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Thursday August 3, 2006

கடிதம்

சதுரகிரி வேள்


Dear Editor,

Thanks for publishing my previous letter. Though i had to use your prestigious magazine for these kind of

'arguments', i am taking this liberty of doing this again one last time.

This is the last mail i am going to write with reference to what was written by Mr.Nedumaran; First

of all, he assumes that my mails are either knee jerk reactions to suppress some unpalatable information

about origin of velalars or a tactic to silence opposing view points. Nothing can be farther from

truth; In this age of internet, any one can write whatever they want and reach millions in a minute.

There are other websites and forums where people write worse things. As it is not my job to defend Velalars

everywhere, i do not bother much. Since i have been a reader of Thinnai for a while and i like the

seriousness with which people contribute here unlike the frivolousness you see everywhere, i have written

letters on this subject a few times to Thinnai, only to present the other view point. If he thinks he has

the right to portray ?incorrect assumptions? as history, Why can not we put across our arguments? When

he can point out that someone else is presenting ?half-truths? as history, why can?t I say the same

thing about him? He should address the points that I have raised one by one; instead of trying to call mine

as ?dominant caste attitude?.

The height of his argument is when he surmises that Kalappirar were Velalars because they expanded

Agriculture in Tamil country and they reduced taxes; Does he not want to take into account that Tamils had

built irrigation systems like Kallanai before the arrival of Kalappirars and Karikalan married Nangkur

Vel's daughter? If that was the case, who lived in 'Marutham' or was Ainthinai an invention of

kalappirars? It has been scientifically agreed that "settled agriculture" indicates beginning of

establishment of societies and nationhood; mankind has evolved from hunter-gatherer to shifting cultivation

to settled cultivation. It would be a laughing matter if Nedumaran tries inventing a different process of

evolution for Tamils alone, just because Velalar are related to Agriculture.

He refers to a mention of a group of Velalar claiming that they had won over all the three Moovendar. How

does it prove that they were kalapirars because of this? They were other smaller kings who had made

similar claims. What about Mutharayar? Is he not aware about a much smaller tamil group called "Vanar" or

"Banar" who were called "Vanathirayar" who claimed to have won over all the three Moovendar and who briefly

also ruled Madurai after chasing away "Pandyans"? He might know that they are of recent vintage and merged

into maravars, as far as my memory is correct.

Even now, one can see that he has double standards when it comes to Velalars; He is quite happy to relate

"Velam" to Velalar but does not want to relate Velalar to "Velir" or "Vel". How selective more one can be? Is

it anywhere mentioned that "Velalar" are children of "women kept in Velam". He might now say that Velalar

were children of Kalapirar women captured by the victorious Pallavas and Pandyas. Frankly, it does not

matter to us today as recorded history points to otherwise.

This is becasue , Kalapirar were accepted as Jains as most of the Tamil literature written during their

period was around Jain principles. And, the revival of Hinduism or Vedic religion started with

Thirunavuakkarasar, the oldest popular figure clearly known as belonging to Velalar clan, converting

Mahendra Varma Pallavan into Saivam. He and Thirugnana Sambandar caused thousands of jains to be decimated.

If we accept Mr.Nedumaran's theory, why would Appar cause the demise of his own clan?

Also, not only me, a large number of living and dead tamils, had not accepted that Varnasrama existed in

Tamil country. Nedumaran and his ilk can shout from rooftops, but tamil society knows that it did not have

Varnasrama and particularly, every one took up arms and went to battle when it was required. Even

Kalappirar won Tamil country by war. If velalars were descendants of kalapirar, did they give up arms as

soon as they won Tamil country? Initially he said Velalars were descendants of kalappirar; In the next

response, he is saying that some Velir merged into Moovendar and rest into Velalars through Kalappirar.

Now that he might have realized that even Kalappirar were warriors, he might next say that Velalars were

slaves of Kalapirar and they have been claiming the legacy of their original masters. The other

contradiction is that he says that Tolkappiam came in4-5 century AD after Sangam literature. That means it

was written during Kalappirar times. If that was the case, would Tolkappiam not have assigned "External"

category to Velalars? Now that i have pointed out this, he might say Tolkappiam was written earlier

during Pandya times.

He thinks that only Sanror had martial past in tamil history and they are the missing Kshatriyas in Tamil

country, he would be surprised with the number of references i can throw where every other tamil group,

be it Brahmins, Velalars, Maravars, Kaikolar, Agamudaiyar, Mutharaiyar, Kallar, Vanniar, Pallars or

even Kuravars are mentioned in popular tamil literature (not in caste hagiographies) as having

participated in major battles/wars, won titles, and even some had their had their own armies and small

kingdoms.

The bottomline is, Velalar had an illustrious history and has thousands of famous names in tamil history

before the arrival of Vijayanagar armies, where as Nedumaran's group has no mention. He might want to

claim Chera, Chozha and Pandya lineage; But he can not discount the fact that these three dynasties, had

close relations with Velalars and other tamil castes. They married into them, gave them higher positions in

Government. This has continued and till date velalars are generally accepted by every other tamil caste in

equal or higher terms.

Though i hate to conclude like this, it can be fairly assumed that Nedumaran wants to invent a tamil royal

history for a group that did not exist in popular tamil culture before Britishers established themselves

here; instead he finds mention of Velalars and others like maravars, nattars, agamudaiyar, kallar and

udaiyar everywhere. I also understand that he has figured out that there are not too many references

even for Sanror (meaning his caste group) having been kings and feudals, compared to others. I can only

assume that he has come to a conclusion that the only way to establish 'higher' status for his group is to

put down velalars and appropriate everything, from Velanmai to Velir to Nammalvar, for his group. What I

do not understand is, in what way a higher status of Velalars was responsible for the lowering of status of

Sanrors (sanars)?

Sincere apologies to Thinnai Team and other readers of Thinnai.

Hoping to contribute something constructive next time,

Thanks and regards,

Sathuragiri Vel

sathuragirivel@yahoo.com




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