Thunchaththu Ezhuthachan
Thunchaththu Ramanujan Ezhuthachan was a Malayalam devotional poet, translator and linguist from Kerala, south India. He has been called the "Father of Modern Malayalam", or, alternatively, the "Father of Malayalam Literature", or the "Primal Poet in Malayalam". He was one of pioneers of a major shift in Kerala literary production. The number and circulation of his texts far outdo that of any other poet of premodern Kerala.
Ezhuthachan was born in the Thunchaththu home near present-day Ponnani, northern Kerala, in a traditional Hindu family of the Sudra caste. Little is known with certainty about his life. His success even in his own lifetime seems to have been great. Later he or his followers shifted to a village near Palakkad, further east into the Kerala, and established a hermitage and a Brahmin residence there. This institution probably housed both Brahmin and Sudra literary students. The school eventually pioneered the "Ezhuthachan movement", associated with the concept of popular Bhakti, in Kerala. Ezhuthachan's ideas have been variously linked by scholars either with philosopher Ramananda, who founded the Ramanandi sect, or Ramanuja, the single most influential thinker of devotional Hinduism.
For centuries before Ezhuthachan, Kerala people had been producing literary texts in Malayalam and in the Arya Scripts. However, he is celebrated as the "Primal Poet" or the "Father of Malayalam Proper" for his Malayalam recomposition of the Sanskrit epic Ramayana. This work rapidly circulated around Kerala middle-caste homes as a popular devotional text. It can be said that Ezhuthachan brought the then unknown Sanskrit-Puranic literature to the level of common understanding. His other major contribution has been in mainstreaming the current Malayalam alphabet.
Historical Ezhuthachan
There is no firm historical evidence for Ezhuthachan the author.Main historical sources of Ezhuthachan and his life are
- Quasi-historical verses referring to Ezhuthachan.
- An institutional line of masters or gurus, beginnng with one Thunchaththu Sri Guru, is mentioned in one oral verse fom Chittur Madhom. This lineage can be historically verified.
- An inscription giving the details of the founding of the residence, hermitage, and temples in Chittur. This was under the direction of Suryanarayanan Ezhuthachan. This locale can be historically verified.
Period
- Arthur C. Burnell dates Ezhuthachan to seventeenth century. He discovered the date from a title deed. The deed relates to the date of the founding of the Gurumadhom of Chittur.
- William Logan dates Ezuthachan to the seventeenth century.
- Hermann Gundert dates Ezuthachan to the seventeenth century.
- Kovunni Nedungadi dates Ezuthachan to the fifteenth century.
- Govinda Pillai dates Ezuthachan to the fifteenth or sixteenth century. He cites the Kali chronogram 'ayurarogyaa saukhyam' that appears at end of the Narayaneeyam of Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri.
- A. R. Kattayattu Govindra Menon cites the Kali chronogram 'pavitramparam saukhyam' as a reference to the date of Ezuthachan 's samadhi.
- Chittur Gurumadhom authorities also cites the chronogram 'pavitramparam saukhyam' as a reference to the date of Ezuthachan 's samadhi. The word 'surya' is sometimes suffixed to the chronogram.
- R. Narayana Panikkar supports Govinda Pillai's date. The date is based on Ezhuthachan's contemporaneity with Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri. He also mentions certain Nilakanthan "Namdudiri", a possible senior contemporary of Ezhuthachan.
- P. K. Narayana Pillai cites a Kali chronogram 'nakasyanyunasaukhyam' or 1555 AD on the date of Ezhuthachan. He dates Nilakanthan, the posible master of Ezhuthachan, to c. 1502 AD.
- Poet-turned-historian Ulloor S. Parameshwara Iyer has argued that Ezhuthachan was born in 1495 AD and lived up to 1575 AD
- A time frame similar to Ulloor was proposed by scholar C. Radhakrishnan.
- Scholar Sheldon Pollock dates Ezuthachan to the sixteenth century.
- Rich Freeman dates dates Ezhuthachan to late sixteenth-early seventeenth century.
Life and career
Biography
Little is known with certainty about Ezhuthachan's life.Ezhuthachan was born at Trikkandiyoor, near the modern-day town of Tirur, in northern Kerala. It is known that his lineage home was "Thunchaththu". His parents' names are not known, and there are disputes about his given name as well. The name Ezhuthachan, meaning Father of Letters, was a generic title for any village schoolteacher in premodern Kerala.
As a boy he seems to have exihibited uncommon intelligence. He was probably educated by his elder brother. After his early education he is believed to have travelled in the other parts of India and learned Sanskrit and some other Dravidian languages.
It is believed that Ezhuthachan on his way back from Tamil Nadu had a stopover at Chittur and in due course settled down at Thekke Gramam near Anikkode with his disciples. A hermitage and a Brahmin residence, at a site now known as the Chittur Gurumadhom, were established by him. The institution was flanked by temples of gods Rama and Siva. It probably housed both Brahmin and Sudra students. The street still has an array of agraharas.
Ezhuthachan was eventually associated with an institutional line of masters. The locale and lineage of these masters can be historically verified. He and his disciples seem to have ignited a whole new literary movement in Kerala. Its style and content nearly overshadowed the earlier Sanskrit poetry. He is believed to have attained samadhi at the Gurumadhom at Chittur. A verse chanted by the ascetics of the mathom during their daily prayers makes a reference to the following line of masters.
- Thunchaththu Sri Guru
- Sri Karunakaran
- Sri Suryanarayanan
- Sri Deva Guru
- Sri Gopala Guru
Myths and legends
- Legends consider Ezhuthachan as a "gandharva" who in his previous birth was a witness to the Great War in the Mahabharata.
- As a young boy Ezhuthachan corrected the Brahmins at Trikkandiyoor Temple.
- The Brahmins grew uneasy and gave the boy some plantains to eat, and as a resulting ebriety the boy lost his speech. To counteract this Ezhuthachan's father gave him palm beverage and the boy had his speech restored. Ezhuthachan remained addicted to intoxicants.
- Saraswati, the Godess of Learning and Arts, is believed to have helped him to complete the Devi Mahatmya.
- Ezhuthachan is credited with endowing a monkey with the gift of speech.
- It is believed that the Raja of Ambalappuzha requested him to decipher a Telugu manuscript on Adhyatma Ramayanam.
- It is also said that Ezhuthachan had a young daughter, who copied his works for the first time.
- Ezhuthachan or his follower Suryanarayanan predicted the downfall of zamorin's family. And the zamorin sought his help to perform a Sakteya Puja.
- It is said that Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri sought the advice of Ezhuthachan on how to start his Narayaneeyam.
Contributions
Ezhuthachan's other major contribution has been in mainstreaming Malayalam alphabet as the replacement for the old Vattezhuthu. The Arya script permitted the free use of Sanskrit in Malayalam writing.
Ezhuthachan movement
Ezhuthachan introduced a movement of domesticised religious textuality in Kerala. He was a significant voice of the Bhakti movement in south India. The Bhakti movement was a collective opposition to Brahmanical excesses and the moral and political decadence of the then-Kerala society. The shift of literary production in Kerala to a largely Sanskritic, puranic religiosity is attributed this movement. Ezhuthachan's school promoted popular and non-Brahman literary production. His works were also a general opposition against the moral decadence of the 16th century Kerala society.''Adhyatma Ramayanam''
Adhyatma Ramayanam, written in the parrot-song style, is Ezhuthachan's principle work. It is not an adaptation from the original Valmiki Ramayana, but a translation of the Adhyatma Ramayana, a Sanskrit text connected with the Ramanandi sect. The poem is composed in nearly-modern Malayalam. It depicts Rama, the prince of Ayodhya, as an ideal figure.The text spread with phenomenal popularity throughout Kerala middle-caste homes as a material for domestic devotional recitation. Throughout the Malayalam month of Karkkidakam, Adhyatma Ramayanam is still recited—as a devotional practice—in the middle-caste homes of Kerala.
According to critic K. Ayyappa Panicker, those who see Adhyatma Ramayanam merely as a devotional work "belittle" Ezhuthachan.
Style
Parrot-song style
- Known in Malayalam as the Kilippattu genre.
- A convention Ezhuthachan adapted from Old Tamil.
- Recited to a poet by a parrot.
- Thematic focus: epic or Puranic traditions.
- Intended for recitation or singing.
- Heavily Sanskritic lexicon with many Sanskrit nominal terminations.
- No Sanskrit verbal forms or long compounds.
- Most of the grammatical structures are in Malayalam.
- Assembled in an array of Dravidian meters.
- * "Keka" for Bala Kandha and Aranya Kandha
- * "Kakali" for Ayodhya, Kishkindha and Yuddha Kandha
- * "Kalakanchi" for Sundara Kandha
Caste
The two most popular opinions are Ezhuthachan and Nair, with Kaniyar being less popular.
Ezhuthachan
is a socio-economic caste of village school teachers.According to Arthur C. Burnell, Thunchaththu Ezhuthachan belonged to the Ezhuthachan or "school master" caste. Writer K. Balakrishna Kurup also reports the same, in his book :ml:വിശ്വാസത്തിന്റെ കാണാപ്പുറങ്ങൾ|Viswasathinte Kanappurangal. E. P. Bhaskara Guptan, a writer and independent researcher of local history from Kadampazhipuram; supports Kurup's conclusion. Historian :ml:വേലായുധൻ പണിക്കശ്ശേരി|Velayudhan Panikkassery expresses the same opinion.
Nair
The Chakkala Nair caste had the rights to enter brahmanical temples and to participate in worships.The Malayalam poet and historian Ulloor S. Parameswara Iyer agree that Ezhuthachan belonged to this caste and conclude that he could be Vattekattu Nair because he visited brahmanical temples and engaged in worship, which is not allowed for the Ezuthacan caste.
William Logan, officer of the Madras Civil Service under the English India Company Government, expresses a similar opinion in his Malabar Manual and states that Thunchaththu Ezuthachan was "a man of Sudra caste". Kottarathil Shankunni wrote in his Aithihyamala that the term Ezhuthachan is nothing but a title taken up by school teachers belonging to several castes mainly by Nairs in Northern kerala indicating that Ezhuthachan was a Nair.
Kaniyar
Some sources consider him to be Kaniyar. This community of traditional astrologers were well versed in Sanskrit and Malayalam. During the medieval period, when non-Brahmins were not permitted to learn Sanskrit, only the Kaniyar community had been traditionally enjoying the privilege for accessing and acquiring knowledge in Sanskrit, through their hereditary system of pedagogy. They were learned people and had knowledge in astrology, mathematics, mythology and Ayurveda. They were generally assigned as preceptors of martial art and literacy.In addition to the common title Panicker, the members of Kaniyar from the South Travancore and Malabar region were known as Aasaan, Ezhuthu Aasans, or Ezhuthachans, by virtue of their traditional avocational function as village school masters to non-Brahmin pupils.
Legacy
The parrot-song genre, pioneered by Ezhuthachan, inaugurated the production of many similar works in Malayalam.The highest literary honour awarded by the Government of Kerala is known as the "Ezhuthachan Puraskaram". Sooranad Kunjan Pillai was the first recipient of the honour. The Malayalam University, established by Kerala Government in 2012, is named after Ezhuthachan.
Initiation to Letters
The sand from the compound where the house of Ezhuthachan stood once is considered as sacred. It is a tradition in north Kerala to practise the art of writing in the beginning on the sand with the first finger.Monuments
- Ezhuthachan was born at Trikkandiyoor in northern Kerala. His birthplace is now known as Thunchan Parambu.
- Chittur Gurumadhom is located near present-day Palakkad. The madhom is flanked by temples of gods Rama and Siva. The street has an array of agraharas.
- Ezhuthachan's samadhi is also situated at Chittur.
Relics
- Some relics of Ezhuthachan or his age were sacredly preserved at the Chittur madhom. This included the original manuscripts and the clogs used by him. These artifacts were destroyed in a fire 30 or 40 years before William Logan. Only the Bhagavatam was saved from the fire.
- Scholar A. C. Burnell examined this Bhagavatam in the late 19th century. These objects probably belongd to one of the first followers of Ezhuthachan.
- Stool, clog and the staff were destroyed in a second fire. This fire destroyed the original Bhagavatam also.
- Copies of a sri chakra and the idols worshipped by Ezhuthachan, the stylus, the wooden slippers, and a few old manuscripts are exhibited for visitors at Chittur madhom.