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The tale of Bharatha Matha temple, a pet project of C.R. Das and Subramania Siva

The tale of Bharatha Matha temple, a pet project of C.R. Das and Subramania Siva

The Hindu06-05-2025
Congress veteran Kumari Ananthan (1933-2025), who passed away recently, had vigorously pursued a project in the later years of his life: the Bharatha Matha temple in a remote corner of the backward Dharmapuri district.
Actually, he had only followed up on what was initiated by two Congress stalwarts: former president of the All India Congress Committee C.R. Das (1870-1925), famously called Deshbandhu, and Subramania Siva (1884-1925). Coincidentally, this year marks the 100th death anniversary of the two leaders: Das died on June 16 and Siva on July 23. Siva, also known as Sivam, was one of Tamil Nadu's triumvirate of the freedom struggle; the others were V. O. Chidambaram (VOC) (1872-1936) and Subramania Bharati (1882-1921). Besides being a powerful orator, Siva was a writer-journalist. This great lover of Tamil had quoted from The Thirukkural to illustrate the 'tyrannical rule' of the British, something that had landed him in prison.
Das lays the foundation
Two years before his death, Das laid the foundation for the temple at Paparapatti in Pennagaram taluk, about 25 km from Dharmapuri. According to a report published in The Hindu on June 26, 1923, Das reached Paparapatti at 11 a.m. from Bangalore where he was a guest of Adinarayana Chettiar. 'The scene there was a memorable one. The entire village and the approaches had been beautifully decorated and lavishly beflagged... People had gathered in tens of thousands, nearly half the number being women,' says the report.
The report goes on to say that Chinnamuthu Mudaliar, chairman of the taluk board of Dharmapuri, then part of Salem district, donated land for the temple. He also announced that a purse of ₹501, on behalf of 'people of Paparapatty', would be presented to Das. The former AICC president made a 'short but eloquent' address, which was translated by Siva into Tamil. In his speech, Das, who later visited the house of Mudaliar, emphasised that 'various activities of a nation' — social and political — were but 'different manifestations' of the same impulse and had 'but one goal'.
Though Siva was born at Batlagundu (Vathalagundu in Tamil), now part of Dindigul district, he had spent his last years in Paparapatti. By then, he suffered from leprosy, which he contracted while serving a prison term during the British Raj. Siva became the first patriot in the Madras Presidency (encompassing many parts of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Odisha) to be found guilty and imprisoned on the charge of sedition in King Emperor vs Subramania Siva and V.O. Chidambaram Pillai.
The case was filed in connection with Siva's four public speeches at Thoothukudi (then Tuticorin) on February 23, 25 and 26, and March 5, 1908, to mark the release of Bipin Chandra Pal (1858-1932), a torch-bearer of the renaissance in Bengal. In March 1907, Pal was charged by the Bengal government with contempt of court and awarded a six-month imprisonment. VOC was accused of organising those events, though he did not take part in any of them. Siva was awarded a sentence of 10 years of transportation and VOC was awarded transportation for life. The severity of the punishment not only attracted widespread condemnation from a host of leaders but also triggered a wave of unrest and violence in the undivided Tirunelveli district that included the present-day Thoothukudi and Tenkasi districts. Owing to a variety of factors, Tirunelveli Collector Robert William d'Escourt Ashe was assassinated by Vanchinathan at the Maniyachi railway junction three years later.
After the release, Siva's movement was restricted because of his illness and the stipulation of the British authorities. Yet, he managed to reach Paparapatti where Mudaliar had supported him. Siva wanted the temple to come up in his lifetime. That was not to be. For over 75 years, the project went out of public discourse. It returned to prominence during the second half of the DMK government (2006-11) ahead of the Pennagaram Assembly constituency by-election in March 2010. Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi announced the sanction of ₹40 lakh for the 205-square metre memorial for Siva on 85 cents at Paparapatti. In August 2010, Information Minister Parithi Ilamvazhuthi laid the foundation, and in July 2011, Chief Minister Jayalalithaa declared the memorial open.
Demand renewed
It was then that the demand for the construction of the Bharatha Matha temple was renewed. In October 2012, to mark the 129th birth anniversary of Siva, Collector R. Lilly announced that the temple would come up soon. Kumari Ananthan began raising the demand again on various fora, including the Madras High Court. In October 2017, he even embarked on a 'padayatra'. When he wanted to observe a fast at the Siva memorial, he was removed from there and taken to the Dharmapuri government hospital because of his age. He was then 84. Though he had initially wanted the government to build the temple or let the others build it, he pitched for the government to take up the project when the RSS-affiliated Akhila Bharatiya Sanyasigal Sangam formed the Subramniya Siva Bharat Ashram Trust with a proposal to build the temple at a cost of ₹5 crore. In June 2018, the AIADMK government, led by Edappadi K. Palaniswami, announced that the temple would be built at an estimated cost of ₹1.5 crore. In August 2021, the Bharatha Matha Ninaivalayam, furnished with a library, had a low-key inauguration amid the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, with Information Minister M.P. Saminathan declaring it open. It took more than 95 years for the wish of Das and Siva to come true.
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