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The demand for a Dravida Nadu is a warning signal which Delhi needs to heed

Nilu Pule

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The historian Dharampal has a wonderful anecdote about villagers in India in the 16th and 17th century. He said the archives revealed that whenever villagers were fed up with the king for the authoritarian way he treated them, they would abandon the kingdom and move to a new place. The king had to follow them and apologise for his behaviour if he wanted them to return.

Dharampal’s research points out that secession has always been a part of folklore. One realises that even the disciplinary structures of the nation-state have not quite changed this mentality. The emerging nation-state always flaunted the story of Sardar Patel`s attempt to tame erring principalities as a counter legend. In the initial years, the federal framework tames the secessionist imagination except in Kashmir and the North East. But today, as the BJP’s centralism and the juggernaut of the RSS becomes more stark, some kind of secessionist statement is seen as part of an opposition identity.

Two events in recent times were extremely significant. The first was Chandrababu Naidu’s call for a federation of southern states to fight the BJP’s onslaught. Naidu visualised it within the electoral framework but also as a way of giving the South both financial and political breathing space from the BJP. The second call, raised by the DMK leader Stalin that raised memories of linguistic secession, was the project of Dravida Nadu.


The idea in fact was proposed decades earlier by Periyar’s Justice Party. It spread from Tamil regions to embrace all Dravidian languages. By the 1950s, the dream of Dravida Nadu faded, though language was still a pressing issue. But today one sees a resurgence of southern and Tamil nationalism, centring on a feeling that the South is different. What once centred on language has burgeoned into a general dissatisfaction. One saw evidence of it when a younger generation argued for jallikattu. One sensed it in the manner in which Tamils have reacted to the way the Centre has responded to the Sri Lankan problem. In 2017, it acquired a new dimension with the notification banning the sale of cattle for slaughter. A Twitter war ensued in which Kerala refused to comply with the diktats. By 2018, what was a shopping list of dissatisfactions turned into a political battle over the Centre`s economic neglect of Southern states. Stalin and Naidu provided variations of this demand. On Tuesday, ministers and officials from Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Puducherry met in Thiruvananthapuram to discuss the concerns and views on the terms of reference of the 15th Finance Commission. Telangana and Tamil Nadu did not take part in the conclave.

What one is witnessing here is not the old demand for secession. What one is seeing is a larger demand for autonomy, for states to be seen as political entities . Within the electoral framework, one wants a distance not from the general idea of India and being Indian but from the BJP’s centralism. These are not alienated cries from politicians fighting for survival. These are acute political strategies by politicians who know the people on the ground. Instead of condemning this as unpatriotic or anti-national, the BJP must examine its own conduct. Democracy is based on negotiation and it is time the question of federalism comes in for a longer debate.

On the other hand, there is a temptation to read the idea of Dravida Nadu as a failed one despite being launched again and again. Kamal Haasan and Stalin were the latest to dwell on it. Yet one needs to understand that flagging the concept semaphores a set of ideas. First, the distinctness of culture and of region. Second, a sense of the arrogance of the North and its illiteracy about the South. Third, a sense that the South has been neglected when it comes to economic decisions. In each of these cases, one sees two tactics. It often expresses itself as a search for more autonomous states looking for special status or for a sense of the solidarity with the region. If the earlier moves were rhetorical, the new strategy seems more strategic. Tamil nationalism or southern regionalism becomes a bargaining chip one brings to the negotiating table, ever present in the psyche of the people. It is a force that can be tapped into.

https://m.hindustantimes.com/analys...eds-to-heed/story-wB3VraPBhhVsBngyU6tfpJ.html

@kvpak @manlion @Ocean @Peshwa
 
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Meanwhile some real heroes,

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...-stall-and-marathons/articleshow/63649905.cms

This 45-year-old mom runs a tea stall and marathons
TNN | Updated: Apr 7, 2018, 09:00 IST

One is never too old to participate in marathons, says 45-year-old A Kalaimani, an athlete and marathoner. “Opportunities are there for people even up to the age 100 to participate in the Masters athletic championships. This is a sure way to keep oneself fit and ward off ailments, she says.

Kalaimani, who runs a tea stall in the city, has been participating in 21-km marathons with her team ‘Phoenix Runners’. She never misses her morning workout sessions; every Sunday she runs for 21 km as part of her practise to achieve her goal, the 41-km marathon. “I want to complete the 41-km marathon in four hours,” said Kalaimani. She has participated in national and state level Masters athletics events and won four gold medals.

Kalaimani, a native of Pudukkottai, had studied up to Class X; in school she used to participate in kabadi and athletics events. She got married when she was 20 to P Azhagu. “I told my husband that I would continue to pursue athletics. He agreed,” she said.

Since marriage, she has been assisting her husband to run the tea shop in Telungu Street – Thomas Street corner in the city. Kalaivani, who is the master in the tea stall, has two sons - A Prabhu, 24, A Prabhakaran, 21, both school van drivers - and A Priyanka, 19, who is studying BSc. “Ten years ago, my husband came to know about Masters athletics events and asked me to participate.

I was not aware about such an event and approached many people. Finally, I was brought under the tutelage of coach Joseph who made me to participate in district, state and national level athletic events for Masters,” she said.

Trained in 400 metres and 800 metres sprinting events, she won three gold medals in a state level athletic meet held at Pugalore in Karur district in December 2017. She also won gold in the 800 metres event in the National Masters Athletic Championship held in Coimbatore in 2014. She won the third place in the 1,500 metres event in the national meet.

At the national meet in Bengaluru in February 2018, she could not win in any event. “Due to family issues, I was not able to perform well in the national meet. However, I am taking intensive training and will grab gold medals the next time,” said Kalaimani.

“I am keen on taking part in marathons. So, I joined the Phoenix Runners team and took training for the marathon. I used to wake up at 4am and prepare breakfast for my family. Around 5am, I used to drop my husband at the tea stall and go for practise. Every Sunday, our team members cover 21km. Now I am taking special practise to run 41km,” she added.
Kalaimani won the first place in the 21-km marathon held at Annur last month. “I want to take part in marathons across the country,” she said.

“Many women who have been active in the athletics circuit sacrifice their dream after marriage for the family. They should come forward and there are lots of opportunities for people of all ages in the Masters athletic championships,” said Kalaimani.
 
. . .
Meanwhile some real heroes,

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...-stall-and-marathons/articleshow/63649905.cms

This 45-year-old mom runs a tea stall and marathons
TNN | Updated: Apr 7, 2018, 09:00 IST

One is never too old to participate in marathons, says 45-year-old A Kalaimani, an athlete and marathoner. “Opportunities are there for people even up to the age 100 to participate in the Masters athletic championships. This is a sure way to keep oneself fit and ward off ailments, she says.

Kalaimani, who runs a tea stall in the city, has been participating in 21-km marathons with her team ‘Phoenix Runners’. She never misses her morning workout sessions; every Sunday she runs for 21 km as part of her practise to achieve her goal, the 41-km marathon. “I want to complete the 41-km marathon in four hours,” said Kalaimani. She has participated in national and state level Masters athletics events and won four gold medals.

Kalaimani, a native of Pudukkottai, had studied up to Class X; in school she used to participate in kabadi and athletics events. She got married when she was 20 to P Azhagu. “I told my husband that I would continue to pursue athletics. He agreed,” she said.

Since marriage, she has been assisting her husband to run the tea shop in Telungu Street – Thomas Street corner in the city. Kalaivani, who is the master in the tea stall, has two sons - A Prabhu, 24, A Prabhakaran, 21, both school van drivers - and A Priyanka, 19, who is studying BSc. “Ten years ago, my husband came to know about Masters athletics events and asked me to participate.

I was not aware about such an event and approached many people. Finally, I was brought under the tutelage of coach Joseph who made me to participate in district, state and national level athletic events for Masters,” she said.

Trained in 400 metres and 800 metres sprinting events, she won three gold medals in a state level athletic meet held at Pugalore in Karur district in December 2017. She also won gold in the 800 metres event in the National Masters Athletic Championship held in Coimbatore in 2014. She won the third place in the 1,500 metres event in the national meet.

At the national meet in Bengaluru in February 2018, she could not win in any event. “Due to family issues, I was not able to perform well in the national meet. However, I am taking intensive training and will grab gold medals the next time,” said Kalaimani.

“I am keen on taking part in marathons. So, I joined the Phoenix Runners team and took training for the marathon. I used to wake up at 4am and prepare breakfast for my family. Around 5am, I used to drop my husband at the tea stall and go for practise. Every Sunday, our team members cover 21km. Now I am taking special practise to run 41km,” she added.
Kalaimani won the first place in the 21-km marathon held at Annur last month. “I want to take part in marathons across the country,” she said.

“Many women who have been active in the athletics circuit sacrifice their dream after marriage for the family. They should come forward and there are lots of opportunities for people of all ages in the Masters athletic championships,” said Kalaimani.
45-year-old is nothing comparing with this Sikh dude: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ompleting-10km-race-sprightly-92-minutes.html
 
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Lol

@SunilM told us we are flat Broke


Surprise Surprise...Pakistan has got some pockets of Dravidian lineage...in Balochistan. if you look into the two main civilizations Aryans and Dravidians, initially Dravidians were in majority in the earlier millennia.


dravid-sindh-connection1.jpg
 
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