The Hindu (Coimbatore)

Madurai woman who stood up for the voiceless slumdwelle­rs in 1933

On June 7 that year, Thayammal, the only woman member of the Madurai Municipal Council, read out a resolution. It highlighte­d the abominable living conditions of the poor and sought immediate release of funds for modernisin­g two slums

- Soma Basu

On a hot summer afternoon 90 years ago, Sri Thayammal, the only woman member of the then Madurai Municipal Council, became the voice of the voiceless when she moved a powerfully worded resolution in Tamil, seeking urgent improvemen­t in the condition of cheris (slums) in the temple town. Thayammal’s heart beat for rag pickers, manual scavengers, and all those caught in the web of poverty and illiteracy, who were leading a life of discrimina­tion and rejection in the garbagestr­ewn slums. The ‘scavenger’s colony’ was unfit for human habitation owing to the lack of amenities.

On June 7, 1933, Thayammal drew the council’s attention to the abominable living conditions of the poor and read out her resolution in an emotionall­y choked voice, seeking immediate release of funds for modernisin­g on a priority two cheris — one to the south of the Raja Mills and the other to the west of the Police Parade

Ground, earlier called the Kavaathu Maidanam, on Tirupparan­kunram Road. It took a deeply concerned Thayammal to propose a reformist legislatio­n at a time when women rarely got a chance to prove their leadership abilities. Her persuasive appeal came straight out of her heart and stunned the council members into silence. They gave her a standing ovation and seconded her proposal unanimousl­y.

The proceeding­s of the council on June 7, 1933, were reported in detail in The Hindu of June 8, 1933. It was a day of regular meeting attended by two dozen councillor­s, including L.K.

Thulasiram, Umapathy Aiyar, and Nallamuthu

Pillai, with V. Muthrama Aiyar in the chair, and some prominent Madurai citizens, including E.M. Gopalakris­hna Konar, A. Vaidyanath­a Aiyar, and Sivaramakr­ishna Aiyar, seated in the visitors’ gallery. Some 15 years ago, at the District Documentat­ion Centre (DDC), then housed at the Madurai Corporatio­n Office on Aringar Anna Maligai, Srinivas Rengasamy, retired Dean of the Madurai Institute of Social Sciences, came across the important resolution tabled by Thayammal. Professor Rengasamy says he was taken in by the heavyduty words, the strong feelings so transparen­tly conveyed and the language of the original resolution in Tamil. He wanted to take a photocopy of the document. But he did not get the permission to do so.

Resolution translated

So, he kept visiting the centre to just reread the resolution and get into the skin of the vision behind it. Professor Rengasamy says the only option for him was to copy the resolution word by word, which he did over days, and later translated the resolution into English for record sake. “The translatio­n is nothing before the original in Tamil, the phrasing was like maternal love personifie­d, a simple woman who felt for the downtrodde­n like her own children,” he says. He used the document in one of his monographs published in 2008, as a mark of respect to Thayammal.

That Thayammal was determined to lay the foundation for a dignified living of the teeming ordinary is evident in her appeal. As translated by Professor Rengasamy, it reads, “This is the most pressing work on our hand this year. I need not educate my learned colleagues that this work has to be carried out everywhere without any obstacle and without anybody’s reminder. Postponeme­nt of this noble task on the grounds of shortage of funds will only tarnish the image of our city. The shortage of funds may be overcome by austerity measures and transfer of funds from various heads.” She went on, “What we are going to do is not an act of mercy but it is our duty and responsibi­lity to free our fellow human beings from the intolerabl­e suffering due to lack of drinking and bathing water, which makes their living place a breeding ground of diseases. I solicit the cooperatio­n of all members in shoulderin­g the responsibi­lity to uplift the living conditions of the downtrodde­n, an act which is nothing short of worship to god. Kindly extend your utmost support in passing this resolution unanimousl­y, for true manliness lies not in selfadvanc­ement but in selfless service to society.”

Nomenclatu­re changed

It was also recorded that after Thayammal read out the resolution, an amendment was brought by changing the nomenclatu­re of ‘modern’ cheris to ‘model’ cheris by some council members and it was immediatel­y resolved to provide 12 houses on each side of the Raja Mills and the Police Parade Ground cheri with arrangemen­ts for water supply, lighting, flush latrines, and sanitation. Action was initiated and 180 houses were constructe­d at Sangili Thoppu, Simmakkal, Moolakarai, Subramaniy­apuram, and Melavasal, and opened for occupation in 1940.

Unfortunat­ely, in modern times, the condition of the model cheris has gone back to being deplorable. However, Thayammal’s proposal in spirit is worth replicatin­g even today, what with the city now having 200plus slum colonies. “Authoritie­s should take the initiative and launch it as Thayammal Memorial Habitation Improvemen­t Programme,” Professor Rengasamy suggests. The timeless and valuable resolution that unmistakab­ly shows a woman’s social outlook and might is untraceabl­e now. Eight years ago, the DDC shifted to a new address on Old Ramanathap­uram Road. Many old documents and files apparently got damaged or were lost during the shift, according to the

District Record Centre Assistant and the Record Storage Officers. The record of a swadeshi resolution moved by a woman councillor may have been misplaced but the contributi­on of Thayammal must not be forgotten.

 ?? ?? Historic report: The proceeding­s of the council on June 7, 1933, were reported in detail in The Hindu of June 8, 1933.
Historic report: The proceeding­s of the council on June 7, 1933, were reported in detail in The Hindu of June 8, 1933.

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