The Asian Age

Poykayil Appachan, practition­er of critique and co- option

- DR AJAY S SEKHER

Poykayil Appachan, also known as Kumara Gurudevan ( 1879- 1939t), was a revolution­ary Dalit leader and social reformer hailing from Eraviperur near Tiruvalla in central Travancore area. He organised the early inhabitant­s of the region, who were subjugated and enslaved by the dominant upper caste Hindus and Syrian Christians who made it the most degraded forms of slavery in Kerala. The Prathyaksh­a Raksha Daiva Sabha ( PRDS) movement he establishe­d encompasse­d all sections of Dalits across sub caste divisions. He was an inspired orator, an instant poet and a learned organizer; he used carefully crafted songs and spirituals for organising people for their liberation and social emancipati­on. He made it to the Travancore Srimulam Prajasabha and initiated many legislativ­e reforms for his people and similar depressed social sections.

Appachan’s efforts started bearing fruits with people outside the periphery of Tiruvalla came to form PRDS units in various parts of Travancore in early 20th century. People from various Dalit communitie­s cooperated with him and the movement, contributi­ng to the general liberation spirit of the Kerala renaissanc­e. He was also a member of the Sadhu Jana Paripalana Sangham which social reformer and Dalit leader Ayyankali founded in 1907.

Appachan’s speeches and songs created a subaltern space of ethical enquiry and resistance in Kerala in myriad ways and contribute­d to the democratis­ation of society and polity. They together paved the foundation­s of modern Kerala along with the pioneers of Kerala modernity such as Sree Narayanagu­ru, Chattambi Appachan’s speeches and songs created a subaltern space of ethical enquiry and resistance in Kerala in myriad ways and contribute­d to the democratis­ation of society and polity. Appachan’s praxis was to critically assess events. He co- opted the Christian discourses but defiantly critiqued the evangelica­l agenda of missionary work.

Swamikal, Tykad Ayya, Ayya Vaikundhar, Sahodaran Ayyappan, Chavara Achan and Vakkam Maulavi. The early contributi­ons of Christian missionari­es in education and healthcare in 19th century may also be remembered here.

Appachan’s unique praxis was to critically assess events. He co- opted the Christian discourses but defiantly critiqued the evangelica­l agenda of missionary work. He hailed the fruits of modernity but rejected its colonial contexts. He co- operated with many congregati­ons and churches but left them all and founded his own sect outside the fold of Christiani­ty and caste Hinduism. His was a unique mode of social critique and subaltern uprising in the hybrid contexts of colonial modernity. His strategies were often subversive and popular at the same time. He was more into the politics of culture rather than into religious reformism.

The careful organisati­onal framework he created and the social operations he designed may be studied and analysed in the context of the current conjunctur­e of mass mobilisati­on of the people into the dominant folds by spiritual and cultural nationalis­m.

Appachan never tried to create a notion of glorious past as Pampadi John Joseph, the Dalit Christian leader who invoked the Cheraman Perumal connection­s of the Cheramar or Pulaya community of mid Travancore; instead he revived and revitalise­d the memory of slavery and rootedness in the soil from ancient times onwards and used it for a new social imaginatio­n and emancipati­on in the present and near future. History was important to him; but the present and the future were more important and significan­t. His songs and narratives have many lives and many presents and futures; they are resonating in the air as an unending melody, a unique one at that.

The writer is assistant professor, dept of English, Sree Sankaracha­rya University of Sanskrit, Kalady

 ??  ?? Image sourced from Internet.
Image sourced from Internet.

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