- Koviar
Koviar (also Koviyar or Covia) is a Sri Lankan Tamil
caste of traditional agriculturalists and temple workers. Today they are found in all aspects of the society. In the Vellalar dominated caste hierarchy of theJaffna peninsula they ranked higher due to their proximity to temples. There are number of competing theories as to their origins. Template:Sri Lankan Tamil peopleOrigins theories
;Native temple workersAccording to
primary sources such asYalpana Vaipava Malai , they were temple workers known as "Kovilar" who with time came to be known as "Koviar". In Tamil "Kovil" stands for aHindu temple. In South Indian census records "Koviar" and "Kovilar" as native South Indian castes.;Assimilated Sinhalese Some historians such as Mudaliar Rasanayagam have speculated that "Koviar" are assimilated Sinhalese belonging to the "
Govigama " caste with the ascendancy of theJaffna kingdom . Mudaliar Rasanayagma made the speculation based on the fact that "Koviar" caste was not found inSouth India but the census figures for 1881 lists a "Koviar" caste in theMadras Presidency in South India. [http://131.172.16.7/dcd/1881v3/00007.pdf British Colonial census document 1881 Volume 3 page number 7 mentions Koviar in India] ]Historic condition
As a historically depressed social group, they were restricted to Jaffna peninsula and certain areas of
Puttalam and easternBatticaloa region. They provided the bulk of the manual manpower required for cultivation and temple services. There were not held in bonded servitude like other Dalit-like castes in Jaffna. Their ritual position was just below that of the Vellalar and was allowed into the temple as workers and as devotees.Current condition
After Sri Lanka’s independence from Britain in
1948 , Sri Lankan Tamil politics was geared towards a nationalistic cause. "Koviar" using their ritual and physical proximity to the educational services upgraded themselves socially and economically. ThePolicy of standardization imposed by the successive Sri Lankan governments since 1973 had the effect of restricting the number of Tamil students entering stateUniversities and affected upwardly mobile "Koviar" students as much as the dominant class. Hence "Koviar" were also involved in many of the Tamil nationalistic agitations that eventually resulted in the formation of many Tamil militant groups. They were prominent in one of them namelyTELO that was eventually eclipsed by theLTTE that was also seen as to be associated with an another minority but upwardly mobileKaraiyar caste inJaffna .The civil war and the
Black July pogroms have retarded most of these gains and many have escaped the deprivations by seekingrefugee status inIndia ,Europe andNorth America . They are merging with the host populations and/or theSri Lankan Tamil diaspora .citeweb|url= http://books.google.ca/books?id=grMjo9Opu14C&pg=PA103&dq=%22Koviar%22&sig=Vdzi6TzNXIgYYPX5zTcEWzC-_XM#PPA104,M1
title= From differences to ethnic solidarity amongst Tamils|accessdate=2008-06-04 |format=html |work=Dagmar Hellman-Rajanayagam]References
External links
* [http://www.tamilcanadian.com/pageview.php?ID=756&SID=133 Another theory on the origin of the word Koviar]
* [http://www.rootsweb.com/~lkawgw/nobtosom.html Estimates of Koviar caste population in Jaffna]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.