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Paraiyar

Paraiyar,[1] or Parayar[2] or Maraiyar (formerly anglicised as Pariah and Paree[3]), is a caste group found in the Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala, and Sri Lanka.

Paraiyar
Group of Paraiyars in the Madras Presidency, 1909
ClassificationScheduled Caste
ReligionsHinduism (Shaivism), Christianity, Buddhism, Islam
LanguagesTamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada
CountryIndia, Sri Lanka
Populated statesTamil Nadu, Kerala, Puducherry
EthnicityTamils
Related groupsSri Lankan Tamils • Other Dravidians

Etymology

Robert Caldwell, a nineteenth-century missionary and grammarian who worked in South India, was in agreement with some Indian writers of the same period who considered the name to derive from the Tamil word parai (drum). According to this hypothesis, the Paraiyars were originally a community of drummers who performed at auspicious events like weddings and funerals. M. Srinivasa Aiyangar, writing a little later, found this etymology unsatisfactory, arguing that beating of drums could not have been an occupation of so many people. Some other writers, such as Gustav Solomon Oppert, have derived the name from the Tamil word poraian, the name of a regional subdivision mentioned by ancient Tamil grammarians, or the Sanskrit pahariya, meaning "hill man".[4]

More recently, George L. Hart's textual analysis of the Sangam literature (c. 300 BCE – 300 CE) has led him to favour Caldwell's earlier hypothesis. The literature has references to the Tamil caste system and refers to a number of "low-born" groups variously called Pulaiyar and Kinaiyar. Hart believes that one of the drums called kiṇai in the literature later came to be called paṟai and the people that played the drum were paraiyar (plural of paraiyan).[5]

Paraiyar as a word referring to an occupational group first appears in the second century CE writings of Mangudi Kilar. The Purananuru mentions the Tudiyar, the Panar, the Paraiyar and the Kadambar as one of the four tribes of the Tamil world which should be respected.[6][user-generated source?]

History

Pre-British period

Hart says that the pulaiyar performed a ritual function by composing and singing songs in the king's favour and beating drums, as well as travelling around villages to announce royal decrees. They were divided into subgroups based on the instruments they played and one of these groups – the Kinaiyan – "was probably the same as the modern Paraiyan".[7] He says that these people were believed to be associated with magical power and kept at a distance, made to live in separate hamlets outside villages. However, their magical power was believed to sustain the king, who had the ability to transform it into auspicious power.[8] Moffatt is less sure of this, saying that we do not know whether the distancing was a consequence of the belief in their magical powers or in Hinduism's ritual pollution as we know of it nowadays.[9]

  • Inscriptions, especially those from the Thanjavur district, mention paraicceris, which were separate hamlets of the Paraiyars.[10] Also living in separate hamlets were the artisans such as goldsmiths and cobblers, who were also recorded in the Sangam literature.[11]
  • In a few inscriptions (all of them from outside Thanjavur district), Paraiyars are described as temple patrons.[10]
  • There are also references to "Paraiya chieftainships" in the 8th and 10th centuries, but it is not known what these were and how they were integrated into the Chola political system.[11]

Burton Stein describes an essentially continuous process of expansion of the nuclear areas of the caste society into forest and upland areas of tribal and warrior people, and their integration into the caste society at the lowest levels. Many of the forest groups were incorporated as Paraiyar either by association with the parai drum or by integration into the low-status labouring groups who were generically called Paraiyar. Thus, it is thought that Paraiyar came to have many subcastes.[12] According to 1961 Madras Census Report, castes that are categorised under Paraiyar include Koliyar, Panchamar, Thoti, Vettiyan, Vetti, Vellam, Vel, Natuvile, Pani, Pambaikaran, Ammaparaiyan, Urumikaran, Morasu, Tangalam, Samban, Paryan, Nesavukaraparayan, Thotiparayan, Kongaparayan, Mannaparayan, and Semban.[citation needed]

During the Bhakti movement (c. 7th–9th centuries CE), the saints – Shaivite Nayanars and the Vaishnavite Alvars – contained one saint each from the untouchable communities. The Nayanar saint Nandanar was born, according to Periya Puranam, in a "threshold of the huts covered with strips of leather", with mango trees from whose branches were hung drums. "In this abode of the people of the lowest caste (kadainar), there arose a man with a feeling of true devotion to the feet of Siva." Nandanar was described as a temple servant and leather worker, who supplied straps for drums and gut-string for stringed instruments used in the Chidambaram temple, but he was himself not allowed to enter the temple.[13] The Paraiyar regard Nandanar as one of their own caste.[14] Paraiyars wear the sacred thread under rituals such as marriage and funeral.[15]

Scholars such as Burchett and Moffatt state that the Bhakti devotationalism did not undermine Brahmin ritual dominance. Instead, it might have strengthened it by warding off challenges from Jainism and Buddhism.[16][17]

British colonial era

By the early 19th century, the Paraiyars had a degraded status in the Tamil society.[18] Francis Buchanan's report on socio-economic condition of South Indians described them ("Pariar") as inferior caste slaves, who cultivated the lands held by Brahmins. This report largely shaped the perceptions of the British officials about contemporary society. They regarded Pariyars as an outcaste, untouchable community.[19] In the second half of the 19th century, there were frequent descriptions of the Paraiyars in official documents and reformist tracts as being "disinherited sons of the earth".[20][21] The first reference to the idea may be that written by Francis Whyte Ellis in 1818, where he writes that the Paraiyars "affect to consider themselves as the real proprietors of the soil". In 1894, William Goudie, a Weslyan missionary, said that the Paraiyars were self-evidently the "disinherited children of the soil".[21] English officials such as Ellis believed that the Paraiyars were serfs toiling under a system of bonded labour that resembled the European villeinage.[22] However, scholars such as Burton Stein argue that the agricultural bondage in Tamil society was different from the contemporary British ideas of slavery.[23]

Historians such as David Washbrook have argued that the socio-economic status of the Paraiyars rose greatly in the 18th century during the Company rule in India; Washbrook calls it the "Golden Age of the Pariah".[24] Raj Sekhar Basu disagrees with this narrative, although he agrees that there were "certain important economic developments".[25]

The Church Mission Society converted many Paraiyars to Christianity by the early 19th century.[26] During the British Raj, the missionary schools and colleges admitted Paraiyar students amid opposition from the upper-caste students. In 1893, the colonial government sanctioned an additional stipend for the Paraiyar students.[27] The colonial officials, scholars, and missionaries attempted to rewrite the history of the Paraiyars, characterising them as a community that enjoyed a high status in the past. Edgar Thurston (1855–1935), for example, claimed that their status was nearly equal to that of the Brahmins in the past.[28] H. A. Stuart, in his Census Report of 1891, claimed that Valluvars were a priestly class among the Paraiyars, and served as priests during Pallava reign. Robert Caldwell, J. H. A. Tremenheere and Edward Jewitt Robinson claimed that the ancient poet-philosopher Thiruvalluvar was a Paraiyar.[29]

Buddhist advocacy by Iyothee Thass

Iyothee Thass, a Siddha doctor by occupation, belonged to a Paraiyar elite. In 1892, he demanded access for Paraiyars to Hindu temples, but faced resistance from Brahmins and Vellalars. This experience led him to believe that it was impossible to emancipate the community within the Hindu fold. In 1893, he also rejected Christianity and Islam as the alternatives to Hinduism, because caste differences had persisted among Indian Christians, while the backwardness of contemporary local Muslims made Islam unappealing.[30]

Thass subsequently attempted a Buddhist reconstruction of the Tamil religious history. He argued that the Paraiyars were originally followers of Buddhism and constituted the original population of India. According to him, the Brahmanical invaders from Persia defeated them and destroyed Buddhism in southern India; as a result, the Paraiyars lost their culture, religion, wealth and status in the society and become destitute. In 1898, Thass and many of his followers converted to Buddhism and founded the Sakya Buddha Society (cākkaiya putta caṅkam) with the influential mediation of Henry Steel Olcott of the Theosophical Society. Olcott subsequently and greatly supported the Tamil Paraiyar Buddhists.[31]

Controversy over the community's name

Jean-Antoine Dubois, a French missionary who worked in India between 1792 and 1823 and had a Brahmin-centric outlook, recorded the community's name as Pariah. He described them as people who lived outside the system of morals prescribed by Hinduism, accepted that outcaste position and were characterised by "drunkenness, shamelessness, brutality, truthlessness, uncleanliness, disgusting food practices, and an absolute lack of personal honour". Moffat says this led to pariah entering the English language as "a synonym for the socially ostracised and the morally depraved".[32]

Iyothee Thass felt that Paraiyar was a slur, and campaigned against its usage. During the 1881 census of India, he requested the government to record the community members under the name Aboriginal Tamils. He later suggested Dravidian as an alternative term, and formed the Dhraavidar Mahajana Sabhai (Dravidian Mahajana Assembly) in 1891. Another Paraiyar leader, Rettamalai Srinivasan, however, advocated using the term Paraiyar with pride. In 1892, he formed the Parayar Mahajana Sabha (Paraiyar Mahajana Assembly), and also started a news publication titled Paraiyan.[33]

Thass continued his campaign against the term, and petitioned the government to discontinue its usage, demanding punishment for those who used the term. He incorrectly claimed that the term Paraiyar was not found in any ancient records (it has been, in fact, found in the 10th-century Chola stone inscriptions from Kolar district).[33] Thass subsequently advocated the term Adi Dravida (Original Dravidians) to describe the community. In 1892, he used the term Adidravida Jana Sabhai to describe an organisation, which was probably Srinivasan's Parayar Mahajana Sabha. In 1895, he established the People's Assembly of Urdravidians (Adidravida Jana Sabha), which probably split off from Srinivasan's organisation. According to Michael Bergunder, Thass was thus the first person to introduce the concept of Adi Dravida into political discussion.[34]

Another Paraiyar leader, M. C. Rajah — a Madras councillor — made successful efforts for adoption of the term Adi-Dravidar in the government records.[33] In 1914, the Madras Legislative Council passed a resolution that officially censured the usage of the term Paraiyar to refer to a specific community, and recommended Adi Dravidar as an alternative.[35] In the 1920s and 1930s, Periyar E. V. Ramasamy ensured the wider dissemination of the term Adi Dravida.[34]

Right-hand caste faction

Paraiyars belong to the Valangai ("Right-hand caste faction"). Some of them assume the title Valangamattan ("people of the right-hand division"). The Valangai comprised castes with an agricultural basis while the Idangai consisted of castes involved in manufacturing.[36] Valangai were better organised politically.[37]

Present status

As of 2017, the Paraiyar were a listed as a Scheduled Caste in Tamil Nadu under India's system of affirmative action.[38]

Culture

Malavazhiyattam is a ritualistic dance drama performed once a year by the Paraya community in Kerala.[39] Malavazhi is the mother goddesses who are installed in the homes of the Parayas and worshiped by them. Malavazhiyattam is performed to please the deities through music and drama.[40]

Notable people

[clarification needed]

Religious and spiritual leaders

Social reformers and activists

Politics

Arts and Entertainment

References

Citations

  1. ^ Raman, Ravi (2010). Global Capital and Peripheral Labour: The History and Political Economy of Plantation Workers in India. Routledge. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-13519-658-5.
  2. ^ Gough, Kathleen (2008) [1981]. Rural Society in Southeast India. Cambridge University Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-52104-019-8.
  3. ^ Fontaine, Petrus Franciscus Maria (1990). The Light and the Dark: Dualism in ancient Iran, India, and China. Brill Academic Pub. p. 100. ISBN 9789050630511.
  4. ^ Basu (2011), pp. 2–4.
  5. ^ Hart (1987), pp. 467–468.
  6. ^ "Purananuru 337" (in Tamil). ta.wikisource.org. p. 337. Retrieved 26 December 2020. Translated it reads: There are no worthy clans other than these four: Tudiyan, Panan, Paraiyan, Kadamban.
  7. ^ Hart (1987), p. 468.
  8. ^ Hart (1987), pp. 482–483.
  9. ^ Moffat (1979), p. 37.
  10. ^ a b Orr (2000), pp. 236–237.
  11. ^ a b Moffatt (1979), p. 38.
  12. ^ Moffatt (1979), p. 41.
  13. ^ Moffatt (1979), pp. 38–39.
  14. ^ Vincentnathan, Lynn (June 1993). "Nandanar: Untouchable Saint and Caste Hindu Anomaly". Ethos. 21 (2): 154–179. doi:10.1525/eth.1993.21.2.02a00020. JSTOR 640372.
  15. ^ Kolappa Pillay, Kanakasabhapathi (1977). The Caste System in Tamil Nadu. University of Madras. p. 33.
  16. ^ Moffatt (1979), p. 39.
  17. ^ Burchett, Patton (August 2009). "Bhakti Rhetoric in the Hagiography of 'Untouchable' Saints: Discerning Bhakti's Ambivalence on Caste and Brahminhood". International Journal of Hindu Studies. 13 (2): 115–141. doi:10.1007/s11407-009-9072-5. JSTOR 40608021. S2CID 143000307.
  18. ^ Basu (2011), p. 16.
  19. ^ Basu (2011), pp. 2.
  20. ^ Irschick (1994), pp. 153–190.
  21. ^ a b c Bergunder (2004), p. 68.
  22. ^ Basu (2011), pp. 9–11.
  23. ^ Basu (2011), pp. 4.
  24. ^ Basu (2011), pp. 33–34.
  25. ^ Basu (2011), p. 39.
  26. ^ Kanjamala (2014), p. 127.
  27. ^ Kanjamala (2014), p. 66.
  28. ^ Basu (2011), pp. 24–26.
  29. ^ Moffatt (1979), p. 19-21.
  30. ^ Bergunder (2004), p. 70.
  31. ^ Bergunder (2004), pp. 67–71.
  32. ^ Moffat (1979), pp. 6–7.
  33. ^ a b c d Srikumar (2014), p. 357.
  34. ^ a b Bergunder (2004), p. 69.
  35. ^ Bergunder, Frese & Schröder (2011), p. 260.
  36. ^ Siromoney, Gift (1975). "More inscriptions from the Tambaram area". Madras Christian College Magazine. 44. Retrieved 21 September 2008.
  37. ^ Levinson, Stephen C. (1982). "Caste rank and verbal interaction in western Tamilnadu". In McGilvray, Dennis B. (ed.). Caste Ideology and Interaction. Cambridge Papers in Social Anthropology. Vol. 9. Cambridge University Press. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-52124-145-8.
  38. ^ "Tamil Nadu". Ministry of Social Justice. 2017. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  39. ^ Varavoor, Prashanth. "അവതരണങ്ങളിൽ അപമാനിക്കപ്പെടുന്ന അനുഷ്‌ഠാനകലകൾ".
  40. ^ M, Athira (24 March 2022). "Malayalam docu-fiction 'Thevan' pays tribute to folk artiste Thevan Peradipurathu". The Hindu.
  41. ^ Mylapore Institute for Indigenous Studies; I.S.P.C.K. (Organisation) (2000). Christianity is Indian: the emergence of an indigenous community. Published for MIIS, Mylapore by ISPCK. p. 322. ISBN 978-81-7214-561-3.
  42. ^ Roshen Dalal (2011). Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide. Penguin Books India. pp. 68, 271, 281. ISBN 978-0-14-341421-6.
  43. ^ Jaffrelot, Christophe (2003). India's silent revolution: Rise of lower castes in North India. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. p. 169. ISBN 978-1-85065-670-8.
  44. ^ Srikumar (2014), p. 356.
  45. ^ Wyatt, Andrew (16 December 2009). Party System Change in South India: Political Entrepreneurs, Patterns and Processes. ISBN 9781135182014.
  46. ^ "കാവാരികുളം കണ്ടന്‍ കുമാരനും ദളിത് പ്രശ്നവും". Deshabhimani (in Malayalam).
  47. ^ Gorringe, Hugo (7 January 2005). Untouchable Citizens: Dalit Movements and Democratization in Tamil Nadu. ISBN 9789352803057.
  48. ^ "Casteist message in Ilaiyaraaja's name is fake, composer's lawyer clarifies". The News Minute. 21 May 2019. Retrieved 4 January 2021.

Bibliography

  • Basu, Raj Sekhar (2011), Nandanar's Children: The Paraiyans' Tryst with Destiny, Tamil Nadu 1850 - 1956, SAGE, ISBN 978-81-321-0679-1
  • Bergunder, Michael (2004), "Contested Past: Anti-brahmanical and Hindu nationalist reconstructions of early Indian history" (PDF), Historiographia Linguistica, 31 (1): 95–104, doi:10.1075/hl.31.1.05ber
  • Bergunder, Michael; Frese, Heiko; Schröder, Ulrike, eds. (2011), Ritual, Caste, and Religion in Colonial South India, Primus Books, ISBN 978-93-80607-21-4
  • Hart, George L. (1987), "Early Evidence for Caste in South India", in Hockings, Paul (ed.), Dimensions of Social Life: Essays in honor of David B. Mandelbaum, Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, ISBN 978-3-11084-685-0
  • Irschick, Eugene F. (1994), Dialogue and History: Constructing South India, 1795–1895, Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 9780520914322
    • Irschick, Eugene F. (1994), Complete book at Cdlib, but without page numbering
  • Kanjamala, Augustine (2014), The Future of Christian Mission in India, Wipf and Stock, ISBN 978-1-63087-485-8
  • Moffatt, Michael (1979), An Untouchable Community in South India: Structure and Consensus, Princeton University Press, pp. 37–, ISBN 978-1-4008-7036-3
  • Orr, Leslie C. (2000), Donors, Devotees, and Daughters of God, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-535672-4
  • Srikumar, S (2014), Kolar Gold Field: (Unfolding the Untold), Partridge Publishing India, ISBN 978-1-4828-1507-8

paraiyar, parayar, maraiyar, formerly, anglicised, pariah, paree, caste, group, found, indian, states, tamil, nadu, kerala, lanka, group, madras, presidency, 1909classificationscheduled, castereligionshinduism, shaivism, christianity, buddhism, islamlanguagest. Paraiyar 1 or Parayar 2 or Maraiyar formerly anglicised as Pariah and Paree 3 is a caste group found in the Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala and Sri Lanka ParaiyarGroup of Paraiyars in the Madras Presidency 1909ClassificationScheduled CasteReligionsHinduism Shaivism Christianity Buddhism IslamLanguagesTamil Telugu Malayalam KannadaCountryIndia Sri LankaPopulated statesTamil Nadu Kerala PuducherryEthnicityTamilsRelated groupsSri Lankan Tamils Other Dravidians Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre British period 2 2 British colonial era 2 3 Buddhist advocacy by Iyothee Thass 2 4 Controversy over the community s name 3 Right hand caste faction 4 Present status 5 Culture 6 Notable people 6 1 Religious and spiritual leaders 6 2 Social reformers and activists 6 3 Politics 6 4 Arts and Entertainment 7 ReferencesEtymology EditRobert Caldwell a nineteenth century missionary and grammarian who worked in South India was in agreement with some Indian writers of the same period who considered the name to derive from the Tamil word parai drum According to this hypothesis the Paraiyars were originally a community of drummers who performed at auspicious events like weddings and funerals M Srinivasa Aiyangar writing a little later found this etymology unsatisfactory arguing that beating of drums could not have been an occupation of so many people Some other writers such as Gustav Solomon Oppert have derived the name from the Tamil word poraian the name of a regional subdivision mentioned by ancient Tamil grammarians or the Sanskrit pahariya meaning hill man 4 More recently George L Hart s textual analysis of the Sangam literature c 300 BCE 300 CE has led him to favour Caldwell s earlier hypothesis The literature has references to the Tamil caste system and refers to a number of low born groups variously called Pulaiyar and Kinaiyar Hart believes that one of the drums called kiṇai in the literature later came to be called paṟai and the people that played the drum were paraiyar plural of paraiyan 5 Paraiyar as a word referring to an occupational group first appears in the second century CE writings of Mangudi Kilar The Purananuru mentions the Tudiyar the Panar the Paraiyar and the Kadambar as one of the four tribes of the Tamil world which should be respected 6 user generated source History EditPre British period Edit Hart says that the pulaiyar performed a ritual function by composing and singing songs in the king s favour and beating drums as well as travelling around villages to announce royal decrees They were divided into subgroups based on the instruments they played and one of these groups the Kinaiyan was probably the same as the modern Paraiyan 7 He says that these people were believed to be associated with magical power and kept at a distance made to live in separate hamlets outside villages However their magical power was believed to sustain the king who had the ability to transform it into auspicious power 8 Moffatt is less sure of this saying that we do not know whether the distancing was a consequence of the belief in their magical powers or in Hinduism s ritual pollution as we know of it nowadays 9 Inscriptions especially those from the Thanjavur district mention paraicceris which were separate hamlets of the Paraiyars 10 Also living in separate hamlets were the artisans such as goldsmiths and cobblers who were also recorded in the Sangam literature 11 In a few inscriptions all of them from outside Thanjavur district Paraiyars are described as temple patrons 10 There are also references to Paraiya chieftainships in the 8th and 10th centuries but it is not known what these were and how they were integrated into the Chola political system 11 Burton Stein describes an essentially continuous process of expansion of the nuclear areas of the caste society into forest and upland areas of tribal and warrior people and their integration into the caste society at the lowest levels Many of the forest groups were incorporated as Paraiyar either by association with the parai drum or by integration into the low status labouring groups who were generically called Paraiyar Thus it is thought that Paraiyar came to have many subcastes 12 According to 1961 Madras Census Report castes that are categorised under Paraiyar include Koliyar Panchamar Thoti Vettiyan Vetti Vellam Vel Natuvile Pani Pambaikaran Ammaparaiyan Urumikaran Morasu Tangalam Samban Paryan Nesavukaraparayan Thotiparayan Kongaparayan Mannaparayan and Semban citation needed During the Bhakti movement c 7th 9th centuries CE the saints Shaivite Nayanars and the Vaishnavite Alvars contained one saint each from the untouchable communities The Nayanar saint Nandanar was born according to Periya Puranam in a threshold of the huts covered with strips of leather with mango trees from whose branches were hung drums In this abode of the people of the lowest caste kadainar there arose a man with a feeling of true devotion to the feet of Siva Nandanar was described as a temple servant and leather worker who supplied straps for drums and gut string for stringed instruments used in the Chidambaram temple but he was himself not allowed to enter the temple 13 The Paraiyar regard Nandanar as one of their own caste 14 Paraiyars wear the sacred thread under rituals such as marriage and funeral 15 Scholars such as Burchett and Moffatt state that the Bhakti devotationalism did not undermine Brahmin ritual dominance Instead it might have strengthened it by warding off challenges from Jainism and Buddhism 16 17 British colonial era Edit By the early 19th century the Paraiyars had a degraded status in the Tamil society 18 Francis Buchanan s report on socio economic condition of South Indians described them Pariar as inferior caste slaves who cultivated the lands held by Brahmins This report largely shaped the perceptions of the British officials about contemporary society They regarded Pariyars as an outcaste untouchable community 19 In the second half of the 19th century there were frequent descriptions of the Paraiyars in official documents and reformist tracts as being disinherited sons of the earth 20 21 The first reference to the idea may be that written by Francis Whyte Ellis in 1818 where he writes that the Paraiyars affect to consider themselves as the real proprietors of the soil In 1894 William Goudie a Weslyan missionary said that the Paraiyars were self evidently the disinherited children of the soil 21 English officials such as Ellis believed that the Paraiyars were serfs toiling under a system of bonded labour that resembled the European villeinage 22 However scholars such as Burton Stein argue that the agricultural bondage in Tamil society was different from the contemporary British ideas of slavery 23 Historians such as David Washbrook have argued that the socio economic status of the Paraiyars rose greatly in the 18th century during the Company rule in India Washbrook calls it the Golden Age of the Pariah 24 Raj Sekhar Basu disagrees with this narrative although he agrees that there were certain important economic developments 25 The Church Mission Society converted many Paraiyars to Christianity by the early 19th century 26 During the British Raj the missionary schools and colleges admitted Paraiyar students amid opposition from the upper caste students In 1893 the colonial government sanctioned an additional stipend for the Paraiyar students 27 The colonial officials scholars and missionaries attempted to rewrite the history of the Paraiyars characterising them as a community that enjoyed a high status in the past Edgar Thurston 1855 1935 for example claimed that their status was nearly equal to that of the Brahmins in the past 28 H A Stuart in his Census Report of 1891 claimed that Valluvars were a priestly class among the Paraiyars and served as priests during Pallava reign Robert Caldwell J H A Tremenheere and Edward Jewitt Robinson claimed that the ancient poet philosopher Thiruvalluvar was a Paraiyar 29 Buddhist advocacy by Iyothee Thass Edit Iyothee Thass a Siddha doctor by occupation belonged to a Paraiyar elite In 1892 he demanded access for Paraiyars to Hindu temples but faced resistance from Brahmins and Vellalars This experience led him to believe that it was impossible to emancipate the community within the Hindu fold In 1893 he also rejected Christianity and Islam as the alternatives to Hinduism because caste differences had persisted among Indian Christians while the backwardness of contemporary local Muslims made Islam unappealing 30 Thass subsequently attempted a Buddhist reconstruction of the Tamil religious history He argued that the Paraiyars were originally followers of Buddhism and constituted the original population of India According to him the Brahmanical invaders from Persia defeated them and destroyed Buddhism in southern India as a result the Paraiyars lost their culture religion wealth and status in the society and become destitute In 1898 Thass and many of his followers converted to Buddhism and founded the Sakya Buddha Society cakkaiya putta caṅkam with the influential mediation of Henry Steel Olcott of the Theosophical Society Olcott subsequently and greatly supported the Tamil Paraiyar Buddhists 31 Controversy over the community s name Edit Jean Antoine Dubois a French missionary who worked in India between 1792 and 1823 and had a Brahmin centric outlook recorded the community s name as Pariah He described them as people who lived outside the system of morals prescribed by Hinduism accepted that outcaste position and were characterised by drunkenness shamelessness brutality truthlessness uncleanliness disgusting food practices and an absolute lack of personal honour Moffat says this led to pariah entering the English language as a synonym for the socially ostracised and the morally depraved 32 Iyothee Thass felt that Paraiyar was a slur and campaigned against its usage During the 1881 census of India he requested the government to record the community members under the name Aboriginal Tamils He later suggested Dravidian as an alternative term and formed the Dhraavidar Mahajana Sabhai Dravidian Mahajana Assembly in 1891 Another Paraiyar leader Rettamalai Srinivasan however advocated using the term Paraiyar with pride In 1892 he formed the Parayar Mahajana Sabha Paraiyar Mahajana Assembly and also started a news publication titled Paraiyan 33 Thass continued his campaign against the term and petitioned the government to discontinue its usage demanding punishment for those who used the term He incorrectly claimed that the term Paraiyar was not found in any ancient records it has been in fact found in the 10th century Chola stone inscriptions from Kolar district 33 Thass subsequently advocated the term Adi Dravida Original Dravidians to describe the community In 1892 he used the term Adidravida Jana Sabhai to describe an organisation which was probably Srinivasan s Parayar Mahajana Sabha In 1895 he established the People s Assembly of Urdravidians Adidravida Jana Sabha which probably split off from Srinivasan s organisation According to Michael Bergunder Thass was thus the first person to introduce the concept of Adi Dravida into political discussion 34 Another Paraiyar leader M C Rajah a Madras councillor made successful efforts for adoption of the term Adi Dravidar in the government records 33 In 1914 the Madras Legislative Council passed a resolution that officially censured the usage of the term Paraiyar to refer to a specific community and recommended Adi Dravidar as an alternative 35 In the 1920s and 1930s Periyar E V Ramasamy ensured the wider dissemination of the term Adi Dravida 34 Right hand caste faction EditParaiyars belong to the Valangai Right hand caste faction Some of them assume the title Valangamattan people of the right hand division The Valangai comprised castes with an agricultural basis while the Idangai consisted of castes involved in manufacturing 36 Valangai were better organised politically 37 Present status EditAs of 2017 update the Paraiyar were a listed as a Scheduled Caste in Tamil Nadu under India s system of affirmative action 38 Culture EditMalavazhiyattam is a ritualistic dance drama performed once a year by the Paraya community in Kerala 39 Malavazhi is the mother goddesses who are installed in the homes of the Parayas and worshiped by them Malavazhiyattam is performed to please the deities through music and drama 40 Notable people EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message clarification needed Religious and spiritual leaders Edit Poykayil Yohannan 41 rejected Christianity and Hinduism to found the Prathyaksha Raksha Daiva Sabha Nandanar 42 Thiruppaan Alvar Swami Sahajananda Spiritual leader Social activist Politician and founder of Nandanar school ChidambaramSocial reformers and activists Edit M C Rajah 1883 1943 politician social and political activist from the Indian state of Tamil Nadu 33 43 Rettamalai Srinivasan 1860 1945 Paraiyar activist politician from Tamil Nadu 44 Iyothee Thass 1845 1914 founder of the Sakya Buddhist Society also known as Indian Buddhist Association 21 45 Annai Meenambal Shivaraj first woman president of the Scheduled Caste Federation and Deputy Mayor of Madras Kavarikulam Kandan Kumaran social reformer and Sree Moolam Prajasabha member who founded the organization Brahma Pratyaksha Sadhujana Paripalana Parayar Sangam 46 Politics Edit P Kakkan Minister for Home Affairs Agriculture Public Works Member of Parliament In 1946 5 March 1967 in Kamaraj s cabinet Thol Thirumavalavan politician and chairperson of Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi 47 A Raja DMK leader and former Union Minister V I Munuswamy Pillai Minister for Agriculture amp Rural development in Rajaji s cabinet B Parameswaran Minister for Transport Hindu Religious Endowments Harijan Welfare in Kamaraj s cabinet N Sivaraj Founding member of the Justice Party former Mayor of Madras and President of the Republican Party of IndiaArts and Entertainment Edit Ilaiyaraaja Indian film composer 48 Deva music director Raghava Lawrence actor and director Jai actor Kalabhavan Mani Malayalam film actor Premgi Amaren Tamil film actor Yuvan Shankar Raja musician Venkat Prabhu Tamil film director Mysskin Tamil film director Pa Ranjith Tamil film director Ganesh music director part of the Shankar Ganesh duo References EditCitations Raman Ravi 2010 Global Capital and Peripheral Labour The History and Political Economy of Plantation Workers in India Routledge p 67 ISBN 978 1 13519 658 5 Gough Kathleen 2008 1981 Rural Society in Southeast India Cambridge University Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 52104 019 8 Fontaine Petrus Franciscus Maria 1990 The Light and the Dark Dualism in ancient Iran India and China Brill Academic Pub p 100 ISBN 9789050630511 Basu 2011 pp 2 4 Hart 1987 pp 467 468 Purananuru 337 in Tamil ta wikisource org p 337 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Translated it reads There are no worthy clans other than these four Tudiyan Panan Paraiyan Kadamban Hart 1987 p 468 Hart 1987 pp 482 483 Moffat 1979 p 37 sfnp error no target CITEREFMoffat1979 help a b Orr 2000 pp 236 237 a b Moffatt 1979 p 38 Moffatt 1979 p 41 Moffatt 1979 pp 38 39 Vincentnathan Lynn June 1993 Nandanar Untouchable Saint and Caste Hindu Anomaly Ethos 21 2 154 179 doi 10 1525 eth 1993 21 2 02a00020 JSTOR 640372 Kolappa Pillay Kanakasabhapathi 1977 The Caste System in Tamil Nadu University of Madras p 33 Moffatt 1979 p 39 Burchett Patton August 2009 Bhakti Rhetoric in the Hagiography of Untouchable Saints Discerning Bhakti s Ambivalence on Caste and Brahminhood International Journal of Hindu Studies 13 2 115 141 doi 10 1007 s11407 009 9072 5 JSTOR 40608021 S2CID 143000307 Basu 2011 p 16 Basu 2011 pp 2 Irschick 1994 pp 153 190 a b c Bergunder 2004 p 68 Basu 2011 pp 9 11 Basu 2011 pp 4 Basu 2011 pp 33 34 Basu 2011 p 39 Kanjamala 2014 p 127 Kanjamala 2014 p 66 Basu 2011 pp 24 26 Moffatt 1979 p 19 21 Bergunder 2004 p 70 Bergunder 2004 pp 67 71 Moffat 1979 pp 6 7 sfnp error no target CITEREFMoffat1979 help a b c d Srikumar 2014 p 357 a b Bergunder 2004 p 69 Bergunder Frese amp Schroder 2011 p 260 Siromoney Gift 1975 More inscriptions from the Tambaram area Madras Christian College Magazine 44 Retrieved 21 September 2008 Levinson Stephen C 1982 Caste rank and verbal interaction in western Tamilnadu In McGilvray Dennis B ed Caste Ideology and Interaction Cambridge Papers in Social Anthropology Vol 9 Cambridge University Press p 105 ISBN 978 0 52124 145 8 Tamil Nadu Ministry of Social Justice 2017 Retrieved 20 July 2020 Varavoor Prashanth അവതരണങ ങള ൽ അപമ ന ക കപ പ ട ന ന അന ഷ ഠ നകലകൾ M Athira 24 March 2022 Malayalam docu fiction Thevan pays tribute to folk artiste Thevan Peradipurathu The Hindu Mylapore Institute for Indigenous Studies I S P C K Organisation 2000 Christianity is Indian the emergence of an indigenous community Published for MIIS Mylapore by ISPCK p 322 ISBN 978 81 7214 561 3 Roshen Dalal 2011 Hinduism An Alphabetical Guide Penguin Books India pp 68 271 281 ISBN 978 0 14 341421 6 Jaffrelot Christophe 2003 India s silent revolution Rise of lower castes in North India C Hurst amp Co Publishers p 169 ISBN 978 1 85065 670 8 Srikumar 2014 p 356 Wyatt Andrew 16 December 2009 Party System Change in South India Political Entrepreneurs Patterns and Processes ISBN 9781135182014 ക വ ര ക ള കണ ടന ക മ രന ദള ത പ രശ നവ Deshabhimani in Malayalam Gorringe Hugo 7 January 2005 Untouchable Citizens Dalit Movements and Democratization in Tamil Nadu ISBN 9789352803057 Casteist message in Ilaiyaraaja s name is fake composer s lawyer clarifies The News Minute 21 May 2019 Retrieved 4 January 2021 Bibliography Basu Raj Sekhar 2011 Nandanar s Children The Paraiyans Tryst with Destiny Tamil Nadu 1850 1956 SAGE ISBN 978 81 321 0679 1 Bergunder Michael 2004 Contested Past Anti brahmanical and Hindu nationalist reconstructions of early Indian history PDF Historiographia Linguistica 31 1 95 104 doi 10 1075 hl 31 1 05ber Bergunder Michael Frese Heiko Schroder Ulrike eds 2011 Ritual Caste and Religion in Colonial South India Primus Books ISBN 978 93 80607 21 4 Hart George L 1987 Early Evidence for Caste in South India in Hockings Paul ed Dimensions of Social Life Essays in honor of David B Mandelbaum Berlin Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11084 685 0 Irschick Eugene F 1994 Dialogue and History Constructing South India 1795 1895 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520914322 Irschick Eugene F 1994 Complete book at Cdlib but without page numbering Kanjamala Augustine 2014 The Future of Christian Mission in India Wipf and Stock ISBN 978 1 63087 485 8 Moffatt Michael 1979 An Untouchable Community in South India Structure and Consensus Princeton University Press pp 37 ISBN 978 1 4008 7036 3 Orr Leslie C 2000 Donors Devotees and Daughters of God Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 535672 4 Srikumar S 2014 Kolar Gold Field Unfolding the Untold Partridge Publishing India ISBN 978 1 4828 1507 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paraiyar amp oldid 1142590579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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