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It wasn’t clear to me how killing this wonderful school principal was going to help Tamils achieve greater political space in Sri Lanka. If you will permit me a distraction just to complete the story, this man Anantharajan was shot about nine years after that conversation at the YMCA.
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It was sweet of Anantharajan to include this schoolboy in their conversation, and to let him laugh with them. €œIt is him, my daughter’s dad, you educated people - you already know him”. €œFor the last time, I will jail you for contempt of court if you don’t tell us his name” The judge narrated a story of a woman witness, asked to identify her husband: Having won the village chess tournament, I got to chat to these eminent gentlemen after the prize giving. Thinking about all this started from a conversation with a retired Jaffna High Court judge, whose name I forget, and the former principal of St John’s College, Anantharajan (see, just one name), at the Jaffna YMCA, in 1976/77. My wife addresses me as “injErungo Appa”, “Hey Thevaram” or “chaniyan” with roughly equal probability and in decreasing order of expressed affection. My mom would never call my dad: “Hey Sivapuranam”, saying “Appa”– meaning father - instead. We use a lot of uncle, aunty, annai, nangi, master and sir as substitutes for names - the supposedly polite way. In a few hundred years, you will find a whole family-tree of Thevarams, with me at the root.ĭespite going into extensive searches, and sometimes numerical calculations, to find these names and sticking to their structures, we are reluctant to use them. I myself have abandoned the convention for the next generation, naming my kids One Thevaram, Two Thevaram and Three Thevaram, using Thevaram as family name and One, Two and Three as first names. It gets odd when he is in the company of a mixture of Sri Lankans and Europeans at parties: Europeans calling him “Hey Seeeva” and the Sri Lankans calling him “Hey Thiruvasakam”. His work colleagues have learnt to call him Siva, informally, and Dr Thiruvasakam, in a formal setting. He has declared Thiruvasakam as his family name and a truncated version of my dad’s name as his first name. My brother Sivapuranam Thiruvasakam took a different approach. “Who cares, just part of the uniform”, they explained, in an amazingly detached view of life. Once I have met three guys, working eight-hour shifts, all using the same “Jonathan” name badge. That explains why several Sri Lankans I know, working in petrol stations, have on their name badges “Mark”, “Anthony” etc. Vincent, our technician, once said to me: “well, in the lab people may learn to say Thevaram, but if you were in a factory, they will give you a Christian name everyone can pronounce”. It takes a bit of training, but in my ivory tower circles, people learn fast. Thevaram”, and informally also call me “Hey Thevaram”. In the UK, I maintain the habit from home. Should he gain membership of the second chamber of British governance, he becomes Lord Smith, but should Her Majesty be minded to honor him, he will be Sir John. “Hey Smith” and “Dr John”, are wrong. My friend John Smith, who is Dr Smith for formal purposes, is “Hey John”, informally. Informally, people close to him say “Hey Thevaram”. Where I come from, Sivapuranam Thevaram is called Mr Thevaram for formal purposes, and should he acquire titles, he becomes Dr Thevaram, Professor Thevaram etc. “You guys got it all so long”, she complains. Nancy, our research group secretary isn’t phonetically gifted. Their structure is like a tree: A great grandpa Smith, followed by a hierarchy of junior Smiths. His brothers are Mark Smith and Peter Smith, dad is Andy Smith and grandfather was Adam Smith (no, not the same chap). This structure doesn’t match the convention of my friend John Smith: Smith is his family name and John, the given name. So the structure, sliding across generations is: One Two, Two Three, Three Four and so on.
SIVAPURANAM TAMIL FULL
The full name of my dad is Thirukkural Sivapuranam. Again, Thiruvasakam and Thirumanthiram are tokens my dad looked up in the phone book. My brothers are Sivapuranam Thiruvasakam and Sivapuranam Thirumanthiram. Equally significant, and not for negotiation, is the order of the two identifiers in my name: Sivapuranam is the one given to my father at his birth, Thevaram is mine. I usually identify myself as a Sri Lankan Tamil, strictly in that order.
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Swaminathan.My name is Sivapuranam Thevaram, and my origins are in the northern parts of Sri Lanka. This compilation is precisely an ode to Lord Shiva, that is arranged with selective Devotional songs eulogising Him, all sung by artiste Dharmapuram P. #Sivapuranam #Thiruvasagam #DharmapuramPSwaminathan #SivanDevotionalSongs Sivapuranam - Thiruvasagam in Tamil | Dharmapuram P Swaminathan | Sivan Devotional Songs