Tamil Villages Show Their Ancient Histor
Tamil Villages Show Their Ancient Histor
Tamil Villages Show Their Ancient Histor
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
Introduction
This paper was written for presentation at the recent International Conference on Sacred
Geographies, Religious Cultures And Popular Practices held at the Government Arts
College, Tiruvannamalai.
The basis for the paper was this blog. I started this blog after my wife Carol and I moved to
Tiruvannamalai, writing about our experiences of life in India. We made friends with villagers
nearby Tiruvannamalai, and because they knew we were interested, they started inviting us
to village ceremonies and functions. I have a life‐long interest in Anthropology, and I knew
right away that I was seeing things about village culture that were special. Carol and I took
many photos to document what we were seeing, and I starting writing about it.
As I wrote, I researched ‐‐ searching the Internet‐‐ and discovered that some of what I was
seeing was very ancient, predating Hinduism itself.
There are four sections to this paper:
This first part is based on the research I have done, and is my own conclusions based on this.
Parts 2 and 3 are mainly from things that Carol and I have seen, photographed, and written
about. Part 4 are my ideas about what needs to be done now to protect the heritage of the
Tamil villages.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
40,000 years ago and developed farming practices independently. This was at the end of the
last Pleistocene Ice Age (about 11,700 years ago). At that time temperatures warmed,
glaciers melted, sea levels rose, and ecosystems throughout the world reorganized.
Agriculture was both exported from this original area, and was independently developed in
many places in the world. Emmer Wheat was among the first plants to be domesticated in
the Fertile Crescent.
3,500 years ago
About 100 years ago Max Mueller theorized that there was a wave of migrations from
Central Asia about 3500 years ago that saw the entry of Indo‐Europeans, called Aryans, who
brought with them horses and the basis of Vedic Hinduism into northwest India and
Pakistan. This theory is now put to rest by recent genetic studies of South Asia, by Metspalu,
Gyaneshwer Chaubey et al and published in 2011 in the American Journal of Human
Genetics, Dec. 2011. They say, ““Genetic study finds no evidence for Aryan Migration
Theory–On the contrary, South Indians migrated to north and South Asians migrated into
Eurasia.”
The Aryan culture became dominant in North India. The Dravidians were displaced to South
India. These Dravidians are the basis for the present Tamil village population, based on
archeological evidence. Of all the claims I make in this article, the ancient history of the
Dravidians is the least certain. The ideas I express here are supported strongly by some
scholars, while others are unsure. Some Indians vigorously deny any source outside of India
for Aryan or Dravidian origins, citing good evidence. I think finally the work in Genetic
Anthropology will resolve this once and for all. I base claims of Indo‐European genetic
material in the Indian genome on articles from the journal, “Genetic Research” (and Second
article) in which they specifically identify Indo‐European haplotypes (combinations of gene
sequences inherited together) in the Indian population. Let us all wait for conclusive
research results on this.
There is not really an “Indian race.” Rather, the human genetic elements in India contain
material that are mainly a mix of four genetic types: Austro‐Asiatic (AA), Dravidian (DR),
Tibeto‐Burman (TB), and Indo‐European (IE).
Tribals, the Austro‐Asiatics
The various Tribal peoples, about 8% of the present Indian population, are the descendants
of the original Austro‐Asiatic population. There are ∼450 tribal communities in India (Singh
1992), who speak ∼750 dialects. This population was marginalized by first the Dravidians
and then the Aryans, both of whom had more advanced cultures.
Tamils, Dravidians
The Tamil village population is most closely related to the Dravidians, who retreated to
southern India to avoid dominance by the Indo‐European‐speaking nomads.
Probably the Dravidians brought millet with them to South India. Millet was grown in the
Indus Valley Civilization, and was the most important crop in ancient Tamil Nadu, until rice
arrived in South India, again probably brought by the Dravidians from the Indus Valley
Civilization.
Aryans, Indo‐Europeans
What is called the Indo‐Europeans were South Asians and became what is called the Aryan
Sanskritic Vedic population, and perhaps were the originators of the caste system. They
occupied Northwest India and Pakistan. Their genetic traces are found today mainly in the
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
higher castes and in North India. Their origins may be have in the Sarasvati River basin in
North INdia, which dried out about 3500 years ago, the same time the Aryans were said to
have “appeared.”
Tibeto‐Burman
The Tibeto‐Burman population is thought to have come from the Northeast, and to have
brought rice agriculture into the north of India. The dates are not clear, perhaps 4000‐3500
years ago.
Genetic Variation
There is significant genetic difference between South Indian Tribals, and the various Caste
populations. Tribals have much higher proportions of Austro‐Asiatic genetic material. High
castes have much more Indo‐European makeup. The proportion of Indo‐European genetic
material decreases in each lower caste.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
agricultural production also intensified, drawing populations to the plains, where crops and
groves could be more effectively managed.
It may be that this period really marks the ascendency of the Dravidians in South India. Iron
really set the village into the form that has now lasted more than 2000 years. The
introduction of the iron Aruval (sickle‐axe) and plow were the key. The effect of the Iron Age
was that some clans and castes (i.e. the Dravidian farmers) were more productive as
farmers, prospered and became dominant; their villages grew in size and became more
numerous. The cities supported by these farms and villages also grew and became more
prosperous. Certainly the big improvement in farm productivity would have brought about
much growth and change in the cities. It sure seems like this could bring about a flourishing
of a culture, like that experienced at this time in South India.
The original Austro‐Asiatic hunter‐gathers became further marginalized and moved into the
hills, where they still are today.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
The longer one, pictured below, was used as an axe to clear trees, vital for farming, and as a
weapon. The extra weight at the tip of the Aruval moves its center of gravity away from the
handle and makes of a powerful stroke, important both for axes and swords.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
It is mostly made of wood, but with a strip of iron running down the front side of the plow
blade. This was all that is needed. Only a small bit of iron was used for this plow.
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Conclusion
Tamils are descendants of the ancient Dravidians. They took ascendency in Tamil Nadu
about 3000 years ago. They had their own gods and traditions, which still live today in Tamil
Villages
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
Murugan
(From Wikipedia)
It is likely that Murugan was brought to South India by the Dravidians, long before the
introduction of Vedic Hinduism.
In 2006 a Neolithic hand‐held stone axe inscribed with Indus Valley script was discovered in
Tamil Nadu, establishing a clear link between the two civilizations. The stone was of local
origin, so the Indus script had to have been inscribed locally in Tamil Nadu. In this script,
from both the north and south, is a figure thought to represent Murukan, then a powerful
spirit warrior. They are very similar:
“47” is the Tamil character. “48” is the Indus Valley script, While the megalithic/Iron Age
pottery in Tamil Nadu is datable between 800 B.C. and 3 A.D., the Indus script belongs to a
much earlier period, 2,600 BCE to 1,900 BCE, of the mature Harappan period.
These findings prove two things:
The Neolithic people of South India had interactions with Indus Valley people.
They either shared the same language or both the languages were from the same
language tree, Dravidian.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
Murugan is the archetypal Tamil male—attractive, masculine, a great warrior; the ideal
male. Murugan’s long history with the Tamils is recorded in the Sangam writings more than
2,000 years ago (The Sangam was an ancient academy or assembly of Tamil scholars and
poets in Madurai starting about 2,300 years ago). However, it looks like Murugan goes back
much longer, to the Dravidians in the Indus Valley. It is said that the history of Murugan is
the history of the Tamil people. Prominent among the Tamils, he was incorporated into the
Hindu set of gods as Hinduism moved into South India.
Baby Murugan is beloved by Tamils. (From this site)
Murugan was originally a formless Dravidian god of the hills, and worshiped as a spirit to
begin with, then later in the form of a tree and stone, and finally as a Hindu god represented
by a murti (a living god in the form of a stone idol). From the evidence just presented, we
can conclude that Murugan was a Dravidian god, probably worshiped by the Dravidians in
ancient Indus Valley Civilization cities like Harappa and Mohenjo‐daro 5,000 years ago.
Murugan was an ancient Tamil protector of villages. According to the Tamil devotional work,
Thiruppugazh, "Murugan never hesitates to come to the aid of a devotee when called upon
in piety or distress".
As settlements grew and states formed, Murugan also became a model Warlord‐King. So
whenever a king won a battle he was compared to the god Murugan. Gradually Murugan
gained human attributes and accumulated more myths. By the late Sangam period (from
about 300 BCE to 400 CE) the myth of Murugan the warlord‐and‐lover was popular all over
Tamil Nadu.
Pictured below, a village temple dedicated to Murugan.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
Mariamman
Mariamman is a Tamil goddess that protects the people within the village.
(from Wikipedia)
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
The village “belongs to” the goddess. She is thought to be there before the village and to
have created it. Sometimes she is represented only by a head, indicating that her body is the
village and she is rooted in the soil there. The villagers live inside or upon the body of the
goddess. She protects the village and is the guardian of the village boundaries. Outside the
village there is no protection from Mariamman.
Mariamman Shrines
Mariamman shrines are common in the center of villages. They often include an anthill that
could be the resting place of a cobra. Milk and eggs are offered regularly to propitiate the
snake. The anthill is thought to be a manifestation of shakti, the divine feminine creative
power of the universe. Mariamman is a fertility goddess, full of this shakti. Devotees pray to
Mariamman for things such as fertility, healthy progeny, or a good spouse. The most favored
offering is pongal, a common Tamil rice dish.
Mariamman as Family Deity ‐ Kula‐theivam
Mariamman is the family deity for many families in Tamil Nadu, their Kula‐theivam. For any
family occasion, such as a wedding, it is usually a family custom to first worship the family
deity. Many families invoke the family deity as the first step for all occasions in the family.
This family worship of the Kula‐theivam is considered more important than any Hindu
festival. The worship of the family deity runs through many generations of the family, passed
from generation to generation.
Mariamman Festivals
Nearly all members of a village participate in the goddess's festival, now even Brahmins and
Muslims. Blood offerings of animals are commonly sacrificed at festivals of Mariamman. For
these festivals, the different castes can mix freely. I think this is because the festival predates
the caste system. My guess is that the Aryans brought the caste system about 3500 years
ago (with them sitting on top of it as Brahmins and Kshatriyas – the high castes). The Indian
castes are first found in the Vedas, which are Aryan scriptures.
March and April are epidemic months of small pox, chicken pox, and measles in South India.
Mariamman cures these so‐called "heat‐based" diseases. During the summer months in
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South India (March to June), people perform a ceremonial walk carrying pots of water mixed
with turmeric and neem leaves for miles to ward off illnesses.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
Here is another women in a trance. We were told that her village neighbors consider her to
be crazy, mentally unbalanced. She holds out her hands to be whipped by the (non‐Hindu)
priest. This will remove the craziness from her.
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After the trance dancing, the karagams are carried through the village, to bring the gods to
each family’s house for a blessing.
Below, a photo of the house‐to‐house procession with the karagams.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
For more on this Mariamman festival, see this post: Special Celebration for the Rain Goddess
Mariamman
Firewalking
Some Mariamman festivals also have firewalking as one of the rituals, to help the
participants find a balanced life and to see the good in everything.We have not seen this, so
downloaded a photo for you to see.
Photo from inspiredtraveler.ca
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Other Guardians
In addition to the main village god in the center of the village, often Mariamman, there are a
number of different guardian gods, usually placed on the village outskirts. Most are male,
some female. I will give the most details on a male guardian, Karuppaswamy, to give you an
idea of all of what is involved with these guardians. Other than this, most descriptions will be
brief.
In addition to these Tamil gods and goddesses, there is a class of male warrior figures,
munis, that are always associated with Siva or Paravati. Because of their association with
Hindu gods and goddesses, they may be Hindu, not purely Tamil, I really do not know. If
anyone knows anything more definitive about this, please let me know.
Guardian Gods
There are a number of folk deities who perform Tamil village protective roles, of whom
Karuppaswamy and Ayyannar are archetypes.
Karuppaswamy
Karuppaswamy is the God of Justice. He has no tolerance of evil.
Karuppu means “black” in Tamil and is associated with darkness, night, etc. This refers to the
legends of the origins of Karuppaswamy, as (almost) a son of Rama, black due to the test
Rama gave him to verify his paternity. He is both a protective warrior, and one who can
grant the requests of the village people.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
The Karuppanar Kovil (“shrine”) is always found in the outskirts of the village. The
maintenance of the temple is done by the whole of the village. His shrine is usually in the
open space and will not have traditional gopurams, “towers,” like Hindu temples. There will
be big statues with weapons. Karuppaswamy is usually depicted as black, wearing a turban
and a dhoti with flowers and garlands. He wields an Aruval‐‐ a long machete resembling a
scimitar, or sometimes a lance, a trident, or a smaller knife. The Aruval is a very significant
weapon in Tamil Nadu and is considered a symbol of Karuppaswamy. Some Aruvals may
reach the height of 5 feet.
There may also be statues of other goddesses (Kannimaar ‐‐ the 7 Virgins, called Saptha
Kannimar), in his shrines. Animals, Karuppaswamy’s companions, like a hunting dog (Vettai
Naai ), or a lion, and his mount ‐‐ a white horse‐‐ are usually also found at the shrine.
Often, as part of his worship, a cigar will be lit and placed in the Karuppaswamy's mouth. He
is also offered Naravam (“toddy,” a locally distilled alcohol) or some form of modern alcohol.
The local village priest might offer flowers or vibhuti (holy ash) to the gods, and may play the
role of an oracle. Various members of the family or clan are identified to play to the role of
oracle, taking their turn for one year. They undertake vradham (a vow to produce a spiritual
benefit, needed for the function) and maintain chastity and purity, before Karuppaswamy
festivals. Community members will approach the oracle with problems such as family
troubles, financial issues and local community and social issues. This message from the
oracle is believed to be directly from Karuppaswamy, “pure and without human bias.”
Whenever the wishes of the people are granted, they give their offerings to him based on
what they vowed to offer.
Ayyannar
Ayyannar is a another guardian deity who protects the village. Just about every village in
Tamil Nadu has an Ayyannar shrine. Terracotta horses are usually found outside the temple.
These are given to the god as mounts for his nighttime patrols. He will patrol each night to
keep the village safe from harm, patrolling its outskirts.
Ayyannar with his mounts, white horses.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
A small Ayyannar shrine in the forest near Arunachala, with horses. This was built by village
people in this spot because they “hear the footsteps of God” here.
Muniyappan
Muniyappan is the protector of the innocent and the valiant. He also may have horses as
mounts.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
Sudalai Maadan
Maadan, or Sudalai Maadan swamy (Sudalai means burial ground/pyre and Sudalai maadan
means “guardian of burial ground”). He is now considered to be the son of Shiva and Parvati
(as he has been Sanskritized). He seems to have originated as an ancestral guardian spirit of
villages.
He is the god of the dispossessed.
Guardian Goddesses
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
Kateri is worshiped also as a Kaval Deivam – a guardian spirit. She accepts all alcoholic
beverages, now mostly with white and brown rum. Followed with cigars or cigarettes.
Kateri Ammam uses the white rum for healing. She would ask for a female to offer her white
rum, white meaning “pure,” so when it flows through the body of the female it can cure and
cleanse from the inside. One doesn’t drink the alcohol, but only offers it to Kateri Amman.
The white rum will stream through the body and burn out the problems. Her power and
Shakti can cure you when she “drinks” the alcohol. The main issue that Kateri Amman takes
care of is belly problems and women with menstrual cycle problems.
Angala Parmeshwa
Ankalamma is a name given to the Tamil village deity Angala Parameshwa. Ankalamma is
another non‐Vedic deity who originated as a fierce guardian figure. In the rituals dedicated
to her, she is appeased with blood.
Ankalamma's shrines are usually located outside of the village in groves of trees. They are
usually not proper temples, but very simple stone structures.
She is considered one of the fiercest forms of the mother goddess Amman.
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Her primary festival is Mayana Kollai, celebrated for her the day after Maha Sivaratri. During
this festival in Tiruvannamalai, men and boys will dress up as the goddess, and perform body
piercing, to wear “shirts” made of lemons on strings sewn through their skin. All celebrants
will do pradakshina (“circumambulation”) around the Arunachaleswara, the big templein
Tiruvannamalai.
Here is a man dressed as Ankalamma.
Another man wears a “shirt” of lemons. This is extreme tapas (austerities) for a big boon
asked from the goddess.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
You can see these lemons are sewn onto the skin. As he walks around the temple, he will
grab a handfuls of lemons and throw them to the people watching him.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
More of this celebration can be seen in this post: Mayana Kollai Celebration in
Tiruvannamalai
Kali Amman
Kali or Kali Amman was considered as the cause for cholera. She guards against the disease
and is sometimes a village guardian.
Periyachi
Periyachi Amman. The fierce guardian of children and mothers. Don’t mess with her!
Hero Protectors
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The Muniandis
Muniandi refers to the Munis worshipped by the Tamils. The Munis are a grpoup of male
guardians which are classified as Siva Gana, attendants of Siva (and Parvati). The Munis
could refer to former warriors, kings or sages who achieved the status of a Muni after their
human death.
Whether these are Hindu or Tamil is not clear. There are ancient associations with what
appears to be Siva in the Indus Valley Culture, which is thought by many to be the precursor
to the Tamil culture. Because of this, I include them in this post the ancient guardians.
Here is a row of seven Munis at Pachiaimann Koil, in Tiruvannamalai.
Madurai Veeran
Madurai Veeran, a legendary hero and warrior, often protecting Mariamman shrines.
Here is a Madurai Veeran shrine in Tiruvannamalai, on the eastern slopes of Arunachala.
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More of these shrines can be seen in this post: Shrines along the way: Between
Tiruvannamalai and Tirukkoyilur.
Sacred Groves
Called Kovil Kadu, or Swami shola, the establishment of the Sacred Grove is another ancient
tradition, probably from before the Iron Age. Sacred Groves are also non‐Agamic, pre‐Vedic
Hindu. These too are written of in ancient Sangam literature.
The grove will be consecrated to the local village god,generally Amman, the mother goddess
of fertility and health, or Ayyanar, the protector. Snake gods, nagas, are also common. (For
more on Nagas, see this post: Naga Shrine near the Inner Path)
There are about 500 Sacred Groves remaining in Tamil Nadu. This is reduced from about 750
groves 50 years ago.
Sacred Groves are cared for either by the nearby community or specific families within the
community, as a part of the village’s beliefs. Traditional rituals have been performed in the
groves through the generations. Sometimes the potter who makes the terracotta statues
acts as the priest.
Often, special plant species are cultivated and preserved in sacred groves. As part of the
specific local traditions about these groves, plants and trees within the groves usually cannot
be removed. As a consequence these groves are an important source of traditional
Ayurvedic medicinal plants and function as genetic reservoirs of wild species.
Many threats to these sacred groves exist today.
Urbanization.
Today the traditional belief systems which were fundamental to the concept of
sacred grove conservation are considered mere superstitions. The rituals are now
known to very few people, mostly belonging to the older generation.
Many groves are suffering due to ‘Sanskritisation’ or the transformation of the
primitive forms of nature worship into formal temple worship.
Invasion of weeds such as Eupatorium odoratum, Lantana camara, Prosopis juliflora
and Hyptis suaveolens.
Human activities that were previously taboo, such as dead wood collection, biomass
gathering, lopping of tender branches and green leaves for goats, creation of
footpaths, cattle grazing, mining of sand and clay, brick‐making and collection of
wild fruits, vegetables, medicinal plants, fruit‐eating bats and fireflies, are affecting
the ecology of the sacred groves.
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An altar with stone gods and tridents. These are very old gods.
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
More stone gods. I have seen them being used as the primary goods of the sacred grove, the
ones to whom poojas are offered. Traces of a recent pooja remain.
There is also a row of terracotta gods in the back of the grove. These are well kept up with
flowers and fresh clean clothes.
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In the back of the grove are many discarded gods. I think they are replaced each year by new
ones. This must be a big festival.
More about this sacred grove can be seen in this post: Sacred Grove near Tirukkoyilur
In our explorations of the villages around Tiruvannamalai, we have discovered a set of Tamil
gods and guardians, as well as practices, like those involved with the sacred groves, that
were a part of their daily life long before Hinduism ever arrived in South India. These are
things you can see for yourself; you just need to get outside the cities and look.
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mother’s family, and older/younger brothers and sisters. So one’s place within the family
depends on whether they are related through the male line or female line, and the place
within the birth order.
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A person is born into a family and into a village. Sometimes the family is the village:
everyone in the village is related. “Clan” is a word used to describe these kinds of families,
that extend beyond an individual household.
The rites of the family reinforce the identity within the family. Rites of the village support
identity with the village. There are roles in most of these rites for the father’s and mother’s
relatives.
A child growing up in this system knows well his or her place in society. On one hand this
brings a deep security. On the other it can bring resistance to new experiences and ideas.
Family = clan = caste. Clans, which are ancient social groupings, certainly came earlier than
caste.
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We walk through the village to the family shrine. This old large tree is at the center of the
village.
The first part of the function is a special pooja for the goat.
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The goat is worshiped before the sacrifice. Here is the goat with a beautiful flower mala.
This is the family Mariamman shrine, erected and maintained by this family.
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On one side is an old idol for the Snake‐God, the Nagas. These are among the oldest gods in
South India.
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Family members gather for the sacrifice. The goat is at the center of a circle of family
members, (difficult to see in the photo below)
After the sacrifice there will be a shared meal, like mutton biryani. These villagers would not
throw away good food. These shared meals are a common element of all family functions.
The whole family lends a hand in meal preparation. Here are women cutting vegetables…
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Tamil Villages – The Ancient Spiritual Heart of Tamil Nadu
Men stir the pot. The weight of the food is too heavy for the women.
After the vegetables and meat are mostly cooked, then women add rice.
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When it is cooked, family and friends sit and eat together, enjoying the meal.
For more on this see Family Feast in Gondapatai Village, Tamil Nadu.
These celebrations mark each year, and are an important element in the family’s set of
annual celebrations. Ancient Tamil celebrations include Deepam, Pongal, and Thaipusam.
Bangle Ceremony
This is done for a woman late in pregnancy. The basic idea is that glass bangles are given to
the pregnant women to wear. These are thought to stimulate the baby while still in the
womb.
Here is the pregnant women being dressed for the ceremony. Jewelry is being arranged by a
family member.
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A pooja altar is being set up by the mother of the husband of the pregnant women.
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Relatives are setting out fruit and gift items. These are mainly women, since this is mainly a
women’s ceremony.
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The pregnant woman being seated onto a small stool. This late in pregnancy it is not easy for
her to sit down like this. Notice all the jewelry she wears.
Now women are offering her bangles. They put them on her arms. It is hard to do this, since
her hands are swollen from the pregnancy.
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Every women here today, relatives and friends, puts bangles on her.
Along with the bangle, each woman dots her forehead with kum kum, sprinkles her with
holy water, and rubs her face and arms with turmeric.
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For more on this see: Valaikappu: Bangle Ceremony for an Expectant Mother.
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First Haircut
The first haircut will be given to a boy at about 2 years of age.
This family does this rite at the shrine of the paternal grandfather, which is in a grove hear to
the village where his farm was. A relative is carrying the boy through a field to the old family
altar.
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First they must clear a path to the family altar. It is not used regularly, only for special
occasions.
Here is the family altar before clearing out the area in front of it.
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They have cleared out the space and now are offering pooja to the altar.
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For the haircut, the boy is held by mother’s oldest brother. A barber from Tiruvannamalai
does the “haircutting,” which is actually shaving of the head.
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After the haircut, the mother puts new clothes on the boy, and his head is rubbed with
turmeric.
Back to the altar. It is decorated with kum kum for the ceremony.
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The gods have been given food and flowers placed on them. Now they are ready.
The intention of the ceremony is to declare that the boy is now at a new stage in life, no
longer an infant or a toddler. He can now participate as a son in family rituals. Here the boy
has first bell ringing during the pooja.
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For more on this see: Mottai Addithal – A Tamil Boy’s First Haircut.
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When the girl first has her menstrual period, she is considered unclean. It is part of the ritual
to put her into seclusion space. If the family can afford it, they will make a small hut from
bamboo and thatch for her. This family could not afford this, so they made a symbolic
seclusion area, behind a palm frond. For the next few days she lives and eats and sleeps in
this space. Since she is considered unclean, she cannot touch the family’s cooking area or
materials, nor can she worship at the family altar. She is removed from school for this time,
too. She can leave to go out to go to the toilet. That’s all.
When we first saw her, she was in her space, already dressed up in a fancy dress, with a kind
of head‐jewelry common in India, a Tikka, which looks like a pendant on a short chain and is
worn down the hair parting.
We went back the next day. She is wearing a half‐saree, again with a Tikka on her forehead.
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Her aunties are with her much of the days, and they play dress up with the girl all during this
period of seclusion.
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Here she is on the next day. She again is wearing the yellow half‐saree. Today she is dressed
in jewelry to the max. I am pretty sure that these are jewelry items from marriages of her
aunties. During this time her aunties bring their finest clothes to put on girl.
On the last day of seclusion, her mother does her flowers. It has been aunties all the other
days. Today mother cares for her daughter.
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The main event on the final day is a pooja and fire sacrifice with a Hindu priest. Here he is
setting up. He has made a small pit on the floor for the fire sacrifice. This pooja will be the
act which officially transforms her from a girl to a woman.
She sits by the fire pit, wearing her half‐saree. An auntie is putting kumkum on the girl.
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The priest is chanting. I don’t think she has ever been the main participant in any of these
rituals before.
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After the pooja, the girl – now a woman – offers camphor flame to the family and, again able
to worship at the family altar, to the altar itself.
Now the new woman has changed into a woman’s saree and stands before her family.
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Next, we see a small but important step. This ceremony is called the “Turmeric washing
ceremony.” During the time of her seclusion she has had to wear turmeric rubbed onto her
face. This is for purification. Now that the ceremony is over, she is pure again, and can wash
it off.
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Now they dress her up with woman’s decorations and jewelry and makeup.
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Afterward, gifts are offered to the girl, and food is offered to all who have come today.
For more on this see: Age Attained Ceremony: a Girl becomes a Woman, Tiruvannamalai,
and Tamil Coming of Age – Manjal Neerattu Vizha.
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The man was a farmer, so the place for the ceremony is in his fields. Here is a path to walk
through the fields to the keriyam site.
The man’s four sons offer pooja. They are all freshly shaved by a barber for this day. Other
male relatives and friends are gathered here with them.
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One part of the ritual is a ceremonial cremation. A small wooden effigy is made and placed
in dry straw and burned.
The ashes from this are dispersed in tank by the four brothers.
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There is a procession with the rice mixture from the broken‐up pindals.
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The brothers offer rice to the crows, to take to the deceased. It is important, for an
auspicious send off, that crows come and take the rice.
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At the head of the procession is the wife of the dead man, surrounded by relatives and
friends and women from her village.
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Then they remove all jewelry that a wife would wear. She is never to wear such jewelry
again.
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The offerings are made by disbursing everything into the water of the tank.
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All the children of the man, both sons and daughters, have to take a bath in these waters
now.
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After this, the day of the death is celebrated each year by the family. The family also has a
series of restrictions for the first year. For example, they cannot join in any of the normal
village celebrations, nor buy or wear new clothes.
To see more, go to A Kariyam, a Tamil Death Ceremony.
The village rites show in this post tie the family together. I think that they are one reason
that that Tamil village family has endured so long as a social institution. Because of the
strong family, each person knows where they belong in society, and has a network of people
who will remain close to them their entire lives. This family structure is under attack now
from many of the issues of a modernizing India. In the fourth and last part of this series this
will be discussed.
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all together in this joint family. There farms are usually pretty small, and are near to the
village.
You can see people today using the same farming methods. Below is a photo of women
planting rice, taken from our home near Tiruvannamalai.
This farm life has not changed much since the introduction of iron, more than 2,000 years
ago, though now you will see some farm machines in use: tractors, often small, and rice
harvesters. Change has started to come to these villages as India moves into her place in the
modern world. I feel that the culture in these villages today is a precious human and cultural
resource for the world, and needs to be preserved, recorded, protected and nourished.
Lessons learned from this culture need to be shared with other developing countries around
the world who have the capability to preserve their own native family farms and farming
families.
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They include:
Public school, where children are removed from the family for education, and
taught about India and the world.
Family Planning, leading to a reduction in the number of children. This change has
been rapid, and has decreased the number of children per woman in Tamil Nadu by
more than half. So this generation of children is relatively much smaller than the
families at the time of Independence.
“Green Revolution” agriculture, with purchased seeds and chemicals. Farming
methods, which were unchanged for two millennia, underwent a big change in the
1960s with the “Green Revolution.” The Green Revolution improved farm
productivity, but at a dire cost. The cost was for farm chemicals – chemical
fertilizers and weed suppressants, and special seeds that did well under this
chemical regime. Where before a farmer could start the new season and use seeds
he had saved, now each year’s crop has to be financed, borrowing money for the
chemicals and seeds that must be purchased. This changes farming, and introduces
a financial risk that is ruinous to farmers during bad years, when the debt cannot be
repaid. It also has introduced chemicals into the environment that are not healthy
for humans and other animals.
Electricity and TV have been brought into most villages now. While having an
electric light by which the children can study helps their education, when the
children see life beyond the village and are subjected to advertising that makes
them want these things, this can pull them away from the village and family.
Mobile Phones are in pretty much every village now. These bring modernity closer
to every village.
Movement into cities for economic reasons has been draining the life out of the
village as sons (and daughters) move to the city to find work and “make a better
life” for themselves. The villages are already facing a smaller generation of children,
and many of the next generation leave for the city. Family ties remain when they
move to the city, but they are weaker, and the traditional life of the family is
limited.
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Abandonment of elders, due to children moving to cities and other family problems,
such as alcoholism, has become a big issue in villages. The oldest son of the family is
supposed to take care of his parents when they get old. But what happens when he
moves away, or if he is an alcoholic, or they do not have a son (in their smaller
family)? We see old people living on the street because of this. This is widespread.
Two new challenges will add further risks
o Smart Phones are bringing the Internet to the young people of the world. It
is particularly hard for them to resist that allure of video and of relationship
systems, like Facebook. The costs for these phones is dropping fast, and as
they arrive in the villages, they bring the attention of the young people out
of the village, into cities, “where everything is happening.”
o Global Warming brings further risk, with pressure from changing weather
and rising oceans. It is not clear to me how this will affect farming in South
India. There is already great pressure on water systems, where wells must
be dug much deeper due to falling water tables. Agriculture as currently
practiced uses about 70% of the available water, with human and
manufacturing use comprising the other 30%. What affect Global Warming
will have in South India, I have no idea.
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A harvesting team of men and equipment starts working in the spring in the Southern areas
of the wheat‐growing areas of the USA central plains, like in Oklahoma. The team works its
way north, harvesting wheat as it ripens as they go farther and farther north, finally into
Canada.
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This “agribusiness farming” is a high user of investment capital, petrochemicals (gas and oil),
and agricultural chemicals (fertilizers, insecticides and herbicides). In most places it is also
the main user of water supplies. In India about half of all water goes to support just rice
farming, alone. This kind of farming also is not good for the soil, and over the long time
depletes it to where it may no longer be viable for farming – unless even more chemicals are
used.
Is this the future we want for Tamil Nadu? Tamil Nadu now has a population of about 75
million, and even though Tamil Nadu is one of the Indian states that is the most
industrialized, more than half (56%) of the population lives in villages. So unless we want
the Tamil Nadu cities to double in their size, we have to find ways to keep the villages alive,
and as a good place for the next generation to live.
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SRI was developed in 1983 by the French Jesuit Father Henri de Laulanié in Madagascar. SRI
uses less water, about half. It also uses less seed, again about half. Harvests are improved
with increased yield by 10 – 100%. SRI uses less chemical fertilizer and weed‐control
chemicals. All of this greatly lowers cash investment for the farmer. Lower cash investment
and improved yields mean improved profitability for the farmer.
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later reduced to 30 acres. Industrial uses are restricted to 15 acres. This sounds good, but
there are problems, as reported in the Times of India:
However, Section 37‐A of the same act empowers the government to issue permission to
industrial and commercial undertakings to hold excess land. As per Section 37‐B, public
trusts can apply to the government for permission to hold or acquire lands for educational or
hospital purposes. It is because of these provisions that educational/medical institutions
and industries hold thousands of acres of lands. (My bolding)
These problems are now in the hands of the High Court. I do not know how confident we can
be in their solution. I know of a local land use issue, that of a building for an ashram built
upon Government land on Arunachala where the HC ordered that it be removed and the
local government was unable to execute the court order.
There is also a problem with misuse of Agricultural land. I have personally seen rental
housing built on Agricultural land and rented out. This is illegal, but nothing seems to be
done about it. Also there is a big issue with Agricultural land being converted to Patta, and
thus to private development. I do not know for myself, but I have heard that real estate
developers, with lots of money, are powerful, and can influence members of local
governments to convert Agricultural land to Patta.
Conclusion
We need to realize that Tamil villages are precious. We need to understand them, document
their cultural elements, and publicize our findings. We need to preserve them and protect
them, and find ways to nourish them for the future. The heart of this, to me, seems like the
farms. Improved farms means more children will stay in the village as adults. It is easy to
choose to stay with something that is successful.
What else can be done? I have made a few recommendations, primarily to improve the
agricultural success of Tamil Nadu villages. I know there are other ideas. Some groups have
started sourcing crafts items from villages. Others, like the Irula (see this post), have formed
their own organizations to produce and market natural healing herbs and herbal mixtures.
Who is working on these issues? Are there colleges and universities that are providing
leadership on these issues? The government is deeply involved. What leadership can be
provided by the government? Are there private organizations and NGOs that are involved or
that should be involved? I am just a private individual, and a retired foreigner as well. Indian
leadership is needed. Who will step up? What can you do? IF you are interested in this,
comment to this article. Maybe we can, together, work to effect changes that will insure the
survival of Tamil Nadu’s ancient traditions.
References
I used the following sources to help me with information I have included in this series:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Village_deities_of_Tamil_Nadu
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariamman
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aiyanar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madurai_Veeran
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periyachi
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudalai_Maadan
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muniandi
http://www.karuppar.com/blog/arul‐vaaku‐secrets‐is‐trance‐real/
http://www.astroved.com/karuppasamy_rituals.aspx
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karuppu_Sami
http://www.shaktikali.net/kateriamma.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_groves_of_India
http://www.fao.org/docrep/005/y9882e/y9882e14.htm
http://www.ecoheritage.cpreec.org/innerpageof.php?$mFJyBfKPkE6
http://genome.cshlp.org/content/13/10/2277.full
https://genographic.nationalgeographic.com/human‐journey/
http://ces.iisc.ernet.in/hpg/cesmg/peopling.html
http://sri.ciifad.cornell.edu/index.html
http://www.philtar.ac.uk/encyclopedia/hindu/ascetic/mariam.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genographic_Project
http://genome.cshlp.org/content/13/10/2277.full
http://www.rkmp.co.in/general‐domain/history‐and‐evolution/history‐of‐rice‐cultivation‐in‐
india
http://karkanirka.org/2008/05/11/murugan1‐2/
http://karkanirka.org/2008/05/11/murugan2/
http://karkanirka.org/2008/05/11/murugan3/
http://karkanirka.org/2008/05/11/murugan4/
http://murugan.org/research/zvelebil‐tamil_traditions‐intro.htm
http://hindu.com/thehindu/thscrip/print.pl?file=2008050353942200.htm&date=2008/05/0
3/&prd=th&
http://www.scribd.com/doc/75164625/Indian‐Diversity‐genetic‐study‐Metspalu‐
Gyaneshwer‐Chaubey‐et‐al‐AJHG‐Dec‐9‐2011
http://appiusforum.net/indusvalley.html
http://archaeology.up.nic.in/doc/ffsi_nbdf.pdf
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/9647/origins‐of‐agriculture
http://archaeology.about.com/od/iterms/qt/indus.htm http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/
home/science/Climate‐change‐caused‐Indus‐Valley‐civilization‐
collapse/articleshow/31133369.cms
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/286837/Indus‐civilization
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_cotton
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo‐Aryan_peoples#Origins
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aryan_race
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Transwiki:Multilingual_list_of_Indian_family_relation_names
http://www.ihsnet.org.in/HealthSystemsFactSheets/age@marriage.htm
ttps://www.census.gov/population/international/files/ib‐9701.pdf
ttp://planningcommission.nic.in/reports/wrkpapers/wp_hwpaper.pdf
http://www.indiaonlinepages.com/population/tamil‐nadu‐population.html
http://www.tnrd.gov.in/panchayatraj_inst/village_panchayats.html
http://www.tnrd.gov.in/policynotes/R_D_and_Panch_Raj_2013_14_PNE.pdf
http://www.landreforms.tn.gov.in/LandReforms.html
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chennai/HC‐digs‐deep‐into‐TN‐land‐ceiling‐
act/articleshow/11955194.cms
M. Amirthalingam, Sacred Groves of Tamil Nadu – A Survey, CPR Environmental Education
Centre, Chennai, India, p. 191, 1998
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