Merger of Kanyakumari with Madras State
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The present-day Kanyakumari district and parts of Tenkasi district of Tamil Nadu state in India was originally a part of the Travancore-Cochin state. Between 1945 and 1956, especially after the Government of India announced plans to reorganize states along linguistic lines, the people of Tamil-majority Kanyakumari campaigned for its inclusion in the Madras State (later Tamil Nadu) instead of the Malayalam-majority Kerala state. In Tamil, the campaign is also known as Therkku Ellai Porattam ("South Frontier Struggle").
The campaign was successful: Agastheeswaram, Kalkulam, Thovalai, Vilavancode and half part of Shenkottai taluks were merged with Madras as per the States Reorganisation Act, 1956.[1] The first four were combined to form the present-day Kanyakumari district, while Shenkottai was merged with the Tirunelveli district present day tenkasi district
Background
[edit]In Census of 1901, the present day Kanyakumari had 59% of its population speaking Malayalam and 40% speaking Tamil language. The Malayalam language was mostly spoken by upper castes such as Nair and Tamil by lower castes like Nadars. The princely state of Travancore had multiple instances of Caste discriminations and this sowed seeds for linguistic contest over this region in earlier half of 20th century. The Proselytism by Anglican Churches among lower castes helped the language movement gather more momentum. By 1951, the demography of region started showing major changes the population speaking Tamil grew close to 48% and Malayalam dipped to 51%. The migration of Tamils from areas east of Aralvaimozhi pass to fertile Nanjinad plains of Kanyakumari district and migration of Malayalis to urban centers of Travancore–Cochin such as Thiruvananthapuram and Kochi aided this and concerted attempts by linguistic and caste groups under aegis of TTNC to achieve linguistic majority contributed to the demographic inversion. The Christian population of region also witnessed a steep spike from 30% to 40% in this period.
Thus there was a significant Tamil population in the Thovalai, Agastheeswaram, Sengottai, Eraniel, Vilavancode, Kalkulam, Devikulam, Peerumedu, Neyyattinkara, Thiruvananthapuram South and Thiruvananthapuram North taluks of erstwhile Travancore State.[2] A lot of atrocities were committed by the Malayalis on the Tamils which caused untold sufferings and unliveable conditions which caused the Tamils to struggle to merge with the Tamil majority Madras state.[citation needed] In the Tamil regions, Malayalam was the official language and there were only a few Tamil-medium schools. So the Tamils met many hardships. Travancore State Government continued rejecting the requests of Tamils.[3]
During that period the Travancore State Congress favoured the idea of uniting all the Malayalam speaking regions and the formation of a "Unified Kerala". In protest against this idea, many Tamil leaders vacated the party. Tamils gathered together at Nagercoil on 16 December 1945 under the leadership of Sam Nathaniel and formed the new political party All Travancore Tamilian Congress. That party was continuously compelling for the merger of Tamil regions in Travancore with Tamil Nadu.[4]
Travancore Tamil Nadu Congress (T.T.N.C)
[edit]In the working committee meeting of Tamilian congress at Eraviputhur on 30 June 1946, the name of the political party was changed to Travancore Tamil Nadu Congress (T.T.N.C). T.T.N.C was popular among the Tamils living in Thovalai and Agateeswaram Taluks. Mr. Ma. Po. Sivagnanam (Ma.Po.Si) was the only leader from Tamil Nadu who functioned in favour of T.T.N.C.[5]
After the independence of India, State Assembly Elections were announced in Travancore. As a consequence, T.T.N.C improved its popularity among Tamils. A popular and leading advocate from Vilavancode Mr. A. Nesamony organised a meeting of his supporters at Allan Memorial Hall, Nagercoil on 8 September 1947. In that meeting it was declared that they must achieve their objective through their political organisation, the T.T.N.C. And T.T.N.C started gaining strength and momentum in Kalkulam - Vilavancode Taluks.[6]
1948 police firing
[edit]During the election propaganda campaign, clashes occurred between the Tamil speaking communities and the Malayalam speaking communities at various places in Kalkulam - Vilavancode Taluks. police force suppressed the agitating Nadars. In February 1948 police opened fire and two Tamil speaking Nadars were killed.[5]
T.T.N.C won in 14 constituencies in the election to the State Legislative Assembly. Mr. A. Nesamony was elected as the legislative leader of the party. Then under his leadership, the awakened Tamil population was prepared to undergo any sacrifice to achieve their goal.[7]
1952 general elections
[edit]In 1950, a meeting was held at Palayamkottai to make compromises between state congress and T.T.N.C. The meeting met with failure and Mr. Sam Nathaniel resigned from the post of president of T.T.N.C Mr. P. Ramasamy Pillai, a strong follower of Mr. A. Nesamony was elected as the New President.[6]
The first general election of Independent India was held on 1952. T.T.N.C won 8 legislative assembly seats. Mr. A. Chidambaranathan became the minister on behalf of T.T.N.C in the coalition state government formed by the Congress. In the parliamentary Constituency Mr. A. Nesamony was elected as M.P. and in the Rajyasabha seat. Mr. A. Abdul Razak was elected as M.P. on behalf of T.T.N.C.[6]
In due course, accusing the Congress government for not showing enough care the struggle of the Tamils, T.T.N.C had broken away from the coalition and the Congress government lost the majority. So fresh elections were announced. In 1954 elections, T.T.N.C gained victory in 12 constituencies.[6]
1954 police firing
[edit]Pattom Thanu Pillai was the chief minister for Thiru - Kochi legislative assembly. He engaged hard measures against the agitations of Tamils. Especially the Tamils at Devikulam - Peerumedu regions went through the atrocities of Travancore Police force. Condemning the attitude of the police, T.T.N.C leaders from Nagercoil went to Munnar and participated in agitations against the prohibitive orders. The leaders were arrested and an uncalm atmosphere prevailed in South Travancore.[8]
On 11 August, Liberation Day celebrations were held at many places in South Travancore. Public meetings and processions were organised . Communists also collaborated with the agitation programmes. Police opened fire at the processions in Thoduvetty (Martandam) and Puthukadai. Nine Tamil volunteers were killed and thousands of T.T.N.C and communist sympathizers were arrested in various parts of Tamil main land. At the end, Pattom Thanu Pillai's ministry was toppled and normalcy returned to the Tamil regions.[7]
States Reorganization Commission
[edit]The central government had appointed Fazal Ali Commission(1953 dec) for the states reorganisation based on language. It submitted its report on 10 August 1955. Based on this report, Devikulam - Peermedu and Neyyattinkara Taluks were merged with Kerala state.[9]
On 1 November 1956 - four Taluks Thovalai, Agastheeswaram, Kalkulam, Vilavancode were recognised to form the New Kanyakumari District and merged with Tamil Nadu State. Half of Sengottai Taluk was merged with Tirunelveli District. The main demand of T.T.N.C was to merger the Tamil regions with Tamil Nadu and major part of its demand was realised. So T.T.N.C was dissolved thereafter.[7]
Retainment of Devikulam and Peerumedu Taluks in Kerala
[edit]Apart from Kanyakumari district, the Taluks of Devikulam and Peermade in present-day Idukki district also had a Tamil-majority until late 1940's.[10] The T.T.N.C had also requested to merge these Taluks with Madras State.[10] However it was due to some decisions of Pattom Thanu Pillai, who was the first prime minister of Travancore, that they retained in the modern-state of Kerala.[10] Pattom came up with a colonisation project to re-engineer the demography of Cardamom Hills.[10] His colonisation project was to relocate 8,000 Malayalam-speaking families into the Taluks of Devikulam and Peermade.[10] About 50,000 acres in these Taluks, which were Tamil-majority area, were chosen for the colonisation project.[10] As a victory of the Colonisation project done by post-independence Travancore, these two Taluks and a larger portion of Cardamom Hills retained in the state of Kerala, after States Reorganisation Act, 1956.[10]
References
[edit]- ^ Jebagnanam Cyril Kanmony (2010). Human rights violation. Mittal Publications. p. 41. ISBN 978-81-8324-347-6.
- ^ Report on the Census of Travancore (1881) (PDF). Thiruvananthapuram: Government of India. 1884. pp. 135, 258.
- ^ V. S. Sathianesan - Tamil Separatism in Travancore
- ^ R. Isaac Jeyadhas - Kanyakumari District and Indian Independence Struggle (Tamil)
- ^ a b D. Daniel - Travancore Tamils: Struggle for Identity.
- ^ a b c d B. Yogeeswaran - History of Travancore Tamil Struggle (Tamil)
- ^ a b c D. Peter - Malayali Dominance and Tamil Liberation (Tamil)
- ^ R. Kuppusamy - Historical foot prints of a True War (Tamil)
- ^ B. Mariya John - Linguistic Reorganisation of Madras Presidenty
- ^ a b c d e f g Ayyappan, R (31 October 2020). "Why did Kerala surrender Kanyakumari without a fight?". Onmanorama. Retrieved 16 June 2021.