C. Natesa Mudaliar

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Dr C Natesa Mudaliar
C Natesa Mudaliar 2008 stamp of India.jpg
Natesa Mudaliar on a 2008 stamp of India
Born1875
Died1937
NationalityIndian
Alma materPresidency College, Madras
OccupationDoctor, politician, philanthropist
Political partyJustice Party

Dr. C. Natesa Mudaliar (1875–1937), also known as Natesan, was an Indian politician and activist of the Dravidian Movement from the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. He was one of the founders of the Justice Party, along with Theagaroya Chetty and Dr. T. M. Nair. He is often mentioned as Dravida Thanthai (lit., Father of the Dravidian Movement).

Mudaliar was born in Triplicane, Madras, in 1875. His early schooling was in Madras, following which he graduated from Presidency College and Madras Medical College before practising as a doctor.

Mudaliar founded the Madras United League in 1912 and was one of the founders of the South Indian Liberal Federation. He was elected to the Madras Legislative Council in 1923 as a candidate of the Justice Party and served as a legislator until 1937, when he died at the age of 62.

Early life[edit]

Natesa Mudaliar was born in Triplicane, Madras in 1875. He had his early schooling in Madras and graduated in arts from the University of Madras. He worked as a lecturer in Pithapuram Maharaja College and as an interpreter in the Gordon Woodrof Company. He graduated in medicine from Madras Medical College and practised as a doctor.[1] In 1914, he started a hostel for non-Brahmin students in Madras Presidency. This marked his entry in South Indian politics.[citation needed]

Contribution in early Dravidian politics[edit]

In 1912, the Madras United League was formed. Mudaliar was one of the founders of the league and served as its Secretary. The league was largely composed of government employees and concentrated on improving the literacy of non-Brahmins by conducting adult education classes. In Novovembet 1912, the Madras United League was renamed as the Madras Dravidian Association and Panaganti Ramarayaningar, later the Raja of Panagal was elected president. As a part of its programme, the Madras Dravidian Association conducted a hostel called "Dravidian Home" for the benefit of non-Brahmin students. Mudaliar was the caretaker of this hostel.[citation needed]

Formation of the South Indian Liberal Federation[edit]

Through the mediatory efforts of Mudaliar, political opponents Theagaroya Chetty and T. M. Nair came together and resolved to put forth their efforts to form an organization representing the non-Brahmins of the Madras Presidency.[citation needed]

In November 1916, at a non-Brahmin conference presided over by Panaganti Ramarayaningar, the four important non-Brahmin organizations in the Presidency came together to form the South Indian Liberal Federation, more popularly known as the Justice Party. Theagaroya Chetty became the first President of the federation.[citation needed]

Mudaliar, along with Chetty, was instrumental in negotiating an end to the Buckingham and Carnatic Mills strike of 1921, organized by V. Kalyanasundaram.[2]

In the Legislative Council[edit]

Mudaliar did not participate in the first general elections in Madras Presidency held in 1920. However, in the 1923 assembly elections, he was elected to the Madras Legislative Council. He had differences with ministers in the Raja of Panagal ministry and often criticized the government.[citation needed] When P. Subbarayan took over as Chief Minister, Mudaliar praised Subbarayan and the Swarajya Arty and appealed for the merger of the Justice Party with the Indian National Congress.[3] At the Non-Brahmin confederation in Coimbatore in 1927, he led the split of the Justice Party into two camps: Ministerialists and Constitutionalists and functioned as the leader of the Constitutionalists until the two groups merged. In 1929, Mudaliar presided over the Justice Party conference in which a resolution was passed facilitating the admission of Brahmins in the party.[citation needed]

In 1933, Mudaliar expressed his support to C. P. Ramaswami Iyer when the latter spoke against casteism and proposed a temple entry law in order to remove restrictions on scheduled castes entering Hindu temples.[citation needed]

Death[edit]

Natesan was expected to contest in the 1937 elections to the legislative assembly of Madras but he died suddenly in February 1937 at the age of 62.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. Madhukar, Savita Jhingan (2008). "News and Announcements" (PDF). Stamps of India Collectors Companion (359): 3.
  2. Muthiah, S. (22 December 2008). "A street name unchanged". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012.
  3. Mangalamurugesan, Nataraja Kandasamy (1979). Self-Respect Movement in Tamil Nadu, 1920–1940. Koodal publishers. p. 134.

External links[edit]