Sakkiliar

Sakkiliar

Arunthathiyar are one of the most marginalized social groups or castes from Tamil Nadu and [[Sri LankakopkopkopkopkopAlong with Pallar and Parayar, they form the largest Dalit group. The Indian census of 2001 reported the Arunthathiyar population to be 15,00,000 (pdf)

Contents

Primary function

At some point in history, a class of people who were soldiers and military commanders were forced into submission of menial labor due to political and social change. This resulted in this community’s devolution to the low caste status it has today. This is well reflected in the number of freedom fighters that this community produced in the pre Indian independence era. While there are several similar castes across India, this seems to be the only community that has its origins in the warrior class. The most notable are Chamars, Jhatia, Mathigas, Chandala and those of North India. At present the Arunthathiyar fall into the class of Dalits in the Indian communal structure. The place of residence of arunthathiyar (sakkiliar) is said to be "palayam" which litterally means the place of army who did the kavalgars job. The below article explains the supreme bravery and the systematic suppression metted out to this community.

http://princelystatesofindia.com/Polegars/polegars.html

Spread to Modern Urban indian Cities

With the migration of many rural workers to urban areas, the landscape of urban cities has changed. The Arunthathiyar have taken a prominent role into labor supply of the construction industry in the rapidly ever changing urban cities of south India.

Sakkili as a derogotary term

Sakkili is a term used by certain Flame Warriors from Sri Lanka, partisan to the Sinhalese nationalistic cause in the current civil war to describe all Sri Lankan Tamils (native) and has been noted by sociologists. This is a racist term and a very offensive term in Sri Lanka. Information provided is wrong here and there's no reference. Remove.

Due to the negative connotation associated with this word the community has changed it name to Arunthathiyar using Sanskritisation myths of origin from a daughter of a mythical Brahmin sage named Arundati.

See also

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka — ethnic group| group=Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka poptime=855,025 (2001) citeweb|url= http://www.statistics.gov.lk/PopHouSat/PDF/Population/p9p8%20Ethnicity.pdf title= Statistics Sri Lanka, Population by district and ethnicity |accessdate=2008 02 21 …   Wikipedia

  • Caste system in Sri Lanka — The Caste system in Sri Lanka is a division of society into strata, differing somewhat from the classic Varnas of North India but is similar in nature to the Jāti system found in South India. The fourfold caste model in Sri Lanka s pre British… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Nepal-related topics — This is a list of topics related to Nepal. Those interested in the subject can monitor changes to the pages by clicking on Related changes in the sidebar.Nepal* Nepal * Nepal, Travel information * * Nepal Bhasa * Institute of Medicine, Nepal *… …   Wikipedia

  • Telugu castes — The Hindu Telugu society is classified into a number of castes based on occupation.=Forward Caste=Forward castes are castes that are politically, educationally and financially well off and don t qualify for government reservations in educational… …   Wikipedia

  • Diarchy in Madras Presidency — Diarchy was established in Madras Presidency based on the recommendations of the Montague Chelmsford report. Five elections were held during the period diarchy was in effect and Justice Party occupied power most of the time. It ended with the… …   Wikipedia

  • Indische Tamilen in Sri Lanka — Bevölkerungsanteil der indischen Tamilen in Sri Lanka auf Distriktebene nach dem Zensus von 2001 bzw. 1981 (in kursiver Schrift) Indische Tamilen oder Hochlandtamilen sind in Sri Lanka derjenige Teil der tamilischen Bevölkerung, der während der… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”