Cutting edge of Hindu revivalism in Jaffna
HINDUS: After about 300 years of intense persecution under the
Portuguese and the Dutch, the Hindus of Jaffna heaved a sigh of relief
when the British took over at the fag end of the 18th century.
The era of forcible conversions to Catholicism (under the Portuguese)
and to Protestantism (under the Dutch) was over.
In the liberal atmosphere created by the British, most converts
reverted to their traditional religion, namely, Hinduism.
Daniel Poor, a pioneer of the American Ceylon Mission (ACM) noted
that with the Dutch yoke off their shoulders, the Hindus of Jaffna
returned to "sweet idolatory" and temple building was resumed at a
frenetic pace.
As Dr Murugar Gunasingam says in his book, Sri Lankan Tamil
Nationalism: A Study of its Origins (MV Publications, Sydney 1999),
there were as many as 329 Hindu temples in Jaffna in 1814. Many had come
up in the first few years of British rule.
Earlier, the Portuguese had destroyed as many as 500 temples. In
Dutch times, temples were in disuse, as the Brahmin priests had been
chased out.
Threat from a new quarter But British rule did not turn out to be an
unmixed blessing.
It had created a new danger, the danger of conversion through
education and systematic propaganda through the use of the new print
medium.
The new political and economic order established by the British was
creating employment opportunities for the Hindus of Jaffna, which
necessitated an education.
And the Hindu Tamil youth of Jaffna were eager to seize these
opportunities and acquire an English education for that purpose.
Seeing a potential in this for gaining converts, the new Protestant
missions which followed the British flag, set up schools and boarding
houses, including some for girls.
Printing presses were established to churn out easily accessible
Christian literature on a large scale.
The new British rulers handed over government-run schools to the
missionaries, and gave grants-in-aid to non-government schools. The
latter was a great help to missionary-run schools.
The missionary-run schools and medical missions, with their dedicated
and selfless staff, presented a very new and beguiling face to the
people of Jaffna, who, under Portuguese and Dutch rule earlier, had been
dragooned into accepting Christianity and economically exploited
thereafter by the state-backed missionaries.
Missions fail to make headway However, despite possessing all the
necessary tools for mass conversion, the Protestant missionaries did not
make much headway.
According to Dr Gunasingam determined evangelisation by the American
Ceylon Mission (ACM) from 1816 to 1839 had yielded only 492 converts.
Success eluded the Wesleyan Mission and the Church Missionary Society
(CMS) also. Gunasingam says that conversion was low because, unlike the
Portuguese or the Dutch, the British did not make conversion a necessity
for obtaining government jobs or state patronage.
The British had also declared that they would not allow forcible
conversions.
Missionaries create insecurity But many Jaffna Hindu Tamils, mainly
of the elite Vellala, Chettiar and Brahmin castes, felt that the power
of the missionaries was insidious.
They feared that if the Hindus, mainly Saivite, were not careful,
they could be overwhelmed by the missionaries armed with all the tools
of modern propaganda then available, namely, a virtual monopoly over the
educational system and the printed word.
The liberal education, which the mission schools provided, had
created awareness among the Saivites and sharpened their critical
faculties.
While the missionaries hoped that education would make the young
Saivites see the truth of Christianity and the falsehood of Saivism, it
had the opposite impact, notes Gunasingam.
Often, education made the student critical of Christianity and see
the danger that it posed to his own indigenous religion.
But this, by itself, did not make the Saivites take measures to
assert their faith and oppose the proselytising activities of the
missionaries.
What triggered active resistance was the stepping up of vile anti-Saivite
propaganda by the missionaries.
According to Gunasingam, the missionaries started attacking Saivisim
and Saivite practices viciously because they were frustrated with the
poor rate of conversion.
In his article entitled Arumuga Navalar and the Hindu Renaissance
Among the Tamils in the book "Religious Controversy in British India"
edited by Kenneth W Jones, D Dennis Hudson gives a particularly telling
example of the missionary view of Saivism.
He quotes the Protestant periodical Morning Star as saying: "There is
nothing in the peculiar doctrines and precepts of the Saiva religion
that is adapted to improve a man's moral character or fit him to be
useful to his fellow men".
"If the world were to be converted to the Saiva faith, no one would
expect any improvement in the morals or the happiness of men." "Everyone
might be a great liar and cheat, as great an adulterer, as oppressive of
the poor, as covetous, as proud, as he was before without the purity of
faith."
The "Skandapuranam" one of the most sacred texts of Saivism, was
denounced as a set of "extravagant fictions many of which are of immoral
tendency."
The Morning Star and other publications were also making disparaging
remarks against the famous Kandaswamy temple in Nallur, saying that it
was a den vice.
The attacks on this temple, which was the nerve centre of Saivisim in
the Jaffna peninsula, was seen as a frontal assault on Tamil culture and
Tamil pride.
Rise of Hindu protest The first to protest against such
characterisations and write against Christianity was Muthukumara
Kavirajar (1780-1851).
His works, which were printed later, became an important weapon in
the armoury of the Saivites.
The first collective action on the part of the Saivites of Jaffna was
a meeting held by a group drawn from the elite Vellala, Brahmin and
Chettiar communities, at the Siva temple at Vannarpannai in September
1842.
Among the leading lights present were Sathasiva Pillai, Swaminatha
Iyar, Viswanatha Iyar, Arumuga Pillai, Kandaswamy Pillai and Arumuga
Chettiar.
The group decided to set up a "Veda-Agama" School to teach children
the Vedas, the Agamas (temple worship) and the elements of Saivisim.
The plan was to discourage parents from sending their children to
Christian mission schools.
It was also decided to purchase a printing press to counter the media
war unleashed by the missionaries.
Though the purchase of a printing press took time, the Veda Agama
school started functioning in 1842.
Enter Arumuga Navalar It was at this time that Arumugam Pillai
(1822-1879) entered the scene with a bang. As Arumuga Navalar or simply
as Navalar, he was to become Sri Lanka's foremost Saivite or Hindu
revivalist; the harbinger of Tamil nationalism; and the cutting edge of
the long, and successful campaign against Christian proselytising.
Navalar was unique among the campaigners for Saivism in Jaffna in as
much as he was into it full time.
He had stubbornly remained unmarried to retain his independence.
Having been a student of, and a teacher in, the Wesleyan School,
where he was the favourite of the Missionary cum Principal, Peter
Percival, Navalar, came with a good grounding in Christianity. This
helped him argue against it authoritatively.
He took to Christian methods of preaching which had been effective.
Like the Christian pastors, he preached in the places of worship.
On December 18, 1847, Navalar set the ball rolling with a lecture at
the Vaideeswara temple in Vannarpannai. He lectured there every Friday.
And he went from place to place together with his devoted colleague and
assistant, Kartikeya Aiyar of Nallur.
Taking the cue from the Christian missionaries, Navalar made his
religion relevant to real life.
In his lectures, he would stress, apart from the theological and
liturgical aspects of Saivism, the evils of adultery and drunkenness;
the virtue of non-killing; the need to treat women with respect; the
importance of giving alms; and the need to protect the cow.
Navalar gave a new interpretation to Saivisim which instilled in his
audiences pride in their traditional faith. Simultaneously, he sought
reform of Hindu society.
His endeavours helped blunt the Christian missionaries' criticism of
Hinduism and Hindu practices.
Drew similarities between Saivism and Christianity Hudson notes that
Navalar took a very novel approach to Saivism and and Christianity.
He drew similarities between them and used them to argue that the
Christian missionaries had no right to criticise Saivism and paint it in
lurid colours.
Navalar noticed striking parallels between the liturgies of the
temple in Jerusalem and the temples of Siva in Sri Lanka and India.
He pointed out that the Israelites, who were chosen by God as his own
children, believed that the Lord dwelt in the ark made of wood and lived
between the cherubim. And He had bestowed grace upon them.
Likewise, the Saivites believed that God dwelt in the idol of Siva
and bestowed grace on them.
The Israelites made a sanctuary for the worship of God. The Saivites
built temples.The Isrealites worshiped the cherubim and the bronze
serpent. The Saivites worshiped images made of gold and silver.
The Israelites displayed bread and wine in their temples. The
Saivites kept fruits as prasadam. Both Israelites and Saivites burnt
incense. The Israelites burnt the heifer (cow) and took its ashes for
use.
The Saivites used the ashes from the dung of the heifer as "Tiruneer"
or "Vibhuti".
Navalar wondered why the missionaries approved what the Israelites
did, and disapproved a similar thing done by the Saivites.
If they could justify the Israelite rituals as a means to absorb the
thoughts of God, the Saivities could justify their rituals too, he
argued.
Navalar pointed out that Christ and the early Christians followed the
rites and ceremonies of the temple.
The bible had said that it was the duty of every Christian to observe
them. How then could the missionaries now abandon them, he asked.
In Navalar's view, the proselytizing Christians were a blessing in
disguise, because he believed that Lord Siva was using the Christian
missionaries to awaken Saivites to the truths of Saivism as contained in
the Agamas.
Need for comprehensive written scripture Navalar's familiarity with
Christianity led him to feel that Saivism required a written and
revealed set of scriptures that would parallel the Bible's comprehensive
authority.
And he believed that the Agama scriptures would serve the purpose
because they eliminated the unsavory practices in popular Saivism, even
as they gave a sophisticated justification of temple worship.
Writing on Navalar's view of the Agama scriptures, Husdson writes:
"On the one hand, the Agama scriptures eliminated some of the popular
Shaiva culture, such as animal sacrifices and the worship of malevolent
deities and demons, that the missionaries attacked ceaselessly and that
had no scriptural basis".
"On the other hand, they provided a sophisticated and profound
theological interpretation of temple worship and of the Puranic stories
of the gods that nullified the sneers of the missionaries."
"Arumuga Navalar believed that the Sanskrit and Tamil scriptures of
Agamic Shaivism purified popular and Puranic religion, elevated the
ignorant, and inspired the literati."
Changes character of Hindu schools With the aid of wealthy persons in
both Sri Lanka and Tamil Nadu ( with which he was in close touch),
Navalar started many schools.
These schools taught Saivism as well as modern subjects to make them
relevant to the needs of the modernising world.
He discouraged learning by rote, which had been the traditional
method in schools, especially religious schools.
He put difficult Saivite poems and commentaries into easily
understandable prose, which would also be as elegant and thought
provoking as the original. He designed a graded Saivite curriculum.
The other most important contribution of his was the establishment of
a Saivite press with a machine he brought at Madras.
The press, which started functioning in 1850, churned out Saivite
literature and commentaries, and Navalar's own writings in a big way.
According to Hudson, the most dramatic use of the press was the
publication of anti-Christian literature between 1852 and 1854. In 1954,
came a booklet for effectively countering Christian propaganda, entitled
"Abolition of the Abuse of Saivism."
Commenting on this booklet, a missionary wrote in Morning Star that
Navalar had shown an "intimate and astonishing" acquaintance with the
Holy Bible and that he had "cunningly" defended the rituals, practices
and lingam worship of the Saivas "on the authority of our own writings!"
The missionary then concluded that it could not be denied that the
booklet had "great effect" in favour of Saivisim and against
Christianity.
Navalar's tireless work, which included ceaseless traveling, writing,
and speaking, had a telling impact on Tamil society in Jaffna.
It revived pride in the traditional religion, reinforced ties with
Hindu India, reined in the marauding state-backed missionaries, and
sowed the seeds of Tamil nationalism.
Bishop Sabhapathi Kulendran had no option but to admit that it was
largely due to Navalar that Christian conversions in Jaffna did not live
up to the promise they showed in the early part of the 19th century.
PK Balachandran is Special Correspondent of Hindustan Times in Sri
Lanka
Courtesy:
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