This story is from March 19, 2025
Periyar was critical of Tamil, he also rationalised it
The Tamil Nadu govt's decision to use the Tamil letter ‘roo' instead of ‘`' as the rupee symbol has not only sparked controversy within the state and at the Centre, but it has also thrust E V R Periyar back into the spotlight. Following Stalin's March 13 announcement, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, addressing Parliament, accused the DMK of hypocrisy for venerating Periyar "who called the Tamil language barbaric," while DMK leaders, including MP Kanimozhi, fought back with an explanation of the context behind the social reformer's remark.It has become a pattern for anti-Periyar groups to selectively highlight Periyar's criticism whenever debates on issues such as the three-language policy crop up. While it is true that Periyar made such a statement, the context and reasoning behind it are often overlooked or misunderstood. Periyar believed that if a language "wields god-like status," it means it "needs reform." Though Periyar criticised Tamil, he continued to write and converse in it and even worked to improve it. Citing Tamil's insufficiencies, Periyar advocated the adoption of English while admitting he was not a scholar in either language. He also proposed several reforms to the Tamil script and vocabulary, implementing them in ‘Kudi Arasu,' the magazine he founded in May 1925.Tamil scholars initially derided his attempts, but over time, mainstream Tamil media adopted his reforms. Media scholar Robin Jeffrey said in 1997 that successful newspapers in Tamil Nadu from the 1940s emerged from different strata of society, adopting new styles and techniques to draw in readers. One of the styles non-brahmin periodicals adopted was doing away with Sanskritised Tamil conversations. The anti-brahmin movement of the 1920s encouraged people from non-brahmin communities to launch publications, which shook up the vernacular journalism scene dominated by brahmins. Among the earliest of the non-brahminical magazines was ‘Kudi Arasu,' which published articles on a range of topics, including atheism. Despite its impact, the magazine met with a premature end in 1949.However, Periyar's articles in the magazine were later compiled into books, many of which became bestsellers. "At the time, Tamil periodicals had Sanskritised names such as ‘Desopakari,' ‘Desabhimani,' ‘Jananukulan,' ‘Sudesabhimani,' and ‘Swadesamithran,' as they were run by brahmins. It was in this context that Periyar launched ‘Kudi Arasu' (Tamil for ‘Republic'), a magazine that truly represented Tamils," says K Ravi Bharathi, orator and member of Dravidar Viduthalai Kazhagam, a social movement and splinter group of Periyar's Dravidar Kazhagam. "When ‘Kudi Arasu' was launched, ‘Swadesamithran,' the first Tamil daily, lost 2,000 readers to it."‘Kudi Arasu' was published as a weekly from 1925 to 1949, with a two-year hiatus between 1933 and 1935 due to British censorship. Though there were magazines before it that touched upon progressive ideas, ‘Kudi Arasu' is considered the pioneering magazine of the Dravidian movement, as it was the first to popularise the concept of social justice. Periyar began talking about Tamil alphabet reforms in 1934. After ‘Kudi Arasu' was suspended in 1933, he founded ‘Pagutharivu,' the magazine where he introduced suggestions for Tamil script reforms. When ‘Kudi Arasu' was revived in 1935, Periyar implemented these changes, beginning with the issue dated January 13.Periyar focused on the shapes of graphemes (the smallest meaningful unit in a writing system), which made Tamil script easier to write, type, and print, says S V Shanmugam, professor at the Centre of Advanced Study in Linguistics, Annamalai University, in his book ‘Aspects of Language Development in Tamil.' "Though the reform is oriented towards mechanical efficiency, it also increases pedagogical efficiency."In 1936, Periyar spoke about these reforms at Kumbakonam Govt College and Chennai's Pachaiyappa's College, in his lectures ‘Language' and ‘Letter.' Periyar said the Tamil vowels ‘Ai' and ‘Au' ought to be removed since they were used as diphthongs (a single-syllable sound formed by combining two vowel sounds). The Tamil script has 247 letters, of which he felt 38 were redundant. "We can talk, write, and read any word without these 38 letters. And it would not change the pronunciation or meaning," said Periyar. Instead, he introduced 13 restructured Tamil letters in ‘Kudi Arasu.' In 1978, Periyar's birth centenary, the Tamil Nadu govt issued an order stating that his set of 13 letters would be officially adopted. The change was immediately implemented in the Tamil daily ‘Dinamani.'"In March 1995, the state govt allowed changes in the Tamil typewriter keyboard," writes V C Kulandaiswamy, former vice-chancellor, Anna University, in his book ‘Tamil Ezhuthu Seeramaipu.' "Back then, the symbols for addition, multiplication, division, equal to, semicolon, and colon were not found in the Tamil typewriter, because of space constraints. With Periyar's changes, these symbols were added, and the changes implemented in 1997."Though the administration and public slowly accepted the changes, academicians were reluctant, worrying that the elimination of letters such as ‘ai' and ‘au' would make it difficult for future generations to read ancient Tamil texts. As a result, these letters are still taught in schools. "Periyar's suggestions will make it easier to teach children the language," says teacher Tamil Aasaan. "There is more in the language that can be reformed. I say this as a teacher and lifelong student of Tamil," says Aasaan, who prefixed Tamil to his name because of his passion for the language.Email your feedback with name and address to southpole.toi@timesofindia.com
Top Comment
S
SIVASAMY D S
88 days ago
The views expressed by the writer Vinothkumar that E V Ramasamy Periyar brought the changes in Tamil alphabet is totally wrong.Vinothkumarstated that E V R implemented these changes in the year 1935 in his magazine Kudiyarasu.In fact even as early as 1915 Kappalottiya Thamizhan Ayya V O Chidambaram Pillai had written an article in September 1915 in the journal GNANABANU published by the great freedom fighter Ayya Subramania Siva,welcoming the changes in the Thamizh alphabet implemented already by certain Tamizh writers which means these changes in Thamizh alphabet had been implemented in the year 1915 itself 20 years before E V R claimed to have made these changes. Therefore it is very clear that E V R is not responsible for rationalising the Thamizh alphabet as told by Vinothkumar.As usual it is a fraudulent attempt to hail Periyar as a great Thamizh scholar.Read allPost comment
Popular from City
- Haryana model Simmi Chaudhary found murdered in canal; body identified by tattoos, boyfriend arrested
- TCS deployment policy: 225 billing days mandatory, bench time capped at 35 days
- Couple gives up seats for others, lives to tell the tale
- Meghalaya honeymoon murder: Sonam Raghuvanshi declared mentally sound, crime scene recreation next
- Mumbai's newly-inaugurated rail overbridge has three lanes, no divider and no pedestrian space; commuters question planning
end of article
Trending Stories
- 'Immediately evacuate Tehran': Trump's big warning amid Iran-Israel conflict; to leave G7 summit early
- Couple gives up seats for others, lives to tell the tale
- TCS deployment policy: 225 billing days mandatory, bench time capped at 35 days
- Fourth scare in 36 hours: Air India Express flight takes U-turn to Delhi; was on way to Ranchi
- 'Pakistan will attack Israel with nuclear missile': Top Iranian official; can Shaheen-3 reach Tel Aviv?
- Mumbai's newly-inaugurated rail overbridge has three lanes, no divider and no pedestrian space; commuters question planning
- Air India plane crash: 70 tolas gold; at crash site, 1st responder's grit shines
Featured in city
- Meghalaya honeymoon murder: Haunting May 23 video from Double Decker trek captures Raja Raghuvanshi's killers; one tries to hide face
- Mid-air scare: Muscat-Delhi IndiGo flight makes emergency landing in Nagpur after bomb threat; no suspicious items found
00:21 No red beacon, no frills: Old video of former Gujarat CM Vijay Rupani resurfaces - watch- Haryana model Sheetal was stabbed 8 times; CCTV video shows couple together hours before murder, boyfriend confesses after trying to stage accident
- 'Here we get free car wash service': Days after partial opening, Kalladka flyover turns into waterfall due to leakage — watch video
- Final goodbye: Father pays heartfelt tribute to AI 171 pilot Captain Sumeet Sabharwal killed in Ahmedabad crash - watch
Visual Stories
- Beginner's guide for girls to shave facial baby hair
- Sreeleela's Most Mesmerising Saree Looks You Simply Can’t Miss
- 8 lucrative freelance skills driving client demand in 2025
- Rekha and her stunning Kanjeevaram saree looks
- 8 aquarium fish that are surprisingly super intelligent
- 8 genius tips for students to master any skill in just 30 days
- Shamita Shetty’s inspired top 10 must-have looks
- Zodiac signs who can become great journalists
- Priyanka Mohan’s mesmerizing fashion moments
- 10 secret parenting tips that raise respectful, obedient children
Photostories
- 7 high uric acid symptoms that appear in hands and legs
- 5 foods that are excellent for the heart
- Dipika Kakar gets emotional talking about her liver cancer diagnosis and surgery; says 'My biggest fear was will I be able to stay close to my child'
- Aamir Khan's top 5 films with the highest Box Office collections
- Bollywood films that take flight: Stories of plane crashes, airborne heroes, and aviation dramas
- What were the educational qualifications of the Mughals?
- 8 longevity secrets from the Japanese lifestyle
- 5 pointless arguments intelligent people avoid at all costs
- Why one should never say I am busy, according to Sister Shivani
- A decade later: Indian diaspora cheers on as PM Modi arrives in Canada for G7 summit
Top Trends
Up Next