First, a Short Introduction About the Dravidian Movement and DMK
Dravidian Movement begins with introduction of Dyarchy (ruled from two centers, di-) in 1919. Please kindly read this post ->Background of Dravidian Movement. The 1st world war saw monarchy collapse in Russian and German empires. Sharing of power via Dyarchy was actually a step toward balance that the British created in order to avoid such a collapse. The immediate consequence of introduction of Dyarchy was the introduction of elections in Indian politics, for the first ever time in the history of the Indian subcontinent (most probably).
So, the local elites prepared a propaganda movement in order to woo the voters though franchise was very very limited to begin with. But this was not the main agenda. The local elites- Balija Naidu (the nayakas of TN), Nattukottai Chettiars, Thuluva Vellala Mudaliars (and other castes like beri/komati chetti) were making truckloads of money through British trade. Brahmins had at one point become dominant in the Indian National Congress and started to make some serious efforts towards freedom struggle. The british saw the danger. So, they got the local elites, who were their deep allies, to thwart the Congress's efforts towards freedom struggle by attacking the Brahmins, who were the main culprits there. Also, Brahmin hate had been festering in the hearts of the vellalas from the previous century itself, so they gladly agreed.
Dravidian movement was what the Chettiars, Mudaliars and Balija Naidus (elites of TN) constructed for the British, in order to safeguard their rule in South India, and to thwart Congress's efforts towards freedom struggle.
I believe Dravidian Movement happened at the confluence of 3 forces :-
2. Elections came with Dyarchy. Elections meant votebank, and votebank means need for an agenda. Even though the franchise was 3%, the elites saw that their game was up. It was a matter of time. They created a permanent agenda. Social Justice. They didn't exactly strive for social justice. Instead, they artificially created social injustice. Chettiar + Mudaliar translated Manusmriti into tamil in 1918, when Montagu Chelmsford Reforms proposed Dyarchy (Read this -> https://thethiravidiantruth.blogspot.com/2021/07/only-we-are-reading-manusmriti-again.html). This was the social justice that Nagarathar-Mudaliar/Vellalar (Dravidian) movement created in preparation for their politics of social justice. It was an agenda for elections, and they have maintained it for a century through sheer force of propaganda.
3. The deep Brahmin hate of the local elites. Brahmin hate originated from the saiva vellalas in the end of the previous century. Saiva Vellalas were not big zamindars/political bigwigs like the Mudaliars or Chettiars, but were the most ritualistic of the non-brahmins. Saiva Vellalas are the chief creators of Brahmin hate, followed closely by chettiar and mudaliar. A bunch of Saiva Vellalas sat behind Periyar at all times. Periyar was simply a channel or a nozzle that spouted the vitriol of Brahmin hate of vellalas and nagarathars. The creators of one hundred years of Brahmin hate in Tamil Nadu are :-
a. Saiva Vellalar (Pillai)
b. Nattukottai Nagarathar (Chettiar)
c. Mudaliar
'Mudaliar' is actually a title used by many castes, but it is identified mainly with two castes. Sengundhar a.k.a Kaikolar and Thondaimandala Thuluva Vellala Mudaliar. The latter are the key players and architects of the Dravidian Movement. Except for Bharathidasan and Annadurai, Im not aware of any other Sengundhars being as active in the movt. These elites also constructed the Dravidian Movement. The british need for Brahmin hate was only political. They only needed enough to weaken the Congress, but Brahmin hate filled out far far far beyond that and became extremely visceral and personal due to the hate and malice of Chettiar-Mudaliar-Pillai. 'Dravidian' socio-political worldview and one hundred + years of Brahmin hate was from them. 'Periyar' was not a person. 'Periyar' was the name of the cult built by Chettiar-Mudaliar-Pillai. They created that cult image, and they have kept it alive till today to channelise their hate.
Anaithu Sadhi Archagar (All-caste priesthood)
The first amendment towards this was brought by Karunanidhi in 1970. This was later challenged in the famous 1972 Seshammal case. The 2nd time the DMK govt tried to do this was in 2006. That too, was challenged in court, and the final verdict was delivered in 2015 by Justice Ranjan Gogoi. These are the basic details.
Now, lets go in and see the fun. HRCE Act came in 1925. It has been amended many times both by South Indian Liberal Federation (or, 'Justice' Party), and by Dravida Mudaliar, sorry, Munnetra Kazhagam. HRCE Act of 1959 was an important one which led to formation of a department.
Now, I just want to bring to your attention the timing of the events. 1970.
We all know that 'kula kalvi thittam' was a lie and propaganda just to spite Brahmins and to force Rajaji to resign. Periyar became a 'Congress' supporter after Rajaji resigned and Kamaraj was made CM. Just look at the irony and the mockery. 'Periyar' was the weapon forged by the Chettiars/Vellalas/Mudaliars at the behest of the British in order to thwart the Congress's freedom struggle. Yet, after independence, that very same 'Periyar' supported 'Congress' for 13 years, from 1954!!!
They say that Dravidian rule in TN began in 1967. Wrong. Dravidian rule in TN began in 1954. Tamilnadu Congress is independent India's first Dravidian party. It always was, except for those 40-50 yrs in the first half of the 20th century. The current TN Congress President, K.S.Alagiri's father was a DK man. It always was and is a Dravidian Party.
After the Periyar-Kamaraj incident of 1954, Vanniyar/nadars leaders, and crowd became followers of that 'Congress'. Rajaji shortly quit from that 'Congress' for good. Periyar brought Kamaraj as CM using a lie, in 1954, then supported Kamaraj as candidate in the next 3 assembly elections - 1957, 1962, 1967. In 1967, Rajaji was supporting DMK and Periyar was supporting Congress!! Because Periyar needed the support of the lower castes groups who had numerical strength. Maybe he thought the mudaliars could take care of themselves.
Nadars and Vanniyars were happy in Congress. Then, Bhaktavatsalam Mudaliar happened. Kamaraj Nadar was kept only as a poster boy for the inclusiveness and social justice of the Nagarathar-Vellalar (Dravidian) Movement. The elites never did want to allow lower castes to rise so high. So, there was friction between the upper and lower castes within 'Congress'. After Bhaktavatsalam came, this friction became more intense. The Nadars/vanniyars started jumping to the other mudaliar party, DMK, thinking that it would be better. Hindi edhirpu (opposition) of DMK was not DMK vs centre. It was DMK vs Bhaktavatsalam. Hindi was never imposed.
This was why DMK won in 1967. Periyar supported Kamaraj as usual but was dejected after he lost. Soon after election results were announced, he expressed support for DMK -> https://thethiravidiantruth.blogspot.com/2021/07/relationships-between-kamaraj-congress.html. Periyar's rationale for supporting was simple. He followed vanniyar + nadar because those were his slaves. They had jumped to DMK because of Bhaktavatsala Mudaliar. A small tid-bit. The original Naam Nadar Party started by S.P.Adithan contested under DMK symbol in 1967 merged with DMK post elections.
Now, what happened was...Annadurai Mudaliar died in 1969. V.R.Nedunchezhiyan Mudaliar wanted to succeed Annadurai as CM. But fate had other plans. The vanniyar + nadar who had recently jumped en masse to DMK saw the vacuum that Anna's death had created, and they didn't want to fall into the clutches of another mudaliar again. They plotted. Their godfather, Periyar was with them in DMK too. And, they had another hero on their side.
WPA Soundarapandian Nadar was the champion of Nadars during Justice Party times. Then, after the 1939 temple entry, Kamaraj Nadar took that place. WPA was shunted to the side. Similarly, after 1969, Muthuvel Karunanidhi became the champion of Nadars, and Kamaraj was moved to the side. Karunanidhi was the leader of the factions of vanniyar, nadar et al, who wanted to defy mudaliar domination, right there in Dravida Mudaliar Kazhagam. Thuluva Vellala Mudaliars constructed Dravidian Movement itself. C. Natesa Mudaliar, Thiru.Vi.Ka, Arcot Ramasamy Mudaliar, V.R.Nedunchezhiyan, N.V.Natarasan, K. Anbazhagan, etc (upto Sabareesan today).
1967 Elections was Periyar + (Kamaraj) Congress vs. Rajaji + DMK
1971 Elections was Periyar + (Karunanidhi) DMK vs. Rajaji + (Kamaraj) Congress.
Just see how much change happened in just 1 election. This was because in 1969, the highjack of DMK leadership by Vanniyar + Nadar + Periyar + Karunanidhi happened.
So, this 'anaithu sadhi archagar' or 'periyar nenjil theitha mull' (the thorn in Periyar's heart) happened in between these two events, in 1970.
This was basically just a preparation for the 1971 assembly elections, and a kind of a publicity event to mark Periyar's shift from 'Congress' to DMK. A sambavam, for the memory, for commemoration.
I don't know how the amendment of 1970 was challenged right after winning the 1971 elections, in the 1972 Seshammal case. I mean, just look at the timing. 1970, 1971, 1972. Neat, isn't it? 13 brahmins are supposed to have filed the case. This is a very often heard line in DK stages. "13 பாப்பான் வழக்கு போட்டானே..." ("13 Brahmin fellows who filed that case...")
The plaintiffs of 1972 Seshammal case, as well as the DMK government's advocate general, as well as the judge who delivered the judgement, were all Brahmins!!
This is not incidental. This was planned and deliberate. They wanted to show to the people and say "See, even if we are the ruling party, and want to bring a change, we are unable to do so because parpanargal (Brahmins) are everywhere, in bureaucracy, judiciary. They are stopping us, even if we are the ruling party".
They take a few steps towards what they called social justice, then imagine up an invisible wall, which they tell people is "the hand of the Brahmin (ism). They tell the people that this wall is not letting them go further up. But of course, in reality, there is no such wall. They never want to do that thing they set out to do. They only wanted to milk the issue for its political potential, and to feed Brahmin hate to the masses. Same is happening with NEET/NEP.
The amendment that Karunanidhi brought in 1970 was introduction of a single sub-clause in the point #55 of the HRCE Act 1959.
That is, it abolished hereditary appointments to posts in the HRCE department. This included both the priests (ulthurai employees) and other govt officers like trustee, manager, etc. This is what DMK had been touting as being the attack on Brahmin priesthood. They talked *a lot* on the political stages, but the actual step they took was just this. If you see, DMK's move didn't exactly attack Brahmin priesthood directly. They just wanted to demonstrate their seriousness and intent, and milk the political benefits that came along with this.
So, DMK has taken steps towards anaithu sadhi archagar (all-caste priesthood) only twice. 1970, and 2006. 1970 was the period when Vanniyar, Nadar had shifted base to DMK and took Periyar with them. It was the period this trio had won over DMK leadership from the hands of the Mudaliars. So, this archagar stunt was a sort of celebratory firework. A 'sambavam' which would complement the general propaganda of Periyar and Dravidian Movt. They will say Periyar had spoken about this in 1929 conference itself, blah blah blah. But why didn't he take steps towards it? Hell, temple entry itself was done by Congress only, not by SILF. And the 1959 act was passed by 'Congress' when Periyar had been supporting it. Periyar and Dravidian Movement never cared for actual reform (even if this can be counted as one). They only wanted publicity, political benefit, and vent Brahmin hate.
Im pretty sure all those 13 'Brahmins' who filed the 1972 'Seshammal & ors' case (link here -> Seshammal & Ors, Etc. Etc vs State Of Tamil Nadu on 14 March, 1972) were 'asked to do so', by Chettiar-Mudaliar-Pillai (Dravidian) Movement. There are 2 sides to that group. The good cops, ஆத்திகவாதி (theists) and bad cops, கடவுள் மறுப்பாளர்கள் (the 'deniers-of-god', the periyar side). IDK if Brahmins were and are aware that these two are part of the same group, and complement each other. K. Parasaran was involved in both 1972 and 2006 cases. If somebody can, please do ask him if they were approached by somebody to file the case in 1972.
You can see very clearly that DMK never had the intent to challenge Brahmin priesthood. Just see the actual change that they brought in 1970. They only half heartedly changed hereditary appointments. If you really want non-brahmins to become priests, how would you word your amendment? If it was me, I would proclaim it somewhat like this
"Right now, only Brahmins are priests in many big temples and they have a monopoly there. This has to be changed. From now on, caste will not be a factor that will be considered for appointments of priests"
Or, something like that, right? But see the change they brought. That too, they only amended the 1959 HRCE Act. Why didn't Periyar question it back then? (Answer : Because it did not have political potential back then, or, they were not in a mood to politicize it any further. If they want, they can weaponize and politicize anything. Such is the power of their propaganda and sway over the tamil psyche).
This is the first layer. There are many layers to this issue. I will delve a little into the legal part now.
Legal Part
Article 25 & 26 of the Indian constitution protect religious rights.
Article 13 says that all laws which are inconsistent with, or trample upon the fundamental rights, are void.
Articles 14-18 talk about equality before law. Article 17 abolishes untouchability. Article 19 gives all citizens the right to settle anywhere in the country and to take up any profession that they wish. What are the fundamental rights under constitution of India.
These are the laws we need to be aware of, in order to understand this issue. Pretty simple stuff.
Basically, in 1970, the argument of the Dravidian Movement in the courts was that the exclusive appointments of Brahmins as priests is against the fundamental rights given to everybody. Violates articles 14, 15, 16, 19, etc.
So, any law, or practice/custom, has to pass the fundamental laws as above. Articles 25 & 26 are limited by the fundamental rights.
As we know, there are certain documents/scriptures known as 'agama'.
We will not understand the issue and see the games if we do not see beyond the halo that has been built around certain words and concepts. There are many such strong connotations loaded onto the word 'agama' too. Evokes strong emotions. But very few go deeper.
What are 'agamas'? 'agama' itself is supposed to be a sanskrit word. It is a generic term, like "book", or "scripture". Agamas are religious documents. But, it is a generic term. The agamas of Assam need not be similar to, or have a connection to, agamas of Tamil Nadu. Agamas are like a handbook for temples and religious stuff. They carry rules for how religious procedures should be carried out, and also other philosophical stuff.
The agamas of Tamil Nadu are unique.
Nellai Kannan and other vellalas often say that Brahmins cannot enter some of their saivite temples/mutts because that would desecrate them. தீட்டு பட்டுடுமாம். This is apparently written in their agamas.
Some agamas say that while the idol of some god/deity is brought out, a few hundreds of temple dancers (devadasis) must be present outside the temple, or should be dancing in the hall, or whatever. We know what kind of places temples were, in Tamil Nadu, until recently. Its a separate topic in itself. Point is...agamas are rarely consistent with each other. It is the 'practice' that matters.
So basically, agamas are the rulebooks for the temples and religious activities. It is not exactly known who the authors of the collection of documents/scriptures of the works that go by the generic name, 'agama', were (In TN). Such unknown authorship often carries an aura of mystique, which is a good thing, in religion. As if the works were written by the invisible hand of God, or by persons in whom God had temporarily taken residence. 'Inspiration'. These elements of 'mystery' might be useful within the domain of religion and spirituality, but disadvantageous in socio-politics, and legal proceedings.
Within TN, there are many many 'agamas', and of course, a lot them contradict each other. It has been the 'practice' in TN to appoint priestly Brahmins of certain specific texts to be the priests in certain temples. Thillai Chidambaram Temple, for ex, is run by podhu dikshitars. And, apparently, the agamas dictate that only a certain subsect of Brahmin priests, trained in certain agamas, can be priests in particular types of temples. Having said that agamas are highly flexible and non-consistent, we can of course find another agama which says that caste should strictly not be followed in matters of priesthood. In fact, they are so flexible that I can write such an agama today, and say that "agamas are in favor of Anaithu Sadhiyinarum Archagar". The key point is that this has been the *current practice*, and it has been done in the name of agamas.
Just like Constitution, IPC, etc contain the formal laws of the land, we can say that in TN, 'agamas' are some sort of a lawbook that are applicable only within the realm of religious worship. An informal, or, native lawbook for worship.
The term 'agamic temples' or 'agama-governed' temples is important. It automatically means that there are such things as non-agamic temples. So, presumably, the important, big, money-making temples are all agamic temples. Agama-governed temples are run according to the rule of the agama. But do all agamas agree on all rules? No, right? So how do these 'agamic temples' decide which rule to follow? I don't know.
What I do know is that temples are not exactly public property. Certain people, or groups, have a greater say in the temples. This is simply because they were the investors. The 'practices' of temples in TN have the approval of these decision-makers. The trustees of big 'agamic temples' are from this group too. So, the agamas are secondary. The will of this group is primary.
Since agamas are highly flexible, this group can approve something, and make it seem as if it is being carried out 'according to the agamas'. For any X, you can find some part of the agama that says X is the rightest thing to do, and also some other agama that says that X is wrong, or not compulsory. It's up to the interpretation. What im trying to convey is that it is not the agama we must focusing on, but the will/wishes of the groups with deciding power. The groups who are also the 'trustees' a lot of time. Nagarathar + Vellalar.
So, in general, the agamas say the Brahmins must be priests in the temples (following subsect, agama-training rules, ofc), and this has been the practice too. Let's forget the fact that Dravidian Movement only took forward a ghost-step in 1970, and only their talk was big. Let's try to find answers to the questions.
It is believed that agamas to say that Brahmins should be priests in the temples, and Dravidian movement filed a case saying that this is a casteist thing to do, and that this also goes against the fundamental rights enshrined in the constitution. Articles 25 & 26 give everyone the right to practice and preach any religion, but no law, including 25 & 26, can violate the fundamental rights of equality. This seems to be the heart of the conflict. But it's not.
These were the arguments placed by both the opposing groups. Brahmins often take the stance of the 2nd group, as described in the above paragraph. But IMO this is a wrong thing to do. We are not seeing the games that are being played.
Dravidian Movement creates a build-up as if its really against 'Brahmin' priesthood and that an attack on this Brahmin priesthood is an attack on the caste system itself. This is the part that we need to expose and attack. They never meant to break Brahmin priesthood. I mean, look at the sub-clause of section (55) that DMK amended in 1970! Does that look like revolution? And, attacking Brahmins or Brahmin priesthood does nothing to weaken caste system.
The verdict of the 1972 Seshammal case was that appointments based on hereditary principle could be abolished, but that new appointments must happen as per agamic rules. In other words, only those denominations could be appointed as priests. This is when Periyar famously said "operation success but patient dead".
But see the game. DMK deliberately only attacked hereditary appointments in 1970. They didn't attack the 'practice' of Brahmin priesthood, or those parts of the agamas that spoke of appointing denominations of priests at temples. They only attacked hereditary appointments. So, the court said "that is ok, but you still have to follow agamas". If Dravidian Movement really wanted to do this, couldn't they have worded their 1970 amendments more strongly? This is obvious even to the casual outsider. They only ever bothered about the political mileage in the issue.
Of course, they will say "இதுவே முடியல. இன்னும் ஆகமத்தை, பார்ப்பன பூசாரி நியமனத்தை வெளிப்படையா எதிர்க்க பார்ப்பனீயம் அனுமதித்திருக்குமா?".
("Brahminism hit us back even for touching hereditary appointments. Do you think it would have allowed us to attack the base of the tree, i.e., agamas, or Brahmin priesthood, as a whole?")
They will keep creating that illusion of the invisible hand of the 'Brahmin', the Brahmin ghost. To see their games, we have to look closer.
So, the G.O. said that “Any person who is a Hindu and possessing the requisite qualification and training can be appointed as a Archaka in Hindu temples”. Later, they did a lot of hanky panky business. They brought an ordinance, and then an act. An ordinance is like a temporary law (அவசர சட்டம்). The ordinance contained very strong words. The G.O. was, as you can see above, generic. The act did not contain the changes suggested by the ordinance!
So, the ordinance was brought just for show (பூச்சாண்டி). This whole game itself is for show only. appointments must be within the rules of the agamas. If Dravidian Movement really wanted to bring a change, they must have expressly attacked the *verdict of the 1972 Seshammal Case*. They didn't, because this was all for political mileage and Brahmin hate. They didn't care about the actual Brahmin priesthood. There is a twist there. I'll get to that in a while.
DMK govt's 1970 amendment/act only roughly restated the existing practice.
We can't show openly if the people, the so-called brahmins who challenged DMK's 1970 amendment were sent by Chettiar-Mudaliar-Pillai (Dravidian) Movement. I personally can connect the dots easily, but I can't substantiate, for now.
But, 2006 is pretty much straightforward. The group which filed a petition against DMK in 2006 was - 'Adi Sivachariargal Nala Sangam'. If you watch the following clip, you will notice two things.
b. The archakar (priests) who filed the 2006 petition against DMK, and the ADMK govt were talking with each other for an 'out of court settlement'.
The ADMK part is probably a hoax. It was the DMK, or vellalas, who are common to both. Those petitioners were not Brahmins at all! They are vellalas. And, the group which made DMK play such a drama are also vellalas!!! Sathyavel Murugan was the agama-expert who appeared on behalf of the Dravidian Movement, and there were other vellalas with him too. Do you see the game?
The vellalas sat on the Dravidian Movement side, playing the drama of social justice. There, they said, and made other people say, that opposing (hating) Brahmins was an important prerequisite for social justice. They carried out this Brahmin hate, have been doing it for a century now. The Brahmin hate of DMK, DK, Karunanidhi, and Periyar was from the Chettiars and Vellalas. This also gave a lot of political mileage to DMK. They could tell the people that they were fighting against the great brahminical oppression, and saving tamils from it.
Then, on this side, they resisted and sought to undo the very same changes that they had tried to bring, from that side. This is clear as daylight in the 2006 case, and yet to be substantiated in the 1972 Seshammal case, but it is not too far a stretch at all.
The bad cops, the 'deniers-of-god' (நாத்திகவாதி) Nagarathar-Vellalar carry out Brahmin hate disguised in various ways as 'social justice', 'caste annihilation', etc. The good cops, the believers, ஆத்திகவாதி Nagarathar-Vellalar cancel out and retracts the steps taken by the above group towards those ends. So what remains?
You can observe this ஆத்திகவாதி-நாத்திகவாதி technique of A+B - B followed even in NEET. They know that NEET is going to stay anyways. So why oppose? There is political benefit in opposing. In 'trying' to change, even if they know it is impossible, or that they are not going to do it.. It is important to rip open their games fully because if NEET is indeed stopped for other reasons, then it will appear like their victory, and make all their other propaganda true.
So, they 'took a step forward', did Brahmin hate, then arranged for their own step to be retraced by sending a group to oppose them. Adi Saiva Sivachariar are not Brahmins at all. Dravidian Movement never wanted to attack Brahmin priesthood. Even if they wanted to, there is no need to fight the Brahmins, or get their approval. The Nagarathar/Vellalar/Mudaliar who created the Dravidian Movement are themselves the trustees of the big temples and mutts. They are the deciding authority. There is no need to fight or oppose the Brahmin, but they did. This is what I call infinite malice.