fbpx
Wikipedia

Subramania Bharati

C. Subramania Bharathi[1] (IPA: /ˌsuˈbrəˌmənˈjʌ ˈbɑːˌrʌθi/; born C. Subramaniyan[1] 11 December 1882 – 11 September 1921) was a Tamil writer, poet, journalist, Indian independence activist, social reformer and polyglot. He was bestowed the title "Bharathi" for his excellence in poetry. He was a pioneer of modern Tamil poetry and is considered one of the greatest Tamil literary figures of all time. He is popularly known by his mononymous title "Bharathi/ Bharathiyaar," and also by the other title "Mahakavi Bharathi" ("the great poet Bharathi"). His numerous works included fiery songs kindling patriotism during the Indian Independence movement.[2][3] He fought for the emancipation of women, against child marriage, vehemently opposed the caste system, and stood for reforming society and religion. He was also in solidarity with Dalits and Muslims.[4][5]

C. Subramania Bharathi[1]
Subramania Bharathi Commemorative Stamp
Born(1882-12-11)11 December 1882
Died11 September 1921(1921-09-11) (aged 38)
Other namesBharathiyar, Subbaiah, Sakthi Dasan, Mahakavi, Mundasu Kavignar, Veera Kavi, Shelly Daasan
CitizenshipIndia
Occupation(s)Journalist, poet, writer, teacher, patriot, freedom fighter
MovementIndian independence movement
SpouseChellamma (m. 1896–1921)
Children2
Signature

Born in Ettayapuram of Tirunelveli district (present-day Thoothukudi) in 1882, Bharathi had his early education in Tirunelveli and Varanasi and worked as a journalist with many newspapers, including The Hindu, Bala Bharata, Vijaya, Chakravarthini, the Swadesamitran and India. In 1908, an arrest warrant was issued against Bharathi by the government of British India caused him to move to Pondicherry where he lived until 1918.[6]

His influence on Tamil literature is phenomenal, although it is said that he was proficient in around 32,[not verified in body][citation needed] including 3 non-Indian foreign languages. His favorite language was Tamil. He was prolific in his output. He covered political, social and spiritual themes. The songs and poems composed by Bharathi are very often used in Tamil cinema and have become staples in the literary and musical repertoire of Tamil artistes throughout the world. He paved the way for modern blank verse. He wrote many books and poems on how Tamil is beautiful in nature.

Biography

 
Photograph of Subramanya Bharathi with his wife Chellamma
 
Bharathiyar House in Puducherry

C. Subramaniyan (Tamil: சி. சுப்பிரமணியன்) was born in a Brahmin[7] family[8] on 11[9] December 1882[7] in the village of Ettayapuram, Tamil Nadu to Chinnaswami Subramania Iyer and Lakshmi Ammal. From a very young age, Subramaniyan was musically and poetically inclined. He lost his mother[7] at the age of five and was brought up by his father who wanted him to learn English, excel in arithmetic, and become an engineer.[10][11] At around the young age of 11, he was conferred the title[7] of "Bharathi", meaning blessed by the goddess of learning Saraswati, by the Raja of Ettayapuram on seeing his excellence in poetry. Henceforth he was known as C. Subramania Bharathi (Tamil: சி. சுப்பிரமணிய பாரதி). At the age of 15 he was married[7] to Chellamma who was seven years old. Chellama was from Kadayam town[7] near Tenkasi. He lost his father at the age of sixteen.[7] He went to the M.D.T. Hindu College in Tirunelveli. Bharathi was a proficient linguist, he was well-versed in Tamil, Sanskrit, Hindi, Telugu, English, French and had a smattering knowledge of Arabic.

During his stay in Varanasi,[9] Bharathi was exposed to Hindu spirituality and nationalism. This broadened his outlook and he learned Sanskrit, Hindi and English. In addition, he changed his outward appearance. He also grew a beard and wore a turban[9] due to his admiration of Sikhs, influenced by his Sikh friend. Though he passed an entrance exam for a job, he returned to Ettayapuram during 1901 and started as the court poet of Raja of Ettayapuram for a couple of years. He was a Tamil teacher from August to November 1904 in Sethupathy High School in Madurai.[11] During this period, Bharathi understood the need to be well-informed of the world outside and took interest in the world of journalism and the print media of the West. Bharathi joined as Assistant Editor of the Swadesamitran,[9] a Tamil daily in 1904. In December 1905, he attended the All India Congress session held in Benaras. On his journey back home, he met Sister Nivedita, Swami Vivekananda's spiritual heir. She inspired[9] Bharathi to recognise the privileges of women and the emancipation of women exercised Bharathi's mind. He visualised the new woman as an emanation of Shakti, a willing helpmate of man to build a new earth through co-operative endeavour. Among other greats such as Bal Gangadhar Tilak, he considered Nivedita his Guru, and penned verses in her praise. He attended the Indian National Congress session in Calcutta under Dadabhai Naoiroji, which demanded Swaraj and boycott of British goods.[11]

By April 1907, he started editing the Tamil weekly India and the English newspaper Bala Bharatham[9] with M.P.T. Acharya. These newspapers were also a means of expressing Bharathi's creativity, which began to peak during this period. Bharathi started to publish his poems regularly in these editions. From hymns to nationalistic writings, from contemplations on the relationship between God and Man to songs on the Russian and French revolutions, Bharathi's subjects were diverse.[10]

Bharathi participated in the historic Surat Congress[9] in 1907 along with V.O. Chidambaram Pillai and Mandayam Srinivachariar, which deepened the divisions within the Indian National Congress with a section preferring armed resistance, primarily led by Tilak over moderate approach preferred by certain other sections. Bharathi supported Tilak with V. O. Chidambaram Pillai and Kanchi Varathachariyar. Tilak openly supported armed resistance against the British.[11]

 
Cover page of the 1909 magazine Vijaya, published first from Madras and then from Pondicherry. The cover showing "Mother India" (Bharat Mata) with her diverse progeny and the rallying cry "Vande Mataram”.

In 1908, the British instituted a case against V.O. Chidambaram Pillai.[9] In the same year, the proprietor of the journal India was arrested in Madras. Faced with the prospect of arrest, Bharathi escaped to Pondicherry, which was under French rule.[12] From there he edited and published the weekly journal India, Vijaya, a Tamil daily, Bala Bharatham, an English monthly, and Suryodayam, a local weekly in Pondicherry. The British tried to suppress Bharathi's output by stopping remittances and letters to the papers. Both India and Vijaya were banned in India in 1909.[11]

 
Subramanya Bharathi with his family and friends.

During his exile, Bharathi had the opportunity to meet many other leaders of the revolutionary wing[9] of the Independence movement like Aurobindo, Lajpat Rai and V.V.S. Aiyar, who had also sought asylum under the French. Bharathi assisted Aurobindo in the Arya journal and later Karma Yogi in Pondicherry.[10] This was also the period when he started learning Vedic literature. Three of his greatest works namely, Kuyil Pattu, Panchali Sapatham and Kannan Pattu were composed during 1912. He also translated Vedic hymns, Patanjali's Yoga Sutra and Bhagavat Gita to Tamil.[11] Bharathi entered India near Cuddalore in November 1918 and was promptly arrested.[9] He was imprisoned in the Central prison in Cuddalore in custody for three weeks from 20 November to 14 December and was released after the intervention of Annie Besant and C.P. Ramaswamy Aiyar. He was stricken by poverty during this period, resulting in his ill health. The following year, 1919, Bharathi met Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. He resumed editing Swadesimeitran from 1920 in Madras (modern-day Chennai).[13]

Death

He was badly affected by the imprisonments and by 1920 when a General Amnesty Order finally removed restrictions on his movements, Bharathi was already struggling. He was struck by an elephant[9] named Lavanya at Parthasarathy temple, Triplicane, Chennai, whom he used to feed every day. When he fed a coconut to Lavanya (the elephant), the elephant got fired up and attacked Bharathi. Although he survived the incident, his health deteriorated a few months later and he died[9] early morning on 11 September 1921 at around 1 am. Though Bharathi was considered a people's poet, a great nationalist, outstanding freedom fighter and social visionary, it was recorded that there were only 14 people to attend his funeral. He delivered his last speech at Karungalpalayam Library in Erode, which was about the topic Man is Immortal.[14] The last years of his life were spent in a house in Triplicane, Chennai. The house was bought and renovated by the Government of Tamil Nadu in 1993 and named Bharathi Illam (Home of Bharathi).[15]

Works

He who forgets not God and fails not in his duty, no matter whatever befalls him and however much he suffers, will at the end attain honour and happiness.[16]

Bharathi is considered one of the pioneers of modern Tamil literature.[17] Bharathi used simple words and rhythms, unlike his previous century works in Tamil, which had complex vocabulary. He also employed novel ideas and techniques in his devotional poems.[2] He used a metre called Nondi Chindu in most of his works, which was earlier used by Gopalakrisnha Bharathiar.[18]

Bharathi's poetry expressed a progressive, reformist ideal. His imagery and the vigour of his verse were a forerunner to modern Tamil poetry in different aspects. He was the forerunner of a forceful kind of poetry that combined classical and contemporary elements. He had a prodigious output penning thousands of verses on diverse topics like Indian Nationalism, love songs, children's songs, songs of nature, glory of the Tamil language, and odes to prominent freedom fighters of India like Tilak, Gandhi and Lajpat Rai. He even penned an ode to New Russia and Belgium.

Bharathi's poetry not only includes works on Hindu deities like Shakti, Kali, Vinayagar, Murugan, Sivan, Kannan(Krishna), but also on other religious gods like Allah and Jesus. His insightful similes have been read by millions of Tamil readers. He was well-versed in various languages and translated speeches of Indian National reform leaders like Sri Aurobindo, Bal Gangadhar Tilak and Swami Vivekananda.[13] Bharathi's works can be found at Tamil Wikisource Subramaniya Bharathi and also at the open access Tamil literature repository called Project Madurai.[19] Bharathi's works were nationalized meaning they were brought under public ownership of the government thus becoming public domain works in 1949[9] by the then Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, Omandur Ramasamy Reddy.

Bharathi describes the dance of Shakthi (in Oozhi koothu, Dance of destiny) in the following lines:

Tamil
சக்திப் பேய் தான் தலையொடு தலைகள் முட்டிச்
சட்டச் சட சட சடவென்றுடைபடு தாளம் கொட்டி அங்கே
எத்திகினிலும் நின்விழி அனல் போய் எட்டித்
தானே எரியும் கோலம் கண்டே சாகும் காலம்
அன்னை அன்னை
ஆடுங்கூத்தை நாடச் செய்தாய் என்னை

It is the opinion of some litterateurs that Bharathiar's Panchali Sapatham, based on the story of Panchali (Draupadi), is also an ode to Bharat Mata. That the Pandavass are the Indians, the Kauravas the British and the Kurukshetra war of Mahabharat that of the Indian freedom struggle. It certainly is ascribed to the rise of womanhood in society.[10][11]

Tamil
பட்டினில் உடையும் பஞ்சினில் ஆடையும்
பண்ணி மலைகளென வீதி குவிப்போம்
கட்டித் திரவியங்கள் கொண்டு வருவார்
காசினி வணிகருக்கு அவை கொடுப்போம்

[English Translation]
We make Dresses from Silk and Cotton
In quantities as large as mountains
They bring lot of wealth
The traders around the world,
to whom we give it(dresses)

He is known to have said, "Even if Indians are divided, they are children of one Mother, where is the need for foreigners to interfere?" In the period 1910–1920, he wrote about a new and free India where there are no castes. He talks of building up India's defense, her ships sailing the high seas, success in manufacturing and universal education. He calls for sharing amongst states with wonderful imagery like the diversion of excess water of the Bengal delta to needy regions and a bridge to Sri Lanka.

Bharathi also wanted to abolish starvation. He sang, "Thani oru manithanakku unavu illayenil intha jagaththinai azhithiduvom" translated as " If one single man suffers from starvation, we will destroy the entire world".

Some of his poems are translated by Jayanthasri Balakrishnan in English in her blog, though not published.[20]

Even though he has strong opinions about Gods, he is also against false stories spread in epics and other part of social fabric in Tamil Nadu.

In Kuyil paattu (Song of Nightingale) he writes..

கடலினைத் தாவும் குரவும்-வெங்

கனலிற் பிறந்ததோர் செவ்விதழ்ப் பெண்ணும்,

வடமலை தாழ்ந்தத னாலே-தெற்கில்

வந்து சமன்செயும் குட்டை முனியும்,

நதியி னுள்ளேமுழு கிப்போய்-அந்த

நாகர் உலகிலோர் பாம்பின் மகளை

விதியுற வேமணம் செய்த-திறல்

வீமனும் கற்பனை என்பது கண்டோம்.

ஒன்றுமற் றொன்றைப் பழிக்கும்-ஒன்றில்

உண்மையென் றோதிமற் றொன்றுபொய் யென்னும்

நன்று புராணங்கள் செய்தார்-அதில்

நல்ல கவிதை பலபல தந்தார்.

கவிதை மிகநல்ல தேனும்-அக்

கதைகள் பொய்யென்று தெளிவுறக் கண்டோம்;

Monkey that jumps the seas;

Woman who born inside the hot fire;

The sage who came to south to equalize because of lowered;

The man called Bhima who submerged and swim inside the river and married the daughter of serpent king of fate;

We have seen all those are just imagination..

One blame the other;

And say the truth is only here, and other is lie;

They made good epic, with that

They gave good poems;

Even though the poems are good;

We saw clearly that those stories are lies;

Bharathi on caste system

Bharathi also fought against the caste system in Hindu society. Bharathi was born in an orthodox Brahmin family, but he considered all living beings to be equal, and to illustrate this he performed the upanayanam for a young Dalit man and made him a Brahmin. He also scorned the divisive tendencies being imparted into the younger generations by their elderly tutors during his time. He openly criticised the preachers for mixing their individual thoughts while teaching the Vedas, Upanishads and the Gita. He strongly advocated bringing the Dalits to the Hindu mainstream.

Tamil
"சாதிகள் இல்லையடி பாப்பா!-குலத்
தாழ்ச்சி உயர்ச்சி சொல்லல் பாவம்;
நீதி உயர்ந்த மதி, கல்வி-அன்பு
நிறைய உடையவர்கள் மேலோர்."

[English Translation]
There is no caste system.
It is a sin to divide people on caste basis.
The ones who are really of a superior class are the ones
excelling in being just, wise, educated and loving.

Here he expresses the love between human beings, where a man should not see their caste. They should see them as human beings. Not only human beings, they should see them as their brothers and sisters. This means that a well-educated person knows to treat them equally and not by their caste.

Legacy

 
This is a photograph of writing by Mahatma Gandhi in Tamil language commending the effort to build a monument in memory of poet Subramaniya Bharathi at Ettayapuram.

The Government of India in 1987 instituted a highest National Subramanyam Bharati Award conferred along with Ministry of Human Resource Development, annually confers on writers of outstanding works in Hindi literature.

Bharathiar University, a state university named after the poet, was established in 1982 at Coimbatore.[21] There is a statue of Bharathiar at Marina Beach and also in the Indian Parliament. A Tamil Movie titled Bharathi was made in the year 2000 on the life of the poet by Gnana Rajasekeran, which won National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil.[22] The movie Kappalottiya Thamizhan chronicles the important struggles of V.O.Chidambaranar along with Subramanya Siva and Bharathiar with S.V. Subbaiah starring as Subramania Bharathi. On 14 August 2014 Professor Muhammadu Sathik raja Started an Educational trust at thiruppuvanam pudur, near Madurai named as Omar -Bharathi educational trust, the name is kept to praise the two legendary poets Umaru Pulavar and Subramania Bharathiyar from Ettaiyapuram. Though these two Poets are having three centuries time interval, the divine service and their contribution to the Tamil language are made them unparallel legends. Both two poets are offered their services at vaigai river bank of thiruppuvanam. the two poets were strongly suffered by their financial status, so both of them were unsuccessful to fulfil their family members need. Many roads are named after him, notable ones including Bharathiar road in Coimbatore and Subramaniam Bharti Marg in New Delhi.[23][24] The NGO Sevalaya runs the Mahakavi Bharatiya Higher Secondary School.[25]

In popular culture

Bharati had a critical reception from the Tamil music director Adhithya Venkatapathy through the musical duo Hiphop Tamizha which features Bharati in its logo.[26][27] Many of the poems written by Bharati were used in various Tamil films in the form of songs. AVM productions was the first company to use his songs in films, "Aaduvome Palli" from Naam Iruvar (1947) was the first song inspired from Bharathi's poem.[28] Many of the film titles were taken from his poems like Vallamai Tharayo (2008), Aanmai Thavarel (2011), Nayyapudai (2016), Nerkonda Paarvai (2019),[29] Soorarai Potru (2020).[30][31]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Birth name: C. Subramaniyan, the person's given name: Subramaniyan, father's given name: Chinnaswami. (C. Subramaniyan by the prevalent patronymic initials as prefix naming system in Tamil Nadu and it is Subramaniyan Chinnaswami by the patronymic suffix naming system.) Bharathi is a conferred title meaning blessed by the goddess of learning. His name became C. Subramania Bharathi and he is also widely known mononymously as Bharathi. (In this article, the subject is referred using his title Bharathi because subject is not known without his title. (Permitted in WP per Wikipedia:Naming conventions (Indic)#Titles and honorifics))
  2. ^ a b Natarajan, Nalini; Nelson, Emmanuel Sampath, eds. (1996). Handbook of Twentieth-century Literatures of India. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 290. ISBN 9780313287787.
  3. ^ "Congress Veteran reenacts Bharathis escape to Pondy". The Times of India.
  4. ^ "Knowing Subramania Bharati beyond his turban colour". www.telegraphindia.com. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  5. ^ Raman, Aroon (21 December 2009). "All too human at the core". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  6. ^ "On the streets where Bharati walked". The Hindu.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "Subramanya Bharathi biography". TamilVU.org Tamil Virtual University. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  8. ^ "Why we're so turned off by Bharathiyar's saffron turban: Did the orange fall too far from the tree". Edex Live. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kasi Viswanathan, Muralidharan. "In Memory of Bharathi. (Bharathi's biography. பாரதியார் நினைவு தினம்)". BBC.com BBC News Tamil. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d Indian Literature: An Introduction. University of Delhi. Pearson Education India. 2005. pp. 125–126. ISBN 9788131705209.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Bharati, Subramania; Rajagopalan, Usha (2013). Panchali's Pledge. Hachette UK. p. 1. ISBN 9789350095300.
  12. ^ . The Hindu. 5 December 2004. Archived from the original on 21 November 2016.
  13. ^ a b Lal, Mohan (1992). Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature: sasay to zorgot. Sahitya Akademi. pp. 4191–3. ISBN 9788126012213.
  14. ^ . The Hindu. 15 April 2008. Archived from the original on 15 April 2008. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
  15. ^ Rangarajan (11 January 2021). A Madras Mystery. ISBN 9781637147573.
  16. ^ . Daily News. Colombo, Sri Lanka. 11 June 2013. Archived from the original on 10 June 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2013. – via HighBeam (subscription required)
  17. ^ Annamalai, E. (1968). "Changing society and modern Tamil literature". Tamil Issue. 4 (3/4): 21–36. JSTOR 40874190.(subscription required)
  18. ^ George, K.M., ed. (1992). Modern Indian Literature, an Anthology: Plays and prose. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 379. ISBN 978-81-7201-324-0.
  19. ^ "Project Madurai". projectmadurai.org, open access Tamil literature repository. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  20. ^ "Jayanthasri translations". mythreyid.academia.edu. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  21. ^ Gupta, Ameeta; Kumar, Ashish (2006). Handbook of Universities, Volume 1. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. p. 14. ISBN 9788126906079.
  22. ^ . Sunday Tribune. South Africa. 30 March 2008. Archived from the original on 10 June 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2013. – via HighBeam (subscription required)
  23. ^ "Free helmet distribution". The Times of India. 6 October 2015.
  24. ^ "Subramaniam Bharti Marg". Indian Express. 3 October 2015.
  25. ^ "Activities: School". Sevalaya.
  26. ^ Akshaya Raju (16 October 2014). . Guindy Times. Archived from the original on 28 November 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  27. ^ Avinash Gopinath (11 November 2014). "Kollywood Gets A New Music Director!". Oneindia.in. from the original on 21 November 2014. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
  28. ^ "Filmy Ripples – Mahakavi Bharathiyar's works in Tamil Film Music". 7 August 2017.
  29. ^ "Ner Konda Paarvai : Subramania Bharati's line from a poem becomes the title of Ajith-starrer". International Business Times. 5 March 2019.
  30. ^ "Suriya 38 Title Has Bharathiyar Touch!".
  31. ^ "'நேர்கொண்ட பார்வை', 'சூரரைப் போற்று', 'புதுமைப் பெண்'... தமிழ் சினிமாவும் பாரதியார் ரெஃபரென்ஸும்!".

Further reading

  • Fire In The Soul: The Life And Times of Subramania Bharati. OCLC 339.
  • “Subramania Barati and Tamil Modernism”
  • "Fictionalizing an Untold History"

External links

subramania, bharati, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Subramania Bharati news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In this Indian name the name Chinnaswami is a patronymic and the person should be referred to by the given name Subramaniyan C Subramania Bharathi 1 IPA ˌ s u ˈ b r e ˌ m e n ˈ j ʌ ˈ b ɑː ˌ r ʌ 8 i born C Subramaniyan 1 11 December 1882 11 September 1921 was a Tamil writer poet journalist Indian independence activist social reformer and polyglot He was bestowed the title Bharathi for his excellence in poetry He was a pioneer of modern Tamil poetry and is considered one of the greatest Tamil literary figures of all time He is popularly known by his mononymous title Bharathi Bharathiyaar and also by the other title Mahakavi Bharathi the great poet Bharathi His numerous works included fiery songs kindling patriotism during the Indian Independence movement 2 3 He fought for the emancipation of women against child marriage vehemently opposed the caste system and stood for reforming society and religion He was also in solidarity with Dalits and Muslims 4 5 C Subramania Bharathi 1 Subramania Bharathi Commemorative StampBorn 1882 12 11 11 December 1882Ettayapuram Ettaiyapuram estate British IndiaDied11 September 1921 1921 09 11 aged 38 Madras Madras Presidency British India present day Tamil Nadu India Other namesBharathiyar Subbaiah Sakthi Dasan Mahakavi Mundasu Kavignar Veera Kavi Shelly DaasanCitizenshipIndiaOccupation s Journalist poet writer teacher patriot freedom fighterMovementIndian independence movementSpouseChellamma m 1896 1921 Children2SignatureBorn in Ettayapuram of Tirunelveli district present day Thoothukudi in 1882 Bharathi had his early education in Tirunelveli and Varanasi and worked as a journalist with many newspapers including The Hindu Bala Bharata Vijaya Chakravarthini the Swadesamitran and India In 1908 an arrest warrant was issued against Bharathi by the government of British India caused him to move to Pondicherry where he lived until 1918 6 His influence on Tamil literature is phenomenal although it is said that he was proficient in around 32 not verified in body citation needed including 3 non Indian foreign languages His favorite language was Tamil He was prolific in his output He covered political social and spiritual themes The songs and poems composed by Bharathi are very often used in Tamil cinema and have become staples in the literary and musical repertoire of Tamil artistes throughout the world He paved the way for modern blank verse He wrote many books and poems on how Tamil is beautiful in nature Contents 1 Biography 2 Death 3 Works 4 Bharathi on caste system 5 Legacy 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography Edit Photograph of Subramanya Bharathi with his wife Chellamma Bharathiyar House in Puducherry C Subramaniyan Tamil ச ச ப ப ரமண யன was born in a Brahmin 7 family 8 on 11 9 December 1882 7 in the village of Ettayapuram Tamil Nadu to Chinnaswami Subramania Iyer and Lakshmi Ammal From a very young age Subramaniyan was musically and poetically inclined He lost his mother 7 at the age of five and was brought up by his father who wanted him to learn English excel in arithmetic and become an engineer 10 11 At around the young age of 11 he was conferred the title 7 of Bharathi meaning blessed by the goddess of learning Saraswati by the Raja of Ettayapuram on seeing his excellence in poetry Henceforth he was known as C Subramania Bharathi Tamil ச ச ப ப ரமண ய ப ரத At the age of 15 he was married 7 to Chellamma who was seven years old Chellama was from Kadayam town 7 near Tenkasi He lost his father at the age of sixteen 7 He went to the M D T Hindu College in Tirunelveli Bharathi was a proficient linguist he was well versed in Tamil Sanskrit Hindi Telugu English French and had a smattering knowledge of Arabic During his stay in Varanasi 9 Bharathi was exposed to Hindu spirituality and nationalism This broadened his outlook and he learned Sanskrit Hindi and English In addition he changed his outward appearance He also grew a beard and wore a turban 9 due to his admiration of Sikhs influenced by his Sikh friend Though he passed an entrance exam for a job he returned to Ettayapuram during 1901 and started as the court poet of Raja of Ettayapuram for a couple of years He was a Tamil teacher from August to November 1904 in Sethupathy High School in Madurai 11 During this period Bharathi understood the need to be well informed of the world outside and took interest in the world of journalism and the print media of the West Bharathi joined as Assistant Editor of the Swadesamitran 9 a Tamil daily in 1904 In December 1905 he attended the All India Congress session held in Benaras On his journey back home he met Sister Nivedita Swami Vivekananda s spiritual heir She inspired 9 Bharathi to recognise the privileges of women and the emancipation of women exercised Bharathi s mind He visualised the new woman as an emanation of Shakti a willing helpmate of man to build a new earth through co operative endeavour Among other greats such as Bal Gangadhar Tilak he considered Nivedita his Guru and penned verses in her praise He attended the Indian National Congress session in Calcutta under Dadabhai Naoiroji which demanded Swaraj and boycott of British goods 11 By April 1907 he started editing the Tamil weekly India and the English newspaper Bala Bharatham 9 with M P T Acharya These newspapers were also a means of expressing Bharathi s creativity which began to peak during this period Bharathi started to publish his poems regularly in these editions From hymns to nationalistic writings from contemplations on the relationship between God and Man to songs on the Russian and French revolutions Bharathi s subjects were diverse 10 Bharathi participated in the historic Surat Congress 9 in 1907 along with V O Chidambaram Pillai and Mandayam Srinivachariar which deepened the divisions within the Indian National Congress with a section preferring armed resistance primarily led by Tilak over moderate approach preferred by certain other sections Bharathi supported Tilak with V O Chidambaram Pillai and Kanchi Varathachariyar Tilak openly supported armed resistance against the British 11 Cover page of the 1909 magazine Vijaya published first from Madras and then from Pondicherry The cover showing Mother India Bharat Mata with her diverse progeny and the rallying cry Vande Mataram In 1908 the British instituted a case against V O Chidambaram Pillai 9 In the same year the proprietor of the journal India was arrested in Madras Faced with the prospect of arrest Bharathi escaped to Pondicherry which was under French rule 12 From there he edited and published the weekly journal India Vijaya a Tamil daily Bala Bharatham an English monthly and Suryodayam a local weekly in Pondicherry The British tried to suppress Bharathi s output by stopping remittances and letters to the papers Both India and Vijaya were banned in India in 1909 11 Subramanya Bharathi with his family and friends During his exile Bharathi had the opportunity to meet many other leaders of the revolutionary wing 9 of the Independence movement like Aurobindo Lajpat Rai and V V S Aiyar who had also sought asylum under the French Bharathi assisted Aurobindo in the Arya journal and later Karma Yogi in Pondicherry 10 This was also the period when he started learning Vedic literature Three of his greatest works namely Kuyil Pattu Panchali Sapatham and Kannan Pattu were composed during 1912 He also translated Vedic hymns Patanjali s Yoga Sutra and Bhagavat Gita to Tamil 11 Bharathi entered India near Cuddalore in November 1918 and was promptly arrested 9 He was imprisoned in the Central prison in Cuddalore in custody for three weeks from 20 November to 14 December and was released after the intervention of Annie Besant and C P Ramaswamy Aiyar He was stricken by poverty during this period resulting in his ill health The following year 1919 Bharathi met Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi He resumed editing Swadesimeitran from 1920 in Madras modern day Chennai 13 Death EditHe was badly affected by the imprisonments and by 1920 when a General Amnesty Order finally removed restrictions on his movements Bharathi was already struggling He was struck by an elephant 9 named Lavanya at Parthasarathy temple Triplicane Chennai whom he used to feed every day When he fed a coconut to Lavanya the elephant the elephant got fired up and attacked Bharathi Although he survived the incident his health deteriorated a few months later and he died 9 early morning on 11 September 1921 at around 1 am Though Bharathi was considered a people s poet a great nationalist outstanding freedom fighter and social visionary it was recorded that there were only 14 people to attend his funeral He delivered his last speech at Karungalpalayam Library in Erode which was about the topic Man is Immortal 14 The last years of his life were spent in a house in Triplicane Chennai The house was bought and renovated by the Government of Tamil Nadu in 1993 and named Bharathi Illam Home of Bharathi 15 Works EditHe who forgets not God and fails not in his duty no matter whatever befalls him and however much he suffers will at the end attain honour and happiness 16 Subramanya Bharathi s Tamil songs Suttum vizhi source source Ninnai charan adaindhen source source Chinnan chiru kiliye source source Senthamizh naadu ennum podhinile source source Aasai mugam source source Problems playing these files See media help Bharathi is considered one of the pioneers of modern Tamil literature 17 Bharathi used simple words and rhythms unlike his previous century works in Tamil which had complex vocabulary He also employed novel ideas and techniques in his devotional poems 2 He used a metre called Nondi Chindu in most of his works which was earlier used by Gopalakrisnha Bharathiar 18 Bharathi s poetry expressed a progressive reformist ideal His imagery and the vigour of his verse were a forerunner to modern Tamil poetry in different aspects He was the forerunner of a forceful kind of poetry that combined classical and contemporary elements He had a prodigious output penning thousands of verses on diverse topics like Indian Nationalism love songs children s songs songs of nature glory of the Tamil language and odes to prominent freedom fighters of India like Tilak Gandhi and Lajpat Rai He even penned an ode to New Russia and Belgium Bharathi s poetry not only includes works on Hindu deities like Shakti Kali Vinayagar Murugan Sivan Kannan Krishna but also on other religious gods like Allah and Jesus His insightful similes have been read by millions of Tamil readers He was well versed in various languages and translated speeches of Indian National reform leaders like Sri Aurobindo Bal Gangadhar Tilak and Swami Vivekananda 13 Bharathi s works can be found at Tamil Wikisource Subramaniya Bharathi and also at the open access Tamil literature repository called Project Madurai 19 Bharathi s works were nationalized meaning they were brought under public ownership of the government thus becoming public domain works in 1949 9 by the then Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu Omandur Ramasamy Reddy Bharathi describes the dance of Shakthi in Oozhi koothu Dance of destiny in the following lines Tamil சக த ப ப ய த ன தல ய ட தல கள ம ட ட ச சட டச சட சட சடவ ன ற ட பட த ளம க ட ட அங க எத த க ன ல ம ந ன வ ழ அனல ப ய எட ட த த ன எர ய ம க லம கண ட ச க ம க லம அன ன அன ன ஆட ங க த த ந டச ச ய த ய என ன It is the opinion of some litterateurs that Bharathiar s Panchali Sapatham based on the story of Panchali Draupadi is also an ode to Bharat Mata That the Pandavass are the Indians the Kauravas the British and the Kurukshetra war of Mahabharat that of the Indian freedom struggle It certainly is ascribed to the rise of womanhood in society 10 11 Tamil பட ட ன ல உட ய ம பஞ ச ன ல ஆட ய ம பண ண மல கள ன வ த க வ ப ப ம கட ட த த ரவ யங கள க ண ட வர வ ர க ச ன வண கர க க அவ க ட ப ப ம English Translation We make Dresses from Silk and Cotton In quantities as large as mountains They bring lot of wealth The traders around the world to whom we give it dresses He is known to have said Even if Indians are divided they are children of one Mother where is the need for foreigners to interfere In the period 1910 1920 he wrote about a new and free India where there are no castes He talks of building up India s defense her ships sailing the high seas success in manufacturing and universal education He calls for sharing amongst states with wonderful imagery like the diversion of excess water of the Bengal delta to needy regions and a bridge to Sri Lanka Bharathi also wanted to abolish starvation He sang Thani oru manithanakku unavu illayenil intha jagaththinai azhithiduvom translated as If one single man suffers from starvation we will destroy the entire world Some of his poems are translated by Jayanthasri Balakrishnan in English in her blog though not published 20 Even though he has strong opinions about Gods he is also against false stories spread in epics and other part of social fabric in Tamil Nadu In Kuyil paattu Song of Nightingale க ய ல ப ட ட he writes கடல ன த த வ ம க ரவ ம வ ங கனல ற ப றந தத ர ச வ வ தழ ப ப ண ண ம வடமல த ழ ந தத ன ல த ற க ல வந த சமன ச ய ம க ட ட ம ன ய ம நத ய ன ள ள ம ழ க ப ப ய அந தந கர உலக ல ர ப ம ப ன மகள வ த ய ற வ மணம ச ய த த றல வ மன ம கற பன என பத கண ட ம ஒன ற மற ற ன ற ப பழ க க ம ஒன ற ல உண ம ய ன ற த மற ற ன ற ப ய ய ன ன ம நன ற ப ர ணங கள ச ய த ர அத ல நல ல கவ த பலபல தந த ர கவ த ம கநல ல த ன ம அக கத கள ப ய ய ன ற த ள வ றக கண ட ம Monkey that jumps the seas Woman who born inside the hot fire The sage who came to south to equalize because of lowered The man called Bhima who submerged and swim inside the river and married the daughter of serpent king of fate We have seen all those are just imagination One blame the other And say the truth is only here and other is lie They made good epic with thatThey gave good poems Even though the poems are good We saw clearly that those stories are lies Bharathi on caste system EditBharathi also fought against the caste system in Hindu society Bharathi was born in an orthodox Brahmin family but he considered all living beings to be equal and to illustrate this he performed the upanayanam for a young Dalit man and made him a Brahmin He also scorned the divisive tendencies being imparted into the younger generations by their elderly tutors during his time He openly criticised the preachers for mixing their individual thoughts while teaching the Vedas Upanishads and the Gita He strongly advocated bringing the Dalits to the Hindu mainstream Tamil ச த கள இல ல யட ப ப ப க லத த ழ ச ச உயர ச ச ச ல லல ப வம ந த உயர ந த மத கல வ அன ப ந ற ய உட யவர கள ம ல ர English Translation There is no caste system It is a sin to divide people on caste basis The ones who are really of a superior class are the ones excelling in being just wise educated and loving Here he expresses the love between human beings where a man should not see their caste They should see them as human beings Not only human beings they should see them as their brothers and sisters This means that a well educated person knows to treat them equally and not by their caste Legacy Edit This is a photograph of writing by Mahatma Gandhi in Tamil language commending the effort to build a monument in memory of poet Subramaniya Bharathi at Ettayapuram The Government of India in 1987 instituted a highest National Subramanyam Bharati Award conferred along with Ministry of Human Resource Development annually confers on writers of outstanding works in Hindi literature Bharathiar University a state university named after the poet was established in 1982 at Coimbatore 21 There is a statue of Bharathiar at Marina Beach and also in the Indian Parliament A Tamil Movie titled Bharathi was made in the year 2000 on the life of the poet by Gnana Rajasekeran which won National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil 22 The movie Kappalottiya Thamizhan chronicles the important struggles of V O Chidambaranar along with Subramanya Siva and Bharathiar with S V Subbaiah starring as Subramania Bharathi On 14 August 2014 Professor Muhammadu Sathik raja Started an Educational trust at thiruppuvanam pudur near Madurai named as Omar Bharathi educational trust the name is kept to praise the two legendary poets Umaru Pulavar and Subramania Bharathiyar from Ettaiyapuram Though these two Poets are having three centuries time interval the divine service and their contribution to the Tamil language are made them unparallel legends Both two poets are offered their services at vaigai river bank of thiruppuvanam the two poets were strongly suffered by their financial status so both of them were unsuccessful to fulfil their family members need Many roads are named after him notable ones including Bharathiar road in Coimbatore and Subramaniam Bharti Marg in New Delhi 23 24 The NGO Sevalaya runs the Mahakavi Bharatiya Higher Secondary School 25 In popular culture EditBharati had a critical reception from the Tamil music director Adhithya Venkatapathy through the musical duo Hiphop Tamizha which features Bharati in its logo 26 27 Many of the poems written by Bharati were used in various Tamil films in the form of songs AVM productions was the first company to use his songs in films Aaduvome Palli from Naam Iruvar 1947 was the first song inspired from Bharathi s poem 28 Many of the film titles were taken from his poems like Vallamai Tharayo 2008 Aanmai Thavarel 2011 Nayyapudai 2016 Nerkonda Paarvai 2019 29 Soorarai Potru 2020 30 31 See also EditTamil Wikisource Subramaniya Bharathi s works Project Madurai Tamil literature repository Bharathi 2000 film Kadayam Tamil literatureReferences Edit a b c Birth name C Subramaniyan the person s given name Subramaniyan father s given name Chinnaswami C Subramaniyan by the prevalent patronymic initials as prefix naming system in Tamil Nadu and it is Subramaniyan Chinnaswami by the patronymic suffix naming system Bharathi is a conferred title meaning blessed by the goddess of learning His name became C Subramania Bharathi and he is also widely known mononymously as Bharathi In this article the subject is referred using his title Bharathi because subject is not known without his title Permitted in WP per Wikipedia Naming conventions Indic Titles and honorifics a b Natarajan Nalini Nelson Emmanuel Sampath eds 1996 Handbook of Twentieth century Literatures of India Greenwood Publishing Group p 290 ISBN 9780313287787 Congress Veteran reenacts Bharathis escape to Pondy The Times of India Knowing Subramania Bharati beyond his turban colour www telegraphindia com Retrieved 11 December 2020 Raman Aroon 21 December 2009 All too human at the core The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 11 December 2020 On the streets where Bharati walked The Hindu a b c d e f g Subramanya Bharathi biography TamilVU org Tamil Virtual University Retrieved 30 November 2022 Why we re so turned off by Bharathiyar s saffron turban Did the orange fall too far from the tree Edex Live Retrieved 22 January 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kasi Viswanathan Muralidharan In Memory of Bharathi Bharathi s biography ப ரத ய ர ந ன வ த னம BBC com BBC News Tamil Retrieved 30 November 2022 a b c d Indian Literature An Introduction University of Delhi Pearson Education India 2005 pp 125 126 ISBN 9788131705209 a b c d e f g Bharati Subramania Rajagopalan Usha 2013 Panchali s Pledge Hachette UK p 1 ISBN 9789350095300 Bharati s Tamil daily Vijaya traced in Paris The Hindu 5 December 2004 Archived from the original on 21 November 2016 a b Lal Mohan 1992 Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature sasay to zorgot Sahitya Akademi pp 4191 3 ISBN 9788126012213 Last speech delivered in Erode The Hindu 15 April 2008 Archived from the original on 15 April 2008 Retrieved 20 December 2013 Rangarajan 11 January 2021 A Madras Mystery ISBN 9781637147573 Brief Shining Moment in Judicial History Daily News Colombo Sri Lanka 11 June 2013 Archived from the original on 10 June 2014 Retrieved 30 November 2013 via HighBeam subscription required Annamalai E 1968 Changing society and modern Tamil literature Tamil Issue 4 3 4 21 36 JSTOR 40874190 subscription required George K M ed 1992 Modern Indian Literature an Anthology Plays and prose New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 379 ISBN 978 81 7201 324 0 Project Madurai projectmadurai org open access Tamil literature repository Retrieved 26 November 2022 Jayanthasri translations mythreyid academia edu Retrieved 20 April 2017 Gupta Ameeta Kumar Ashish 2006 Handbook of Universities Volume 1 Atlantic Publishers amp Dist p 14 ISBN 9788126906079 SA women swoon over Sanjay Sunday Tribune South Africa 30 March 2008 Archived from the original on 10 June 2014 Retrieved 30 November 2013 via HighBeam subscription required Free helmet distribution The Times of India 6 October 2015 Subramaniam Bharti Marg Indian Express 3 October 2015 Activities School Sevalaya Akshaya Raju 16 October 2014 English Pesnalum Tamizhan Da A Hip Hop Tamizha Exclusive Guindy Times Archived from the original on 28 November 2014 Retrieved 28 November 2014 Avinash Gopinath 11 November 2014 Kollywood Gets A New Music Director Oneindia in Archived from the original on 21 November 2014 Retrieved 23 November 2014 Filmy Ripples Mahakavi Bharathiyar s works in Tamil Film Music 7 August 2017 Ner Konda Paarvai Subramania Bharati s line from a poem becomes the title of Ajith starrer International Business Times 5 March 2019 Suriya 38 Title Has Bharathiyar Touch ந ர க ண ட ப ர வ ச ரர ப ப ற ற ப த ம ப ப ண தம ழ ச ன ம வ ம ப ரத ய ர ர ஃபர ன ஸ ம Further reading EditFire In The Soul The Life And Times of Subramania Bharati OCLC 339 Subramania Barati and Tamil Modernism Fictionalizing an Untold History External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Subramanya Bharathi Wikiquote has quotations related to Subramanya Bharathi Wikisource has original text related to this article ச ப ப ரமண ய ப ரத Wikiquote has quotations related to ச ப ப ரமண ய ப ரத Works by Bharathi at the open access repository Project Madurai Long list of works by Bharathi on the left side menu some songs have audio files Songs by Mahakavi Bharathiyar http www thehindu com todays paper tp national tp tamilnadu Bharathiar museum in Cuddalore prison to be thrown open soon article16630552 ece Works by Subramania Bharati at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Kaakai Siraginiley க க க ச றக ன ல Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Subramania Bharati amp oldid 1136894996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.