Travancore Renaissance
Travancore Renaissance
Travancore Renaissance
CHAPTER-II
From the Portuguese period itself, the seeds of Renaissance were sown in
Travancore by the Catholic missionaries. The Catholic missionaries studied a
large number of indegenous languages and contributed to the religious, cultural,
literary, educational and linguistic traditions of Kerala. They set up schools and
seminaries where, besides spiritual education, western sciences and languages
were taught.The printing press was first introduced in India by the Portuguese1.
1. A. Sreedhara Menon, A Survey of Kerala History, D.C. Books, Kottayam, 2007, p.328.
2. John Francis Pallathu, Missionarymarude Sahitya Sevanangal, (Mal.), Jyothir Bhavan,
Kalamassery, 1986, p.29.
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all sections of society including women, intertwined with each other and laid the
foundation of a new earth and a new sky in Travancore. Social transformation of
women is an important factor for the development of a nation. The introduction
of English education and western liberal thought among women by the Christian
missionaries and the consequent efforts of the local rulers and social reformers in
the field of female education went a long way in shaping the modern women of
Kerala. As a result of their efforts, women retained their self-esteem and honour
from a stage of dependency, slavery and insecurity.
By the Charter Act of 1813, British government decided to set apart one
lakh rupees annually for the revival and improvement of literature and the
encouragement of learned natives of India and for the introduction and promotion
of knowledge of the sciences among the inhabitants of the British territories in
India4. ‘Macaulay’s Minutes’ and ‘Wood’s Dispatch’ also promoted the modern
education of Indians5.
3. Thomas Alex, A History of the First Cross Cultural Mission of the Marthoma Church, 1910-
2000, ISPCK, Delhi, 2007, p.1.
4. K.M. Panicker, The Foundations of New India, George Allen and Unwin Limited, London,
1963, p.116.
5. R.C. Majumdar, et.al., An Advanced History of India, Mac Millan India Ltd., Madras, 1990,
p.812.
58
common people and Kalaris under Kurup or Gurukkal for physical training6.
Education in schools was denied to women and lowcastes7. The Christian
missionaries took the first solid step towards the beginning and dispersal of
Western knowledge. As the state compromised with them for the purpose of
modernization; it provided a large amount of donations and grants to the
missionaries8.
Evangelisation for Christ was the only aim of missionary societies and for
that they wanted to educate the women also.They believed that the Church of
Christ will never appear in its great beauty, unless the foundation of Christian
education is laid in the minds of its members by the hands of a Christian mother.
Moreover, the missionaries realized that education was a powerful way to raise
the womenfolk from their low status in the society11. The missionaries co-
ordinated evangelization and social work and invested their energy for the
upliftment of women and the downtrodden. The missionaries were mainly
interested in spreading female education through three types of activities viz.,
opening of day schools for girls, establishment of boarding schools for girls and
domestic instruction in families of middle and higher classes.
The effort of the missionaries was to improve the social position of the
girls, provide them with knowledge and skills and to Christianize them. Girls’
schools were opened with the aim of giving girls enough general knowledge
along with training in piety, etiquette, morals and home management
techniques12. It can also be argued that it was largely the challenge posed by
Christian missionaries in the nineteenth century that provoked the contemporary
social reform movement.
12. J.Devika, Engendering Individuals, The Language of Reforming in Early Twentieth Century
Keralam, Orient Longman Private Limited, New Delhi, 2007, p.88.
13. R. N. Yesudas, The History of the London Missionary Society in Travancore (1806-1908),
Kerala Historical Society, Trivandrum, 1980, p.1.
14. R.N. Yesudas, A People’s Revolt in Travancore- A Backward Class Movement for Social
Freedom, Manju Publishing House, Trivandrum. 1975. p.2.
15. Joy Gnanadasan, A Forgotten History, The Story of the Missionary Movement and the
Liberation of People in South Travancore, Gurukul Lutheran Theological College and
Research Institute, Madras, 1994, p.69.
60
Swati Thirunal Maharaja, the then king of Travancore, after visiting the
Nagercoil Seminary of the L.M.S., invited John Roberts, the Head Master of the
Seminary, to start an English School at Trivandrum16. It later came to be known
as ‘Raja’s Free School’17. This school developed into a college and V.Nagam
Aiya, the historian, civil servant and chronicler of Travancore, was the first
graduate from this college18.
Mrs. Johanna Mead was the pioneer lady teacher of L.M.S. in South
Travancore. Martha Mault, wife of Rev.Charles Mault, co-operated with Mrs.
Johanna Mead and assisted her ably. Mrs. Johanna Mead launched the most
courageous plan of offering education to girls in Travancore19.
The main goals of the missionary women were to improve social position
of girls, to offer them knowledge and skills, to help them to lead a happy family
life, to help them to bring up their children with good culture, to provide them
moral values for building a home and to help them work for the progress of
society. Mrs. Johanna Mead started the first girl’s boarding school of Travancore
at Nagercoil in 1819 and many other lady missionaries joined her20. Stitching,
weaving, embroidery etc. were taught there. All the teachers were women. This is
the first vocational school for girls in Travancore21.
By the great interest taken by missionaries and their wives, the women
were taught to wear respectable dress, to sing, to sew, to embroider and to work
fine pillow lace. It is to be noted that the lace industry played a vital role in the
social and economic life of the people. It provided employment to many and
made the girls self-supporting. At times of scarcity, it provided means of
livelihood to many women in south Travancore. Mrs. Marsden was in charge of
lace industry. The south Travancore lace work had won many prizes in
16. Nittu Volume V, 1005-5-1, Vol.20, p.180, State Central Archives, Trivandrum.
17. V. Nagam Aiya, The Travancore State Manual, Vol. I, Kerala State Gazetters, Trivandrum
1992, p.443.
18. Koji Kawashima, op.cit., p.84.
19. R.J.Hepzi Joy, op.cit. p.82.
20. Koji Kawashima, op.cit., p.98.
21. N.Sam, Keralathile Samoohya Navothanavum Sahityavum, (Mal.), N.Sam, Trivandrum,
1988, p.90.
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22. Samuel Mateer, Native Life in Travancore, Asian Educational Services, New Delhi, 1991,
p.215.
23. Joy Gnanadasan, op.cit., pp.138-141.
24. One Hundredth Annual Report of the L.M.S., 1894, p.190.
25. Joy Gnanadasan, op.cit., p.144.
62
A new era of progress in the realm of female education started with the
arrival of Charles Mead with five more missionaries viz., John Cox, J.S Pattisan,
J.Abbs, James Russel and Ramsay, with their wives27. Girl’s Schools were
established at Nedumangad, Parassala, Marthandam, Kuzhithurai, Kanjirapuram,
Tittuvilai, Erenipuram, Santhipuram and Jamestown. John Cox was appointed in
the Trivandrum Mission in 1838. In the same year Mrs. Cox opened a boarding
school at the haunted hill at Kannammoola. This was the first girl’s school of the
L.M.S. missionaries in Trivandrum28. The leading missionaries during the period
were Duthie and Allan in Nagercoil, James Emyln, Knowles and Foster in
Parassala, Hacker in Neyyoor and Samuel Mateer in Trivandrum.
26. C.M.Agur, Church History of Travancore, Asian Educational Services, New Delhi, 1990,
p.761.
27. R. N. Yesudas, The History of the London Missionary Society in Travancore (1806-1908),
op.cit., p.68.
28. K.S. Mathew and T.K. Sebastian, (eds.), Indian Constitution, Education and Minorities in
Kerala, IRISH, Kannur, 2009, p.2.
29. C.M. Agur, op.cit , p.769.
30. Ibid, pp.768-769.
63
1 1870-71 18
2 1875-76 218
3 1880-81 453
4 1885-86 545
5 1890-91 1225
31. Suma Rose, Polity, Society and Women, Carmel International Publishing House, Trivandrum,
2004, p.103.
32. C.M. Agur, op.cit., p.892.
64
The South Travancore Medical Mission trained native women in the field
of midwifery, nursing etc. Mrs. Mc Donnel was a fully qualified nurse sent by the
L.M.S. to Travancore as a missionary. She raised funds, trained helpers and
opened a maternity ward in Neyyoor. Ida Scudder, daughter of Dr. Scudder,
completed her medical studies in America but returned to Vellore and became a
fullfledged lady doctor there35. Dr. Joan Thomson was the first qualified
missionary doctor of South Travancore Medical Mission.After her arrival, the
number of women patients who came for treatment and consultation increased
considerably.She spent many months for language study before she began her
work at Neyyoor 36.
It was the ‘Bible Women’ who served as a link between the Medical
Mission and the high caste Hindu women. They taught them about the necessity
of going outside of the house to seek medicine for ailments and childbirth. The
Bible Women visited the houses of the higher class, read to the women and
taught them as occasion offers. As some of them had a good knowledge of
medicine and midwifery, they were helpful to the native women many times37.
L.M.S. Missionaries introduced library system in Travancore. In the Trivandrum
reading room, public lectures were arranged, on various subjects, for the benefit
of the people.The missionaries usually visited the houses of their followers and
gave instructions regarding health, hygiene and moral life. The lessons of moral
life taught by the missionaries helped them to improve their lives38. The
Missionary Churches also educated the people in an indirect way. It was through
the sermons that the preachers gave a sense of assurance and acceptance to the
depressed classes, for whose progress, was essential. Through the Church, people
received instruction in music also.
Like the other missionary societies, C.M.S. missionaries too came here
for evangelization but later they concentrated in the field of education. The main
aims of C.M.S. were to provide education to women, to enable them to become
good wives, mothers and hostesses, to provide women equal status with men, to
free women from exploitation and to help them to earn jobs and to help their
family. Girls were also taught sewing, knitting and spinning, besides book
learning, so that they could do something towards earning their living, once they
left school.
In 1817 Thomas Norton started his first school at Aleppey with forty
students. He was encouraged and supported by Rani Gowri Parvathi Bai48. Mrs.
Norton was one of the pioneers of women education in Kerala. Norton’s School
was opened to students of all castes and communities. English, Malayalam,
45. G. Kumara Pillai, Lakshmi N. Menon, (Mal.), Poornodaya Book Trust, Kochi, 1999, p.29.
46. R.J.Hepzi Joy, op.cit., pp.101-102.
47. Malayalam weekly, 23 Dhanu, 1175 M.E.
48. Nittu Volume 1V, 992-6-29, Vol.77, p.110, State Central Archives, Trivandrum.
67
Tamil, Arithmetic and Scripture were taught there. In the girls’ school started by
Mrs. Norton, stitching, knitting, lace work etc. were taught. Teachers were paid
Rs.five per month. Planned curriculum and correct accurate salary were the
peculiar features of Norton’s schools. She also started a ‘Bazaar School’ outside
the mission compound.
Henry Baker started parish schools along with the Syrian churches.
Amelia Baker, wife of Henry Baker, was also a pioneer of girl’s education in
North Travancore49. Henry Baker Junior did his work in the High Ranges from
Mundakkayam to Melukavu. Miss.Mary Baker, daughter of Henry Baker Junior
was the first C.M.S. missionary woman to Travancore from England50.
colleges in India itself. The students of this college were well known for their
good behaviour, service mentality, gentleness, politeness etc. Thereafter gentle
and polite students came to be known as ‘Kottayam type students’55. In 1921, the
Union Christian College was inaugurated at Alwaye. The nucleus of the college
staff was a ‘Fellowship’ of Christians. In 1924, Canon W.E.S. Holland, a C.M.S.
missionary, also joined the ‘Fellowship’56.
Henry Baker Senior and Henry Baker Junior started many mission
churches, mission schools and vernacular schools in the High Ranges. In 1839
Joseph Pitt founded an English School at Mavelikkara which is now known as
‘Bishop Hodges School’. Mrs. Chapman, wife of John Chapman, the Principal of
C.M.S. College also established a girl’s school at Kottayam. When she left for
England, Mrs. Collins managed this school under the name ‘Mrs. Collins Girls’
School’.
The schools run by Mrs. Baker Senior at Kottayam, Mrs. Baker Junior at
Pallom, Mrs. Johnson at Kottayam, Miss. Baker at Thirunakkara, Annie Baker at
Peerumede and Mundakkayam were some important girls’ schools of Central
Travancore at that time58. Annie Baker lived in Kerala until her death at the age
of sixty six. Besides the school for children of labourers in plantations at
Peerumede, she also led Bible classes for low caste women in the verandah of her
house on every Sunday afternoon.
The girls Schools at Kottayam run by Mrs. Baker, Mrs. Fenn, Mrs.
Bailey, Mrs. Chapman and Mrs. Johnson unified and formed the Baker Memorial
Girl’s High School at Kottayam. This school got generous grants from the
government59. Visakhom Thirunal Rama Varma, the Maharaja of Travancore
visited the school in 1880. He was very much satisfied with its work and sent
fifty rupees as a gift to the students later60.
worked among native women. She started a Nair primary school and Ezhava
primary school at Kottayam65. Mrs. Jain Neeve, wife of Rev.C.A.Neeve,
Principal of C.M.S. College, worked among Christian women66. In 1930 a pre-
primary school called ‘Little School’ was started at Kottayam by Miss. East. She
also started Kintergarten Teachers Training School at Kottayam for training pre-
primary teachers.
employed at their needles till noon and at their books in the afternoons. On
Saturday they practiced musical tunes.
Miss. Collins wrote a novel entitled ‘the Slayer’s Slain’ in 1859 and it
was published in 1877. Davis produced a series of literature for the benefit of
Travancore women. Some of her companions wrote very useful papers on
marriage, child care, nutrition and religious education at home. The missionaries
also started many libraries and reading rooms in different places. Natives like
Arch Deacon Koshy wrote ‘Pullelikkunchu’ against caste distinctions and
Nidhirikkal Manikkathanar wrote ‘Sobharaja Vijayam’ and ‘Kripavathi’ in
favour of women education.
When the C.M.S. missionaries got Munroe Island with hundred slaves in
1835, they freed those slaves. In 1847, missionaries presented a memorandum to
Uthram Thirunal Marthanda Varma to abolish slavery79. In 1850, Rev. George
Mathan started a school for the slaves. Depressed classes were greatly assisted by
the missionaries’80. Thus the missionaries helped to erode old Kerala and created
new attitudes and mind set.
Three ideas which influenced 19th century Kerala society were social
equality, social freedom and social justice which were basically Christian points
of view, presented by Christian missionaries. It was the missionaries who first
raised their voice against slavery and it was they who drew the attention of the
public as well as the authorities to this evil.
Education created desire for employment, both in men and women. Many
women were engaged as teachers in schools run by the missionaries and by the
government. Some were engaged in the public department and some in the
political life of the country. The lace industry, the embroidery industry, the
weaving industry, the tile industry and the community school started by the
missionaries provided employment facilities, economic stability and financial
security to many women. Also, the missionaries implanted a new cultured life in
Kerala like a disciplined church, systematic Sunday worship, small prayer
groups, family prayer in morning and evening, Bible reading, cleanliness in
houses, polish in manners, etiquette, culture, art, dressing etc.
80. C. Kesavan, Jeevitha Samaram, (Mal.), D.C. Books, Kottayam, 2005, p.98.
74
Besides L.M.S. and C.M.S., other small Protestant missions like ‘the
Salvation Army’, ‘the Brother Mission’, ‘the Lutheran Mission’ etc. worked in
Travancore82. The combined efforts of Mrs. Mary Chapman and Pastor Robert F.
Cook inaugurated the beginning of Pentecostal churches in Travancore83.
Pastor Robert F. Cook started sixty three mission stations and had forty three
missionaries in Travancore84. His important mission fields were Kottarakkara and
Adoor.
and an orphanage for girls. Through the convent schools, the sisters came into
contact with the girls of Christian and Hindu families and transmitted a positive
energy in them. The main aim of the C.M.C. was the education of girls. The
sisters trained young girls in catechism, prayers, devotion and handicrafts.
Boarding houses for young women for residential study were attached to the
convents. Women who had been capable only of holding washing pots became
efficient through education.
87. K.C.Chacko, Blessed Father Kuriakose Elias Chavara, St.Joseph’s Monastery, Mannanam,
1986, p.61.
88. Suma Rose, op.cit., p.164.
89. J.Chirayil C.M.I., “Chavara Achan, Kerala Sabha Samudharakan”, J.S.Thekkunkal C.M.I.,
(ed.), Chavara Achan Kadannu Poya Vazhikal, (Mal.), Vice-Postulator, Cause of Blessed
Kuriakose Elias Chavara, Mannanam, 2011, p.28.
76
The influence of modern education upon the political life of Kerala was
very significant. The benefits of development were received by the emerging
middle class, constituting the lower section of the higher castes and higher
section of the lower castes92. Without the missionary interference, the place of
women in Kerala would be different. The newly educated women shed aspects of
the matrilineal culture and patriarchal monogamy. Women may have lost sexual
freedom and the security of a matrilineal joint family but in exchange they often
acquired earning power in respectable salaried employment.
If the French Revolution emerged from Voltaire and Rousseau, and if the
Russian Revolution emerged from Marx and Engels, the nineteenth century socio
religious revolutions of Travancore emerged from the missionaries. It was the
Christian missionaries who provided the avarnas “the help from outside” to
demolish caste system93.
Chandu Menon, too, thought in the way of Ram Mohan Roy. This novel
served as an inducing force for socio religious reform movements. The picture of
Suri Namboothiri was so strong and influential which led to the emergence of
Namboothiri reform movements like ‘Yogakshema Sabha’. There is a reference
in the novel about the newly started spinning mill in Kozhikode which shows the
emergence of factory system and industrial capitalism in our country which
finally became another cause for Renaissance. Through ‘Indulekha’, Chandu
Menon also describes the changes which English education brings to Kerala
women’s life96. Raja Ravi Varma’s paintings ‘There Comes Papa’, ‘Malabar
Beauty’, ‘Veena Player’ etc. depicted heroines who boldly faced the world. They
are pictured as those who stand in the threshold of secular and democratic public
sphere which was developing at that time. Close assessments of these pictures
show the alteration of women’s lives from inactive onlookers of social life to
owners of active citizenship.
93. P.S. Velayudhan, S.N.D.P. Yoga Charithram, (Mal.), S.N.D.P. Yogam, Quilon, 1978, p.11.
94. J.Devika, “Imagining Women’s Social Space in Early Modern Keralam”, C.D.S. Working
Paper No. 329, Trivandrum, 2002, p.6.
95. K.N. Ganesh, op.cit., p.310.
96. Samuel Nellimukal, Keralathile Samoohya Parivarthanam, (Mal.), op.cit., p.380.
78
The painting ‘There Comes Papa’, which came out in 1893, shows a
young Malayali woman, with a plump baby on her hip, pointing towards an
approaching figure who is out of the frame97. The father is outside the framework
of the picture. The absent, yet approaching Papa signifies the crisis in Nair
matriliny in the late nineteenth century. The fact that Ravi Varma chose to
celebrate conjugal domesticity and the nuclear family at a time when these were
comparatively unknown amongst large sections of the matrilineal population
reveals his growing patrilineal sensibilities. ‘There Comes Papa’ becomes akin to
a clarion call for the end of matriliny98. In that period of transition from
Marumakkathayam to Makkathayam, the mother points her son towards the
transforming society outside.
During the first half of the nineteenth century, the privilege of women to
cover their bodies with an upper cloth became an impulsive issue in Kerala. The
social revolution in Kerala began with the Channar Revolt, the first organized
agitation for human rights in Kerala100.
Lower caste women were not allowed to wear anything above the waist or
below the knees. An uncovered torso was a sign of respect to upper castes101.
97. G. Arunima, There Comes Papa: Colonialism and the Transformation of Matriliny in
Kerala, Malabar C. 1850-1940, Orient Longman Private Limited, New Delhi, 2003, p.1.
98. Ibid.
99. C.Kesavan, op.cit., p.69.
100. V. Thankayya and P.K. Tilak, Thekken Thiruvitamkoor Viplavathinte Nadu, (Mal.), D.C.
Books, Kottayam, 1995, p.27.
101. S.Thulaseedharan Assary, Colonialism, Princely States and Struggle for Liberation,
Travancore (1938- 1948), A.P.H. Publishing Corporation, New Delhi, 2009, p.45.
79
Brahmin women wore blouses and upper clothes. Nair women had to keep bare
torso before Brahmins and royal family members. During the ‘Aratt’ festival of
Sri Padmanabha temple, when the Maharaja went to the beach to perform certain
religious rites twice a year, hundreds of Nair girls with bare breasts went in
procession for a distance of nearly three kilometers carrying lighted lamps102.
Syrian Christians and Muslims wore long sleeved blouses called kuppayam.
Fisher women used coarse clothes covering breasts but leaving the shoulders
bare.
The missionary women such as Mrs. Martha Mault and Mrs. Johanna
Mead stitched a special type of jacket with short hands and urged the converted
women to wear it and a new style of dress code spread among the Christian
converted women, who, hitherto had no right to cover their breasts103. Students of
Nagercoil boarding schools made five hundred jackets and freely supplied some
of them104. Channar Riot started in 1822 at Kalkkulam when the converted
Channar women began to wear jackets and melmundu in the fashion of savarna
women105. Thereafter, non-converted Channar women also began to wear jackets
and melmundu and this led to severe riots between Nairs and Channars. The
second phase of Channar Riot started in 1828 when two Channar women, Yesu
Adiyal and Neethi Adiyal came to Kalkkulam market wearing upper cloth106. The
savarnas tore their jackets and attacked Christian schools.
The court order of 1829 allowed wearing of jackets but prohibited the
wearing of melmundu. In 1858, another riot occurred when one Poothathankutty
and his wife Eshakee became converts and provoked their master Madom Pillay
by wearing costumes similar to that of Madom Pillay’s wife and by calling them
sinners107. Many churches were set to fire at Parassala. In 1859, L.M.S.
For the first time in the history of Kerala, a community fought bitterly and
earnestly, and succeeded after shedding sweat and blood, in winning the right of
women to dress decently. The upper cloth controversy which continued for thirty
seven years was really only the tip of the iceberg.
For never before or since then had there been the advent of so many great
men in such a short time as during those decades. It was truly like the coming of
spring, the season of regeneration, joy and hope, in the withered garden of India,
filling the land with fine and fragrant flowers109. In Travancore, social reform
movements were started by castes and communities. Social equality was the
precondition for political freedom. Social justice was necessary to enter into the
main stream of political power.The revolutionary centre of Renaissance was
Travancore itself. The fight against Savarna supremacy, casteism, untouchability,
unapproachability, and fight for temple entry centred in Travancore, eventhough
their vibrations were heard in Cochin and Malabar110. The protest movements in
Travancore were termed as social reform movements. All the socio-religious
reform movements originated in Kerala functioned within the operational
structure of caste111.
The period also stormed the princely state of Taravancore with a large
number of agitations such as Channar Riot in 1822-1859, Mukkuthi Riot in 1852,
Malayali Memorial in 1891, Ezhava Memorial in 1896, Bible Dahanam in 1899,
Agrarian riots under Ayyankali in 1907, Kallumala Rebellion in 1912,
Misrabhojanam in 1917, Jati Rakshasa Dahanam in 1917, Vaikom Satyagraha in
1924-1925 and Nivarthana Agitation in 1932. While the Ezhava women fought to
cover their breasts, Namboothiri women fought to uncover their faces.
109. P. Parameswaran, Narayana Guru, the Prophet of Renaissance, Suruchi Sahitya, New
Delhi, 1979, p.11.
110. P. Govindappillai, E.M.S. Namboothirippad, (Mal.), National Book Trust India, New Delhi,
2007, p.93.
111. J.W. Gladstone, Protestant Christianity and People’s Movement in Kerala, Seminary
Publications, Trivandrum, 1984, p.308.
112. V. Thankayya, Sri Vaikunta Swamikal Navothana Silpi, (Mal.), Prabhat Book House,
Trivandrum, 2001, p.65.
82
Sree Narayana Guru advised to give the most important place in the
home, to the wife. To him, virtuous wife brings virtue to the home and the most
Sree Narayana Guru absorbed the rationalistic and practical outlook of the
missionaries. He preferred English rather than Sanskrit, rationalism than blind
faith, schools than temples and simple customs than complex ceremonies. In
1903, he founded ‘Sree Narayana Dharma Paripalana Yogam’ with the assistance
of Dr. Palpu and Kumaran Asan in the model of ‘missions’. He started Sunday
worship in the model of missionaries. Just as missionaries used the Bible, he used
‘Adwaitha philosophy’ as an instrument of social change120. In the model of
missionary activities, Ezhava community came forward to acquire ‘knowledge
through education and strength through organisation’121. The Sree Narayana
Movement created self reliance in all low caste communities. His battle cry was
‘One Caste, One Religion and One God for Man’ 122. He also supported anti-caste
struggles like Vaikom Satyagraha and donated thousand rupees to Vaikom
Satyagraha fund123.
Dr. Palpu was a social revolutionary from the Ezhava caste. He was one
of the signatories of the Malayali Memorial of 1891. He was the brain behind the
Ezhava Memorial of 1896 which requested the Maharaja to confer on the
Ezhavas the same rights and privileges enjoyed by Ezhava converts to
Christianity. He published at his own cost, the book ‘Treatment of Thiyyas in
Travancore’124. He organized agricultural and industrial exhibition in Kollam. He
also suggested a woman’s meeting should be held at every annual conference of
S.N.D.P. The first women’s meeting was held in 1904 itself under the
presidentship of Dr. Palpu’s mother Mathapperumal and in that meeting, Palpu’s
wife P.K.Bhagawathi made a speech125. Dr. Palpu organized three institutions for
the upliftment of women viz., ‘Dharma Sodaree Madam’, ‘Dharma Deepa
Madam’ and ‘Dharma Nidhi’. Among them ‘Dharma Sodaree Madam’ was
meant for women education126 . But his ideas remained unfulfilled.
Another leader of the S.N.D.P. was Kumaran Asan, its first General
Secretary and the well known poet. He was the editor of ‘Vivekodayam’, the
mouthpiece of S.N.D.P. The magazine represented the interests of Ezhava
community and earned the sobriquet ‘Ezhava Gazette’127. Asan also spread his
ideas of social equality through his poems like ‘Veenapoovu’, ‘Nalini’, ‘Leela’,
‘Prarodanam’, ‘Duravastha’ etc.
129. http://www.cherai.com
130. M.K. Sanoo, Parvathy Amma Asaranarude Amma, (Mal.), Sri Narayana Sevika Samajam,
Alwaye, 2000, pp.61-63.
131. G. Krishnan Nadar, Downtrodden Movement in Kerala, G. Krishnan Nadar, Trivandrum,
2007, p.119.
132. Meera Velayudhan, “Reform, Law and Gendered Identity”, M.A. Oommen, (ed.),
Rethinking Development-Kerala’s Development Experience, Vol. I, Concept Publishing
Company, New Delhi, 1991, p.61.
133. K.Devayani, Chorayum Kanneerum Nananja Vazhikal, (Mal.), Samatha, Thrissur, 2010,
p.113.
86
organized Pulaya revolts for attaining civic rights like right to walk and right to
education. In 1893, he travelled through a Villuvandi through the streets wearing
white clothes and asserted his right to travel like the savarnas134. When the
savarnas set fire to a Pulaya school at Venganoor in 1907, Ayyankali organized
agricultural strike. In 1914, when he sought admission for a Pulaya girl Panchami
in Uroottambalam School near Neyyattinkara, the savarnas set fire to the
school135. This resulted in a revolt called ‘Thonnooramandu Lahala’ as it
happened in 1090 M.E. Pulaya women wore bunches and strings of beads around
their neck and hanging on the breast136. As per Ayyankali’s advice, Pulaya
women abandoned their traditional kallumalas and soiled clothes and began to
wear hygienic clothes and modern ornaments. Whenever the savarnas attacked
them, the women counter attacked with sickles and other weapons. In 1905 under
Ayyankali’s leadership, a combined meeting of Pulayas and Nairs was organized
at Kollam.Changanassery Parameswaran Pillai presided over the meeting and
thousands of Pulaya women threw away their kallumalas137. Kumaran Asan
wrote about ‘Kallumala Rebellion’ in Vivekodayam that “riot itself is a social
reformer”138.
134. M.Nisar and Meena Kandasamy, Ayyankali A Dalit Leader of Organic Protest, Other
Books, Calicut, 2007, pp.66-67.
135. Vivekodayam magazine, Book- 11, Issue 8, Vrischikam, 1090 M.E.
136. Samuel Mateer, op.cit., p.40.
137. P. Bhaskaranunni, Keralam Erupatham Nootandinte Arambhathil, (Mal.), Kerala Sahitya
Academy, Thrissur, 2005, p.226.
138. P. Bhaskaranunni, Kollathinte Charithram, (Mal.), Kollam Public Library and Research
Centre, Kollam, 1994, p.145.
139. Adiyardeepam magazine, Vol.1, No.9, 1986.
87
140. M. R. Renukumar, Poikayil Yohannan, (Mal.), Director, Kerala State Institute of Children’s
Literature, Trivandrum, 2010, pp.61-65.
141. V.Satish, “Sri Kumara Guru, a Trail-Blazer”, Journal of Kerala Studies, Vol.37,
Department of History, University of Kerala, Trivandrum, March-December, 2010, p.23.
142. P. Govindappillai, Kerala Navothanam Oru Marxist Veekshanam, (Mal.), op.cit., pp.207-
208.
143. Anilkumar A.V., Yiremyavu Adimayude Jeevitham, (Mal.), Mathrubhoomi Books,
Kozhikode, 2004, p.47.
144. M.R. Renu Kumar, op.cit., p.132.
145. G.Krishnan Nadar, Downtrodden Movement in Kerala,G.Krishnan Nadar,Trivandrum,2007,
p.109.
146. M.Satyaprakasam, Sarasakavi Muloor S.Padmanabha Panicker, (Mal.), Department of
Cultural Publications, Government of Kerala, Trivandrum, 1988, p 210.
147. G.Krishnan Nadar, op.cit., pp.115-116.
148. Ibid., p.116.
88
Large scale participation of women was witnessed for the first time during
the Vaikom Satyagraha. Women kept apart pidiyari every day. Once in a month
they gathered rice from all houses and sent to Vaikom Satyagraha Camp155. When
149. G.Gopi Krishnan, “Sri Subhananda Gurudevan, A Great Socio Religious Reformer”,
South Indian History Congress Proceedings, Vol.22, South Indian History Congress,
Trivandrum, 2002, p.179.
150. Ibid., p.180.
151. Ibid., p.181.
152. Swapna Samel, Dalit Movement in South India, (1857-1950), Serials Publications, Delhi,
2004, p.424.
153. P.Govindappillai, Kerala Navothanam, Yuga Santhathikal, Yuga Silpikal, (Mal.), op.cit.,
pp.118-120.
154. M.R. Renu Kumar, op.cit., pp.12-13.
155. Puthuppally Raghavan, Viplava Smaranakal (Mal.), Vol.1, D.C. Books, Kottayam, 1992,
p.56.
89
the Akalis came and took charge of the kitchen, the rice was sold and the cash
was given to Satyagraha Committee Treasurer Alumoottil Govindan Channar156.
Panavalli Krishnan Vaidyan wrote certain Vaikom Satyagraha songs and women
of Puthupally area used to sing these songs as njattupattu157.
Efforts were also made to change the mode of dress and ornaments of the
Namboothiri females. The old system of enlarged earbores changed slowly.
Instead, young girls began to use studs. They also started wearing blouses.
Formerly, everybody, whether married or unmarried, young or old, would be only
half clad. Another progressive step taken by the community was discarding the
age long ghosha by women.
Mrs. Manazhi was the first antarjanam who discarded ghosha169. The
example was followed by Arya Pallom, Mrs. V.T. Bhattathirippad and others.
While the twenty second annual meeting of the Sabha witnessed only one
Namboothiri woman discarding ghosha, its silver jubilee celebartion saw the
presence of more than seventy five women in modern dress. When ‘Nair
sammelanam’ at Mavelikkara gave a great welcome to those antarjanams who
discarded ghosha and marakkuda, a number of Namboothiri women boldly
attended this meeting and they were received and were seated on the stage170. The
meeting was presided over by Kottoor Bhageerathi Amma and a large crowd
assembled there to see the daring antarjanams.
171. Unni Namboothiri weekly, Book No.1, Issue 2, Edavam, 1122 M.E.
172. Devaki Nilayangode, op.cit., p.62.
173. A.Sreedhara Menon, Kerala and Freedom Struggle, op.cit., p.62.
93
174. Robin Jeffrey, Politics, Women and Well Being: How Kerala Became a Model, Oxford
University Press, New Delhi, 1992, p.41.
175. Vellankulathu Karunakaran Nair, Mannathu Padmanabhan Jeevacharitham, (Mal.),
Vellankulathu Karunakaran Nair, Kottayam, 1992, p.25.
176. Kalathil Velayudhan Nair, Ente Sanchara Pathangal, (Mal.), SPCS, Kottayam, 1978, p.19.
177. Thelliyoor Gopalakrishanan, Chittedathu Sankuppillai, Adya Rashtreeya Raktha Sakshiyude
Katha, Current Books, Kottayam, (Mal.), 2007, p.154.
178. A.Sreedhara Menon, Kerala and Freedom Struggle, op.cit., p.57.
179. Pavanan, Brahmananda Sivayogi, (Mal.), Department of Cultural Publications,
Government of Kerala, Trivandrum, 1997, pp.26-28.
180. P. Govindappillai, Mathacharyanmar, Matha Nishedhikal, (Mal.), Chintha Publications,
Trivandrum, 2009, p.48.
94
185. Jacob Kurien, “Divya Charitham”, (Mal.), Jacob Kurien, (ed.), Parumala Smrithi,
Malankara Sabha Masika Publications, Kottayam, 2002, p.55.
186. Jose Parakkadavil, “Vidyabhyasa Samoohika Rangangalile Agragami”, (Mal.), Jacob
Kurien (ed.), Parumala Smrithi, ibid., pp.268-270.
187. Ibid., p.269.
188. Samuel Chandanappally, Sneha Yatrikante Atmarekha, (Mal.), Ceedees Books,
Chandanappally, 1995, p.19.
96
They taught them the greatness of education and hygiene and the bad
effects of drunkenness. They attracted them towards the Church and Sunday
school, baptized them, admitted them in schools, and gave medicine whenever
necessary. Even if there were rain or wind, they didn’t retire from their work.
This movement still exists in the church and continues the work of complete
liberation of the dalits.
Renaissance Movement didn’t fail but it was not completed. The factors
which led to the social change in Kerala during the Renaissance period can be
summed up as:
• Education created social change and social mobility and increased women
participation in social life. From 1930 onwards women began to