According to a legend, supported by
historical facts, Kizhanatham village was founded after the previous village (Vellakoil)
was totally destroyed by massive floods of the Tambiravarni river in 1760’s. The
overflow from the river caused massive destruction of property and human lives.
However, two families were able to survive the catastrophic floods because they
were able to climb up the palm trees and stay up until the floods completely
receded. These two families are considered the founders of Kizhanatham
village.During its 200-year plus history, the village, its people, and their
occupational structure have undergone profound transformation. The village has
not changed in one sense in its entire history: It was and still is a one-street
village containing approximately 80 houses as the following pictures illustrate:
photographs of Kizhanatham village taken in the year 1975
Nearly forty years ago, the village got electricity, a post office (with telephone facilities), and bus service between the village and nearby cities (Palayamkottai and Tirunelveli). Tirunelveli serves as the district (similar to the American county) headquarters and has a major railroad station with connections to all parts of the country.
Picture of Tirunelveli Junction
It has been well established that the founders
of Kizhanatham village were not natives of this area, but came from another
village (Velamur) 300 miles north of Kizhanatham village. What prompted them to
move south is not known. It was common for families to go on pilgrimages to
far-off places (several hundred miles away) by slow means of transportation
before the railroad system was introduced. Such trips took several months and
resulted in unplanned relocation of families due to family circumstances or
personal choice. For example, our grandmother (mother’s mother) came from a
family that settled down in the state of West Bengal (1600 miles from our
village) two generations earlier and was reared in a different cultural and
linguistic milieu.
It is interesting to note, however, that the
relocation of families does not alter the practice of referring to one’s
geographical origin long after the event has faded from one’s memory. Our father
was intrigued by the fact that Kizhanatham village family wedding invitations
referred to Velamur (the original village of origin) and the name was also
invoked in ancestral worship. His research led to the discovery that such a
village not only existed in reality, but the people of that village
predominantly belonged to the same caste and the Vedic group (Sama) as those of
our village. Similarly, the generations which followed my father’s most likely
refer to their village of origin as Kizhanatham, although they may have been
born and raised in major cities of India such as Bombay, Calcutta, or New Delhi,
or outside of the country and may have never seen the village. Despite the
inroads of industrialization and urbanization, the village in India continues to
serve as the source of identification.
Until the middle of the twentieth century, the
families of Kizhanatham village had modest landholdings which were leased to
farmers for cultivation. Men were usually literate and women were less so. By
the middle of the nineteenth century, with the consolidation of British rule in
the country and the establishment of an educational system which offered
opportunities for the completion of high school, the career goal of young men in
our father’s generation was to obtain clerical jobs with the state government or
the railroads built and operated by a British company. This was the beginning of
the abandonment of traditional education which prepared young men for a priestly
order and the choice of western education for employment in the British colonial
bureaucratic system.
Our grandfather was the last priest (follower
of Sama Veda) who came from a long, unbroken line of priests and performed
ceremonial duties covering such events as births, marriages, and deaths in the
village and beyond. The chain was broken by our father’s generation when he and
his two younger brothers finished high school and took up jobs with the private
sector. Our father’s older brother completed four years of college and obtained
teaching accreditation and became a teacher of mathematics. Our uncle (our
father’s older brother) was a well regarded mathematics teacher in St. Xavier’s
High School for approximately 35 years. He authored several textbooks in
mathematics and trained hundreds of students during his teaching career.
The generations which followed our father’s
have chosen and excelled in diverse occupational fields: science, engineering,
journalism, law, medicine, computer technology, teaching, business, etc. etc.
They are dispersed throughout India and other parts of the world. Our father’s
dream was to trace our family roots and their branches through a recorded system
which will perpetuate the historical legacy and serve as a psychological source
of identification for the current and future generations of men and women who
can trace their origins to the village.