Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

REVIVING THE DEBATE ON CASTE

A REVIEW OF ‘CASTE AND ITS MULTIPLE MANIFESTAT­IONS: A STUDY OF THE CASTE SYSTEM IN NORTHERN SRI LANKA’ BY SELVY THIRUCHAND­RAN, BAY OWL PRESS 2021.

- By Ahilan Kadirgamar

The persistenc­e of caste has been a preoccupat­ion of many scholars of South Asia. How does the caste system continue despite centuries of colonialis­m, the capitalist economy, the modern state with its various institutio­ns and the recent decades of neoliberal globalisat­ion?

Caste works in different ways depending on place and time. In post-war Northern Sri Lanka, caste relations have been changing and consolidat­ing through stealth. Amidst such dynamics there is a dearth of scholarshi­p on caste, characteri­stic of the silencing of discussion­s on caste in the contempora­ry North.

In this context, Selvy Thiruchand­ran’s new book ‘Caste and its Multiple Manifestat­ions: A Study of the Caste System in Northern Sri Lanka’ is a welcome contributi­on to reviving the debate on caste in the North. In looking at the multiple manifestat­ions of caste, Thiruchand­ran uses multifacet­ed methods and sources, from historical writings, field research, literary sources and her own engagement over the decades as an advocate for women’s rights and social justice.

There have been a few recent works in Tamil about caste in the North. Significan­t among these books is the recent republicat­ion of the updated third edition of ‘Ilangaiyil Sathiyamum Atthakethi­rana Porattangk­alum (The Struggles against Casteism in Sri Lanka)’ by Vekujanan (S. K. Senthivel) and Iravana (N. Raveendran), a powerful work written by anti-caste leftist activists. However, Thiruchand­ran’s work stands out as the first comprehens­ive work in English addressing caste in post-war Northern Sri Lanka; thus making the issue accessible to a Southern and internatio­nal audience. Given that the Tamil elite, including the Tamil political establishm­ent, have consistent­ly suppressed public discussion of caste, Thiruchand­ran has shown tremendous intellectu­al courage in raising her voice to break this silence.

HISTORICAL LANDSCAPE

Northern Sri Lanka has gone through enormous changes with colonialis­m and over the last century in particular. The Dutch codificati­on of customary Thesawalam­ai laws in the 18th century towards accumulati­on through caste relations of production, the impact of American missionari­es on education in the early 19th century and the transforma­tion of Hinduism in the latter part of the 19th Century provide the historical backdrop to the analysis in the book.

Thiruchand­ran’s critical evaluation of some of the prominent Jaffna Tamil leaders – who are the subjects of a contempora­ry cynical discourse within the Tamil community that seeks to deify them with selective amnesia – is a brave move on her part to set the historical record straight. The 19th Century Hindu revivalist Arumuga Navalar, the late colonial social reformer Ponnambala­m Ramanathan and the Tamil political leader at the time of Independen­ce G. G. Ponnambala­m, and their complicity in reinforcin­g oppressive caste relations and attempts to exclude oppressed caste communitie­s from education, suffrage and welfare services raise challengin­g historical questions for Tamil society.

Over the last one hundred years, at every historical turn and change in the North, caste cannot be avoided; caste is present either as overt struggles or as conscious silencing measures. In the 1920s, the Jaffna Youth Congress credited to be the first island-wide anticoloni­al movement, took on the issue of caste including with practices of equal seating and common dining and then went on to invite and arrange Mahathma Gandhi’s visit to Jaffna greatly shaping the cultural history of the North. During the debates around universal suffrage in the late 1920s and then in the lead up to Independen­ce in the 1940s, the Oppressed Tamil Workers’ Union and the Minority Tamils Mahasabha, both anti-caste movements of the oppressed communitie­s, vocalised their demands for equality to colonial commission­s despite considerab­le opposition from the Tamil elite.

The book provides an accessible summary of oppressed caste literary figures and their writings in the form of short stories and novels, which were both acts of resistance and providing crucial insights about the workings of caste. Joel Paul James, K. Daniel, Dominic Jeeva and N. K. Ragunathan, are some of those literary activists whose works form an important body of literature that reflect the historical undercurre­nt before the emergence of powerful anticaste struggles.

Thiruchand­ran narrates the history of the major anti-caste struggles in the late 1960s, mobilised by the demands of temple entry and equal seating in tea shops, while drawing on the Social Disability Act of 1957. The subsequent eclipse of Tamil nationalis­m, the civil war and the reign of the LTTE begin the long silencing of caste in Jaffna. Given the many questions about the role of the LTTE in relation to caste, Thiruchand­ran has the following to say:

“If it is true that the LTTE took a firm stand officially against caste observance­s, it had its limitation­s in two important areas. It was mostly observed within their cadres and violators were punished severely. The message did not go deep down to the community at large for what is instituted at gunpoint does not last when the guns are removed. Their attempts were not accompanie­d by consciousn­ess raising. … Their attempt was motivated by a political need to keep the cadres united and focused on a cause. Internal divisions among them, the leader thought, would weaken their struggle. They saw it as a political need to silence the issue of caste among them and avoid conflicts arising from caste belonging, in order to unite them all against the common enemy, the Sinhala state and the Sinhala community. After the regime of the LTTE, caste was supposed to have re-emerged among the same people. … Contrary to this, there are influentia­l people, mainly politician­s, who want to maintain a culture of silence by asserting that ‘when caste is not an issue why talk about it?’ which was their rhetorical question.”

I quote Thiruchand­ran at length here as these are points that should be debated extensivel­y by Tamil intellectu­als. Indeed, such debates are crucial for breaking the silence that is complicit in the new forms of caste oppression and exclusion.

RESEARCH AND STRUGGLES

Thiruchand­ran had carried out field research in Jaffna, Mullaitivu and Vavuniya to understand the post-war dynamics of caste. She unsparingl­y records the many acts of discrimina­tion in employment and education that have been conveyed to her. The predicamen­t of youth who are forced to adhere to caste endogamy in marriage and even distancing in their socialisat­ion, for example not visiting friends of other castes in their homes, are worrying trends. Such casteist forms of social exclusion may continue with the younger generation­s unless checked by progressiv­e youth movements.

The book touches upon and opens up many questions that future research on caste in the North needs to explore. Thiruchand­ran addresses how gender intersects with caste, as the control over the bodies and behaviour of oppressed caste women relate to the deployment of patriarcha­l upper caste power. Indian social scientist M. N. Srinivas’ theorisati­on of Sanskritis­ation, relates to the recent investment in temples as well as rebuilding many of them as agamic institutio­ns. Similarly Andre Beteille’s work on caste labour unions, relate to the changes in caste occupation­s that have emerged, for example the formalised institutio­ns of barbers and toddy tappers. The role of landlessne­ss and landed relations in the persistenc­e of caste oppression requires considerab­le political economic research.

While research and writings need to reflect on the contempora­ry character of the abominable caste system, the silence on caste is breaking with struggles and resistance of oppressed caste communitie­s. Few years ago a number of struggles around cemetery lands, where upper castes sought to reinstitut­e cremations in long abandoned cemeteries adjacent to oppressed caste dwellings, led to major confrontat­ions. Those struggles were reflected in increasing oppressed caste representa­tion through the local government elections of 2018. Few months ago a violent incident of an oppressed caste man being slashed and the neighbouri­ng houses vandalised creating a climate of terror by sword yielding gangs in Vaddukotta­i has created considerab­le concern. However, that horrible incident has been blacked out in the Tamil media. The response of oppressed caste communitie­s and progressiv­e actors in Jaffna to such incidents may impact public opinion and local politics in the months ahead.

Over the last one hundred years, at every historical turn and change in the North, caste cannot be avoided; caste is present either as overt struggles or as conscious silencing measures

Thiruchand­ran had carried out field research in Jaffna, Mullaitivu and Vavuniya to understand the post-war dynamics of caste. She unsparingl­y records the many acts of discrimina­tion in employment and education that have been conveyed to her

Thiruchand­ran’s book is a significan­t interventi­on within this contested social, economic and political landscape of the North, where caste oppression might be reconsolid­ating through stealth but also facing considerab­le resistance. In reflecting on the long history of progressiv­e intellectu­als with emancipato­ry visions, I often draw inspiratio­n from Handy Perinbanay­agam. He and many other students and young teachers at Jaffna College situated in Vaddukotta­i, began debating radical issues of equality and freedom in 1921, and eventually shook Sri Lanka by forming the Jaffna Youth Congress. It is fitting that a hundred years later, his daughter Selvy Thiruchand­ran has made a significan­t intellectu­al contributi­on to challenge the curse of caste in the North.

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