrate stating his reasons that it is against his conscience that his boy or girl should learn Hindustani compulsorily, the child may be exempted. I personally believe very few parents or guardians will claim this exemption. This will expose the hollowness of the agitation and kill it. I wish you to write to Sri. C. Rajagopalachari suggesting this to him. Moreover, I am not very happy over the use by the Madras Government of the Criminal Law Amendment Act against these picketers.[29]

Rajaji defended his action in another G.O. issued on 14 June 1938:

The attainment by our Province of its rightful place in the national life of India requires that our educated youth should possess a working knowledge of the most widely spoken language in India. Government have therefore decided upon the introduction of Hindustani in the secondary school curriculum of our province. Government desire to make it clear that Hindi is not to be introduced in any elementary school whatsoever, the mother tongue being the only language taught in such schools. Hindi is to be introduced only in secondary schools and there too only in the 1st, 2nd and 3rd forms, that is to say in the 6th, 7th and 8th years of school life. It will not therefore interfere in any way with the teaching of the mother tongue in the secondary schools....Hindi will be compulsory only in the sense that attendance in such classes will be compulsory and pupils cannot take Hindi as a substitute for Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam or Kannada, but must learn Hindi only in addition to one of these languages.[2]

He refused to give in to the demands of the agitators. He claimed they were motivated by their "prejudices of anti-aryanism" and "hatred of the Congress".[2] The police response to the agitation grew progressively brutal in 1939. Rajaji used the Criminal Law Amendment Act against the agitators, so that they could be charged of "non-bailable" criminal offenses.[27] Displeased by his high handedness, Governor Erskine complained: "..[Rajaji] was too much of a Tory for me, for though I may want to go back twenty years, he wishes to go back two thousand and to run India as it was run in the time of King Ashoka". During the agitation, a total of 1,198 protesters were arrested and out of them 1,179 were convicted (73 of those jailed were women and some of them went to jail with their children; 32 children accompanied their mothers to prison).[14] Periyar was fined 1,000 Rupees and sentenced to one year of rigorous imprisonment for inciting "women to disobey the law" (he was released within six months on 22 May 1939 citing medical grounds)[30] and Annadurai was jailed for four months.[31][32] On 7 June 1939, all those arrested for participating in the agitations were released without explanation.[30] Rajaji also organised pro-Hindustani meetings to counter the agitators.[7][19]

Cancellation edit

On 29 October 1939, Rajaji's Congress Government resigned protesting the involvement of India in the Second World War. Madras provincial government was placed under Governor's rule. On 31 October, Periyar suspended the agitation and asked the Governor to withdraw the compulsory Hindi order.[30] On 21 February 1940, Governor Erskine, issued a press communique withdrawing compulsory Hindi teaching and making it optional.[33]

Impact edit

The anti-Hindi agitations of 1937-40 led to a change of guard in the Madras Presidency. The main opposition party to the Indian National Congress in the state, the Justice Party, came under Periyar's leadership on 29 December 1938.[34] In 1944, the Justice Party was renamed as Dravidar Kazhagam. The political careers of many later leaders of the Dravidian Movement, such as C. N. Annadurai, started with their participation in these agitations. The agitations stopped the compulsory teaching of Hindi in the state.[2][18] The agitations also reshaped the Dravidian Movement and broadened its political base, when it shifted from its earlier pro-Tamil stance to a more inclusive one, which was both anti-Hindi and pro-English. In the words of Sumathi Ramaswamy (Professor of History at Duke University),[35]

[The anti-Hindi agitations knit] together diverse, even incompatible, social and political interests... Their common cause against Hindi had thrown together religious revivalists like Maraimalai Atikal (1876-1950) with avowed atheists like Ramasami and Bharathidasan (1891-1964); men who supported the Indian cause like T.V. Kalyanasundaram (1883-1953) and M. P. Sivagnanam with dravidian movement supporters like Annadurai; university professors like Somasundara Bharati (1879-1959) and M.S. Purnalingam Pillai (1866 -1947) with uneducated street poets, populist pamphleteers and college students.[36][37]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ . Department of Education, Government of India. Archived from the original on 16 December 2009. Retrieved 24 November 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Ramaswamy 1997, ch. 4.21 (Battling the Demoness Hindi)
  3. ^ Nehru, Jawaharlal; Gandhi, Mohandas (1937). The question of language: Issue 6 of Congress political and economic studies. K. M. Ashraf.
  4. ^ Guha 2008, pp. 128–131
  5. ^ Ghose, Sankar (1993). Jawaharlal Nehru, a biography. Allied Publishers. p. 216. ISBN 81-7023-369-0. ISBN 978-81-7023-369-5.
  6. ^ Saraswathi, Srinivasan (1994). Towards self-respect: Periyar EVR on a new world. Institute of South Indian Studies. pp. 88–89.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g More 1997, pp. 156–159
  8. ^ Venu, E.Es. (1979). Why South opposes Hindi. Justice Publications. p. 54.
  9. ^ Ravichandran & Perumal 1982, p. 174
  10. ^ a b Baliga, B. S. (2000). Madras district gazetteers, Volume 10, Part 1. Superintendent, Govt. Press. p. 244.
  11. ^ More 1997, p. 172
  12. ^ Irschick 1986, pp. 212–20
  13. ^ Venkatachalapathy, A. R. (8 April 1995). "Dravidian Movement and Saivites: 1927-1944". Economic and Political Weekly. 30 (14): 761–768. ISSN 0012-9976. JSTOR 4402599. OCLC 46735231.
  14. ^ a b Sarkar, Tanika (2008). Women and social reform in modern India: a reader. Indiana University Press. p. 396. ISBN 978-0-253-22049-3. ISBN 978-0-253-22049-3.
  15. ^ Ravichandran & Perumal 1982, p. 175
  16. ^ Ramaswamy 1997, ch. 5.22 (The Woman Devotee)
  17. ^ Srilata, K. (2003). The other half of the coconut: women writing self-respect history: an anthology of self-respect literature (1928-1936). Zubaan. pp. 11–12. ISBN 81-86706-50-X. ISBN 978-81-86706-50-3.
  18. ^ a b c d Ramaswamy 1997, Chapter 5.30
  19. ^ a b c d Irschick 1986, pp. 220–226
  20. ^ Kannan 2010, p. 52
  21. ^ Geetha, V; Rajadurai, S. V. (1998). Towards a non-Brahmin millennium: from Iyothee Thass to Periyar. Samya. p. 499. ISBN 81-85604-37-1. ISBN 978-81-85604-37-4.
  22. ^ Bhattacharya, Sabyasachi; Nand, Brahma; Thirumali, Inukonda (2004). Repressed discourses: essays in honour of Prof. Sabyasachi Bhattacharya. Bibliomatrix. p. 259. ISBN 81-901964-1-3. ISBN 978-81-901964-1-3.
  23. ^ Kannan 2010, pp. 50–51
  24. ^ Phadnis, Urmila; Ganguly, Rajat (2001). Ethnicity and nation-building in South Asia. SAGE. p. 221. ISBN 0-7619-9439-4. ISBN 978-0-7619-9439-8.
  25. ^ Vēṅkaṭācalapati, Ā. Irā (2000). andha kalathil kaapi illai (in Tamil). Kalachuvadu. pp. 144–161. ISBN 81-87477-05-9.
  26. ^ Ramaswamy 1997, ch. 5.24 (The Brahman Devotee)
  27. ^ a b Kannan 2010, p. 53
  28. ^ "Aran International e-Journal of Tamil Research | அரண் பன்னாட்டுத் தமிழாய்வு மின்னிதழ்". aranejournal.com. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
  29. ^ a b Ramanathan, K.V. (2008). The Satyamurti Letters, Volume II. Pearson Education India. pp. 3, 34. ISBN 978-81-317-1684-7. ISBN 978-81-317-1684-7.
  30. ^ a b c Ravichandran & Perumal 1982, p. 176
  31. ^ Baliga, B. S. (2000). Tamil Nadu district gazetteers, Volume 2. Superintendent, Govt. Press. p. 85.
  32. ^ Thirunavukkarasu, K (September 2008). . Kalachuvadu Magazine (in Tamil). Archived from the original on 27 June 2009. Retrieved 3 February 2010.
  33. ^ Sundarajan, Saroja (1989). March to freedom in Madras Presidency, 1916-1947. Lalitha Publications. p. 546.
  34. ^ Kandasamy & Smarandache 2005, p. 109
  35. ^ "Prof. Sumathi Ramaswamy Faculty Webpage". Department of History, Duke University. Retrieved 24 November 2009.
  36. ^ Simpson, Andrew (2007). Language and national identity in Asia. Oxford University Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-19-926748-4. ISBN 9780199267484.
  37. ^ Ramaswamy, Sumathy (1999). "The demoness, the maid, the whore, and the good mother: contesting the national language in India". International Journal of the Sociology of Language. Walter de Gruyter. 140 (1): 1–28. doi:10.1515/ijsl.1999.140.1. S2CID 144462193.[dead link]

References edit

anti, hindi, agitation, 1937, this, article, about, anti, hindi, imposition, agitation, that, happened, madras, presidency, during, 1937, anti, hindi, agitations, that, occurred, tamil, nadu, anti, hindi, agitations, tamil, nadu, anti, hindi, imposition, agita. This article is about the anti Hindi imposition agitation that happened in Madras Presidency during 1937 40 For all anti Hindi agitations that occurred in Tamil Nadu see Anti Hindi agitations of Tamil Nadu The Anti Hindi imposition agitation of 1937 40 is a series of protests that happened in Madras Presidency of British India during 1937 40 It was launched in 1937 in opposition to the introduction of compulsory teaching of Hindi in the schools of the presidency by the Indian National Congress government led by C Rajagopalachari Rajaji This move was immediately opposed by E V Ramasamy Periyar and the opposition Justice Party later Dravidar Kazhagam The agitation which lasted for about 30 months was multifaceted and involved fasts conferences marches picketing and protests The government responded with a crackdown resulting in the death of two protesters and the arrest of 1 198 persons including women and children The mandatory Hindi education was later withdrawn by the British Governor of Madras Lord Erskine in February 1940 after the resignation of the Congress government in 1939 1937 40 Anti Hindi agitations of MadrasPart of Anti Hindi agitations of Tamil NaduFront page of Periyar E V Ramasamy s periodical Kudiyarasu 3 September 1939 The headline reads Veezhga Indhi Down with Hindi Date11 August 1937 21 February 1940 2 years 6 months and 11 days LocationTamil speaking areas ofMadras Presidency British India present day Tamil Nadu India Caused byA policy statement and a government order G O issued by the Madras Presidential Government to make the teaching of Hindi language compulsory in secondary schoolsGoalsTo make the government withdraw the orderMethodsNon violent Conferences fasts marching picketing rallying Violent Riots Stone throwingResulted inResignation of the Government 1939 Withdrawal of the order by Madras Governor Lord Erskine 1940 PartiesElectoral parties Justice Party All India Muslim League Non electoral organizations Self Respect Movement Tamilar Padai rallying Karanthai Tamil Sangam Tamil scholars Saivite scholars industrialists and general public Government of Madras 1937 39 Madras Police Electoral parties Indian National Congress partially Non electoral organizations Hindustani Seva Dal Hindustani Hitashi SabhaLead figuresA T Panneerselvam P Khalifulla Sahib Periyar E V Ramasamy C N Annadurai Moovalur Ramamirtham S Dharmambal Pattukkottai Alagiri Meenambal ShivarajMaraimalai Adigal Somasundara Bharathiar T V Umamaheswaran K A P Viswanatham K Appadurai K M Balasubramaniam S Ilakkuvanar MudiyarasanW P A Soundarapandian G D NaiduNatarajan Thalamuthu Palladam Ponnusamy Stalin Jagadeesan M Karunanidhi C RajagopalachariT S S RajanP SubbarayanCasualtiesDeath s 2 Natarajan and Thalamuthu Arrested1 198DetainedPeriyar 1 year released in 6 months Annadurai 4 months Palladam Ponnusamy 6 weeks FinedPeriyar fined 1 000 Contents 1 Background 2 Support for the agitation 3 Fasts 4 Picketing and processions 5 Tamil brigade 6 Natarajan and Thalamuthu 7 Anti Brahminism 8 Government response 9 Cancellation 10 Impact 11 See also 12 Notes 13 ReferencesBackground editMain article Languages of India The Republic of India has hundreds of languages According to the Census of 2001 there are 1 635 rationalized mother tongues and 122 languages with more than 10 000 speakers 1 During the British Raj English was the official language When the Indian Independence Movement gained momentum in the early part of the 20th century efforts were undertaken to make Hindustani as a common language to unite various linguistic groups against the British Government As early as 1918 Mahatma Gandhi established the Dakshin Bharat Hindi Prachar Sabha Institution for the Propagation of Hindi in South India In 1925 the Indian National Congress switched to Hindustani from English for conducting its proceedings 2 Both Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru were supporters of Hindustani and Congress wanted to propagate the learning of Hindustani in non Hindi speaking Provinces of India 3 4 5 The idea of making Hindustani or Hindi the common language was not acceptable to Periyar who viewed it as an attempt to make Tamils subordinate to North Indians 6 The Indian National Congress won the 1937 elections in Madras Presidency Rajaji became the Chief Minister on 14 July 1937 He was a supporter of propagating Hindi in South India Even before the elections he had expressed support for Hindi in a newspaper article Sudesamithran 6 May 1937 Government employment is limited All cannot get it Therefore one has to search for other jobs For that and for business knowledge of Hindi is necessary Only if we learn Hindi the south Indian can gain respect among the others 7 On 11 August 1937 8 within a month of coming to power he announced his intention to introduce Hindi language teaching in secondary schools by issuing a policy statement 7 This move followed lobbying by pro Hindi organisations like Hindustani Seva Dal and Hindustani Hitashi Sabha These organisations had earlier convinced many Justice Party led local governments to introduce compulsory Hindi in schools in the early 1930s 2 Periyar and the opposition Justice Party led by A T Panneerselvam immediately opposed the move An Anti Hindi conference was organised on 4 October 1937 to protest the announcement On 21 April 1938 Rajaji went ahead and passed a government order G O making the teaching of Hindi compulsory in 125 Secondary schools in the Presidency Rajaji s persistence was viewed by Hindi s opponents as an attempt to destroy Tamil and promote Hindi They started statewide protests against Rajaji and Hindi The agitation was marked by protest marches anti Hindi conferences observing an anti Hindi day 1 July 9 and 3 December 1938 10 fasts against government policies black flag demonstrations and picketing of government offices and institutions It was active in Tamil speaking districts of the Presidency Ramnad Tirunelveli Salem Tanjore and North Arcot 7 The agitation lasted till the order was withdrawn in February 1940 Two persons Natarajan and Thalamuthu lost their lives Around 1 200 people including Periyar were imprisoned Support for the agitation edit nbsp From right to left B R Ambedkar Periyar and Jinnah at Jinnah s residence in Bombay 8 January 1940 11 nbsp Frontpage of Kudiyarasu dated 20 November 1938 The story is about the Tamil Nadu Women s ConferenceThe anti Hindi agitation was backed by Periyar s Self Respect Movement and Justice Party The Justice party was led by older established leaders like Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu and Pannirselvam who did not have reputations as agitators and derived their power from patronage Their representatives in the Madras Legislature demanded that the Hindi teaching be made optional 12 The more militant agitators led by Periyar did not have any patronage but derived their influence from activism and politics of agitation Periyar eventually became the president of the Justice Party during the course of the agitation The agitation was also supported by Tamil scholars like Maraimalai Adigal Somasundara Bharathi K Appadurai Mudiyarasan K A P Viswanatham and Ilakkuvanar In December 1937 Tamil Saivite scholars were among the first to announce their opposition to the Hindi teaching in the Saiva Sidhandha Maha Samaja conference at Velur 13 Women also participated in the agitation in large numbers Moovalur Ramamirtham Narayani Va Ba Thamaraikani Munnagar Azhagiyar Dr S Dharmambal Malar Mugathammaiyar Pattammal and Seethammal were some of the women who were arrested for participating in the agitation 14 On 13 November 1938 15 the Tamil Nadu Women s Conference was convened to demonstrate women s support for the movement 16 17 Despite the anti Brahmin sentiments of the backers of the agitation a few Brahmins like Kanchi Rajagopalachari also participated in the movement 18 The Tamil speaking Muslims in the Madras presidency supported the agitation in contrast to the Urdu speaking Muslims who supported the propagation of Hindi P Khalifulla Sahib a Muslim League member representing Trichy in the Legislative Assembly declared I may at once say that I am a Rowther myself my mother tongue is Tamil and not Urdu I am not ashamed of it I am proud of it We have not been told why Hindi after all has been chosen as the common language of India 7 Financial support for the agitation was provided by industrialists and landlords like W P A Soundarapandian Nadar and G D Naidu 19 Acknowledging the agitation s popular support Lord Erskine the then Governor of Madras wrote to Viceroy Linlithgow in July 1938 that Compulsory Hindi has been the cause of great trouble in this province and is certainly contrary to the wishes of the bulk of the population 7 Fasts editOn 1 May 1938 a young man named Stalin Jagadeesan went on a fast demanding the withdrawal of compulsory Hindi teaching He became a symbol for the anti Hindi agitators In an interview published in Periyar s magazine Viduthalai he declared that his fast was to prove that Tamil Thai lit Mother Tamil still had loyal sons On 1 June another man named Ponnusamy began a fast in front of Rajaji s house Periyar did not approve of fasting as a form of protest But other leaders of the agitation like C N Annadurai used Jagadeesan as an example Annadurai declared in an anti Hindi meeting that If Jagadeesan dies I am ready to take his place and die along with ten others As soon as Jagadeesan dies you should also be prepared to die Jagadeesan s fast was called off after ten weeks 18 20 Picketing and processions edit nbsp Front page of Periyar E V Ramasamy s periodical Kudiyarasu 3 September 1939 The headline reads Veezhga Indhi Down with Hindi A major feature of the agitation was the picketing of government offices and the schools where Hindi was being taught compulsorily A boycott committee was formed on 1 June 1938 to coordinate the picketing Rajaji s house in Mambalam the Board High School at Tiruvarur and the Hindu Theosophical School at Triplicane Madras became popular targets for the picketers In that month Periyar started playing an active role in the agitation and the movement heated up In November an anti Hindi procession in Madras city turned violent and developed into a riot with protesters stoning the offices of Indian Express Ananda Vikatan Dina Mani and Tamil Mani With Periyar s fiery speeches motivating them the agitators gained response from the Police The agitation which started relatively small began to gain momentum 19 Tamil brigade editIn August September 1938 a protest march was jointly organised by the Self Respect movement and the Muslim league It was flagged of by Periyar and Khaliffullah The marchers who called themselves Tamilar Padai lit Tamil brigade started from Trichy on 1 August 1938 They were led by Kumarasamy Pillai and Moovalur Ramamirtham In the next 42 days the marchers covered 234 villages and 60 towns They addressed 87 public meetings and received widespread coverage in the press They reached Madras on 11 September 1938 and were arrested for picketing government offices The march succeeded in raising anti Hindi and pro Tamil support in smaller towns and villages they covered 2 7 10 Natarajan and Thalamuthu editTwo persons died during the agitation and were claimed as martyrs by the agitators Their deaths fueled the protests further Natarajan was arrested On 5 December 1938 He was admitted to the hospital on 30 December and died on 15 January 1939 On 13 February 1939 Thalamuthu was arrested with others for picketing the Hindu Theological High School in Madras While imprisoned he fell ill on 6 March and died on 11 March The government claimed that his death was due to Cellulitis and Amoebic dysentery and he was already in poor health when he died When the issue was raised in the Assembly Rajaji dismissed it casually The agitators were incensed by the government attitude and turned the dead men into martyrs Their funeral processions in Madras were attended by hundreds of mourners and witnessed fiery speeches denouncing the government Annadurai proclaimed that Natarajan s name and deeds should be inscribed in gold in the history of the world The agitators praised their sacrifices and claimed that the dead men had refused early release in exchange for ending their activities In an interview given to the Sunday Observer on 27 January 1939 Natarajan s father K Lakshmanan said when his son was hospitalized he refused to apologize to get an early release 18 21 22 Anti Brahminism editThe anti Hindi movement viewed the Hindi legislation as an attempt by Brahmins to impose Hindi and Sanskrit over Tamil 23 24 Rajaji s earlier attempt to translate an English Language Physics book into Tamil using Sanskrit words was viewed as proof of his preference of Sanskrit over Tamil The anti Hindi movement portrayed the Brahmin dominated Tamil Nadu Congress party as a stooge of Hindi Imperialists from the North The resistance of the Brahmin Tamil scholars for removing Sanskrit words from Tamil was viewed by some in the agitation as proof of Brahmin complicity in the attempt to destroy Tamil 25 Rajaji was identified as an enemy of Tamil Dravidian movement newspapers carried cartoons depicting Rajaji hurling a dagger at Tamil Thai and disrobing her Similar banners were displayed in the processions taken out by anti Hindi agitators In an anti Hindi meeting organised in August 1938 Pavalar Balasundaram accused the Brahmin community of killing Tamil Thai Rajaji s dismissal of Natarasan s death in the Assembly was denounced as Aryans laughing while Tamils shed tears for their hero Rajaji complained that the agitators were describing their opponents by caste by their sacred thread by the tuft of the hair on their head 2 19 26 27 Government response editThe ruling Congress Party was divided on the Hindi issue While Rajaji and his supporters stuck to their position 28 Sathyamurti and Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan were against it They wanted Rajaji to make Hindi optional or to provide a conscience clause for allowing parents to withhold their children from Hindi Classes Satyamurti also disagreed with the use of Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1932 against the anti Hindi agitators 29 In a letter written to Mahatma Gandhi on 7 July 1938 he wrote I personally believe that where a parent or guardian swears an affidavit before a magistrate stating his reasons that it is against his conscience that his boy or girl should learn Hindustani compulsorily the child may be exempted I personally believe very few parents or guardians will claim this exemption This will expose the hollowness of the agitation and kill it I wish you to write to Sri C Rajagopalachari suggesting this to him Moreover I am not very happy over the use by the Madras Government of the Criminal Law Amendment Act against these picketers 29 Rajaji defended his action in another G O issued on 14 June 1938 The attainment by our Province of its rightful place in the national life of India requires that our educated youth should possess a working knowledge of the most widely spoken language in India Government have therefore decided upon the introduction of Hindustani in the secondary school curriculum of our province Government desire to make it clear that Hindi is not to be introduced in any elementary school whatsoever the mother tongue being the only language taught in such schools Hindi is to be introduced only in secondary schools and there too only in the 1st 2nd and 3rd forms that is to say in the 6th 7th and 8th years of school life It will not therefore interfere in any way with the teaching of the mother tongue in the secondary schools Hindi will be compulsory only in the sense that attendance in such classes will be compulsory and pupils cannot take Hindi as a substitute for Tamil Telugu Malayalam or Kannada but must learn Hindi only in addition to one of these languages 2 He refused to give in to the demands of the agitators He claimed they were motivated by their prejudices of anti aryanism and hatred of the Congress 2 The police response to the agitation grew progressively brutal in 1939 Rajaji used the Criminal Law Amendment Act against the agitators so that they could be charged of non bailable criminal offenses 27 Displeased by his high handedness Governor Erskine complained Rajaji was too much of a Tory for me for though I may want to go back twenty years he wishes to go back two thousand and to run India as it was run in the time of King Ashoka During the agitation a total of 1 198 protesters were arrested and out of them 1 179 were convicted 73 of those jailed were women and some of them went to jail with their children 32 children accompanied their mothers to prison 14 Periyar was fined 1 000 Rupees and sentenced to one year of rigorous imprisonment for inciting women to disobey the law he was released within six months on 22 May 1939 citing medical grounds 30 and Annadurai was jailed for four months 31 32 On 7 June 1939 all those arrested for participating in the agitations were released without explanation 30 Rajaji also organised pro Hindustani meetings to counter the agitators 7 19 Cancellation editOn 29 October 1939 Rajaji s Congress Government resigned protesting the involvement of India in the Second World War Madras provincial government was placed under Governor s rule On 31 October Periyar suspended the agitation and asked the Governor to withdraw the compulsory Hindi order 30 On 21 February 1940 Governor Erskine issued a press communique withdrawing compulsory Hindi teaching and making it optional 33 Impact editSee also Rise of Dravidian parties to power in Tamil Nadu The anti Hindi agitations of 1937 40 led to a change of guard in the Madras Presidency The main opposition party to the Indian National Congress in the state the Justice Party came under Periyar s leadership on 29 December 1938 34 In 1944 the Justice Party was renamed as Dravidar Kazhagam The political careers of many later leaders of the Dravidian Movement such as C N Annadurai started with their participation in these agitations The agitations stopped the compulsory teaching of Hindi in the state 2 18 The agitations also reshaped the Dravidian Movement and broadened its political base when it shifted from its earlier pro Tamil stance to a more inclusive one which was both anti Hindi and pro English In the words of Sumathi Ramaswamy Professor of History at Duke University 35 The anti Hindi agitations knit together diverse even incompatible social and political interests Their common cause against Hindi had thrown together religious revivalists like Maraimalai Atikal 1876 1950 with avowed atheists like Ramasami and Bharathidasan 1891 1964 men who supported the Indian cause like T V Kalyanasundaram 1883 1953 and M P Sivagnanam with dravidian movement supporters like Annadurai university professors like Somasundara Bharati 1879 1959 and M S Purnalingam Pillai 1866 1947 with uneducated street poets populist pamphleteers and college students 36 37 See also editAnti Hindi agitations of Tamil Nadu Dravidian parties Rise of Dravidian parties to power in Tamil NaduNotes edit Census of India 2001 General Note Department of Education Government of India Archived from the original on 16 December 2009 Retrieved 24 November 2009 a b c d e f g Ramaswamy 1997 ch 4 21 Battling the Demoness Hindi Nehru Jawaharlal Gandhi Mohandas 1937 The question of language Issue 6 of Congress political and economic studies K M Ashraf Guha 2008 pp 128 131 Ghose Sankar 1993 Jawaharlal Nehru a biography Allied Publishers p 216 ISBN 81 7023 369 0 ISBN 978 81 7023 369 5 Saraswathi Srinivasan 1994 Towards self respect Periyar EVR on a new world Institute of South Indian Studies pp 88 89 a b c d e f g More 1997 pp 156 159 Venu E Es 1979 Why South opposes Hindi Justice Publications p 54 Ravichandran amp Perumal 1982 p 174 a b Baliga B S 2000 Madras district gazetteers Volume 10 Part 1 Superintendent Govt Press p 244 More 1997 p 172 Irschick 1986 pp 212 20 Venkatachalapathy A R 8 April 1995 Dravidian Movement and Saivites 1927 1944 Economic and Political Weekly 30 14 761 768 ISSN 0012 9976 JSTOR 4402599 OCLC 46735231 a b Sarkar Tanika 2008 Women and social reform in modern India a reader Indiana University Press p 396 ISBN 978 0 253 22049 3 ISBN 978 0 253 22049 3 Ravichandran amp Perumal 1982 p 175 Ramaswamy 1997 ch 5 22 The Woman Devotee Srilata K 2003 The other half of the coconut women writing self respect history an anthology of self respect literature 1928 1936 Zubaan pp 11 12 ISBN 81 86706 50 X ISBN 978 81 86706 50 3 a b c d Ramaswamy 1997 Chapter 5 30 a b c d Irschick 1986 pp 220 226 Kannan 2010 p 52 Geetha V Rajadurai S V 1998 Towards a non Brahmin millennium from Iyothee Thass to Periyar Samya p 499 ISBN 81 85604 37 1 ISBN 978 81 85604 37 4 Bhattacharya Sabyasachi Nand Brahma Thirumali Inukonda 2004 Repressed discourses essays in honour of Prof Sabyasachi Bhattacharya Bibliomatrix p 259 ISBN 81 901964 1 3 ISBN 978 81 901964 1 3 Kannan 2010 pp 50 51 Phadnis Urmila Ganguly Rajat 2001 Ethnicity and nation building in South Asia SAGE p 221 ISBN 0 7619 9439 4 ISBN 978 0 7619 9439 8 Veṅkaṭacalapati A Ira 2000 andha kalathil kaapi illai in Tamil Kalachuvadu pp 144 161 ISBN 81 87477 05 9 Ramaswamy 1997 ch 5 24 The Brahman Devotee a b Kannan 2010 p 53 Aran International e Journal of Tamil Research அரண பன ன ட ட த தம ழ ய வ ம ன ன தழ aranejournal com Retrieved 21 August 2023 a b Ramanathan K V 2008 The Satyamurti Letters Volume II Pearson Education India pp 3 34 ISBN 978 81 317 1684 7 ISBN 978 81 317 1684 7 a b c Ravichandran amp Perumal 1982 p 176 Baliga B S 2000 Tamil Nadu district gazetteers Volume 2 Superintendent Govt Press p 85 Thirunavukkarasu K September 2008 The son who named his mother Kalachuvadu Magazine in Tamil Archived from the original on 27 June 2009 Retrieved 3 February 2010 Sundarajan Saroja 1989 March to freedom in Madras Presidency 1916 1947 Lalitha Publications p 546 Kandasamy amp Smarandache 2005 p 109 Prof Sumathi Ramaswamy Faculty Webpage Department of History Duke University Retrieved 24 November 2009 Simpson Andrew 2007 Language and national identity in Asia Oxford University Press p 71 ISBN 978 0 19 926748 4 ISBN 9780199267484 Ramaswamy Sumathy 1999 The demoness the maid the whore and the good mother contesting the national language in India International Journal of the Sociology of Language Walter de Gruyter 140 1 1 28 doi 10 1515 ijsl 1999 140 1 S2CID 144462193 dead link References editGuha Ramachandra 2008 India after Gandhi the history of the world s largest democracy Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 06 095858 9 OCLC 76961156 ISBN 978 0 06 095858 9 Irschick Eugene F 1986 Tamil revivalism in the 1930s PDF Madras Cre A OCLC 15015416 Archived from the original PDF on 10 June 2010 Retrieved 27 April 2010 Kandasamy W B Vasantha Smarandache Florentin 2005 Fuzzy and Neutrosophic Analysis of Periyar s Views on Untouchability American Research Press ISBN 1 931233 00 4 OCLC 125408444 ISBN 9781931233002 Kannan R 2010 Anna The life and times of C N Annadurai Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 670 08328 2 More J B P 1997 Political Evolution of Muslims in Tamil Nadu and Madras 1930 1947 Orient Blackswan ISBN 81 250 1192 7 OCLC 37770527 ISBN 978 81 250 1192 7 Ramaswamy Sumathy 1997 Passions of the tongue language devotion in Tamil India 1891 1970 University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 520 20805 6 OCLC 36084635 Ravichandran R Perumal C A 1982 5 Dravidar Kazhagam A political study PDF Madras Madras University Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 17 February 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anti Hindi agitation of 1937 40 amp oldid 1177011606, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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