鶹Ƶ event celebrates Tamil community, raises money for research chair
As a volunteer teacher, Tharscika Ramaneekaran remembers a student telling her why she wanted to learn Tamil – she could not understand her grandparents.
Tamil is one of the world's oldest languages is spoken by more than 80 million people. But after thousands of years, many physical copies of its rich literature and history are now gone.
Ramaneekaran, a third-year biochemistry student, said this is why having a chair in Tamil studies at University of Toronto Scarborough is so important.
“By having a Tamil chair to do proper research, it’s not just that we can connect with our own culture and language,” said Ramaneekaran, who is also culture director of 鶹Ƶ Scarborough’s Tamil Students’ Association.
“We can tell the world, we can share it.”
Ramaneekaran was one of several performers at the first Tamil Heritage Month celebration hosted earlier this week at 鶹Ƶ Scarborough. The event celebrated the Tamil community and was a fundraiser for an initiative to bring a full-time chair in Tamil studies to the university.
The event was created in collaboration with Tamil Chair Inc. and the Canadian Tamil Congress, two non-profit organizations that pledged $3 million in 2018 toward creating a chair. The funds will support the chair’s work to research Tamil language, history and culture, and develop an academic program for Tamil studies.
鶹Ƶ Scarborough student Tharscika Ramaneekaran (left) was one of 18 performers that sang, acted and narrated an epic story at the Tamil Heritage Month celebration (photo by Joseph Burrell)
“During this special time, we want to recognize the many contributions Tamil-Canadians have made in our society,” Wisdom Tettey, 鶹Ƶ Scarborough’s vice-president and principal, told the audience gathered at the event.
“It is with the unwavering support of this community that the University of Toronto Scarborough is able to strengthen and be a leader in Tamil studies.”
Wisdom Tettey, the vice-president and principal of 鶹Ƶ Scarborough, speaks during the Tamil heritage celebration (photo by Joseph Burrell)
The night began and ended with dances by Niro Dance Creations, a Scarborough dance school that specializes in classical Indian dance. Their closing dance was a new routine to a new tune — an original theme song donated for the Tamil chair initiative by D. Imman, a famous film composer, music director and singer in the Tamil film industry.
“The one thing that unifies all of us right here is because we are all Tamil and for that I feel very proud,” Imman told the audience in Tamil.
The night also marked the appointment of Imman as a Canadian ambassador of Tamil Chair Inc.
Imman’s contribution earned him recognition from 鶹Ƶ Scarborough. He was also recognized by local city councillor Jennifer McKelvie and by Vijay Thanigasalam, who was elected to the provincial legislature last year.
The night’s feature event, a traditional Tamil performance, was used to tell an epic tale. The performance was a Villu Paatu, or bow-song, an ancient storytelling form in which a massive bow strung with bells is struck to create music. It accompanies songs and narration.
Actors during a performance of The Legend of Ponnivala, an ancient Tamil folk epic (photo by Joseph Burrell)
The songs, music and narration were all written by Shanmuganathan Ramaneekaran, caretaker at 鶹Ƶ’s Hart House and University College. Eighteen performers illustrated parts of The Legend of Ponnivala, the oral folk epic (estimated to be at least 500 years old) from South India.
鶹Ƶ researcher Brenda Beck first brought the tale to Canada and the U.S. in the late 1960s.
“I hope this will be the first chair, and the first university, that will expand to give value and importance to the folk traditions of Tamil culture,” Beck said.