As burkini controversy unfolds, a look at Kerala’s caste history, its focus on women’s bodies

Even as media across the globe hotly debates on how much women should cover up – or should not – our own history has a disturbing and dark story of how those in power had at one point in time, taken it upon themselves to decide on how women should dress.

Over three hundred years ago, the southern state of Kerala had a system of taxation, whereby women belonging to backward castes and Dalits had to pay a tax, if they wanted to cover their breasts. Standing bare chested was taken as a sign of respect towards those castes supposedly “superior” to them – for both men and women.

The tax however, was levied only on Avarna (lower caste) women who wanted to cover their chest. It goes without saying that some of these “superiors” would have also got their voyeuristic kicks out of this system as well.

Royal officials would travel door to door, collecting this heinous “Mulakkaram” – literally Breast Tax– from Avarna women who had passed puberty. Sickeningly, the amount would depend on the size of the breasts.

Legend has it that a young Ezhava woman from Cherthala in Alappuzha, humiliated and frustrated by this indignity, decided she had enough of being insulted. Nangeli was said to have been attractive and feisty.

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When the pravarthiyar, or village collector came asking for her share, she lit a lamp and laid down a plantain leaf as per the custom, but instead of money, she cut off her breasts and placed them on the leaf, shocking the officials.

Nangeli bled to death, but her defiance has now come to be a symbol of the resistance against this practice. Her husband, who was away at the time, came home to find his wife being cremated, and is said to have jumped into the pyre himself – either heartbroken, or mortified at what the authorities may do to him.

The area where she sacrificed herself was dismissively called “Mulachiparambu” (the breast woman’s plot). Her kith and kin are said to have been forced to leave the area.

History has no official record of her, though this story is well known across Kerala. Academia is largely conflicted about the incident, and today Nangeli has become just another local legend.

Chitrakaran T Murali, who painted a whole series based on her tale, went in search of her family in Cherthala. “They say she had no children. There are relatives in Cherthala who are the descendants of her siblings, but they know just as much as the next person about their heroic ancestor,” he says.

“In those days she was just another poor woman who protested and died. There is no record of her at all. Sadly, even today, she is not given due credit for what she did,” he adds.

Nangeli wasn’t the first one to protest against this barbaric social norm.  Between 1813 and 1859, women belonging to the Panayeri (Palm-climber) Nadar community fought tooth and nail to be able to cover their breasts like Savarana women, in what came to be known as the Channar revolt.

(Nangeli’s great great grand niece Leela, with her family).

In 1813, the Travancore court Dewan Colonel John Munro threw them a carrot and issued an order saying Nadar women who converted to Christianity could cover their chests with an “upper cloth”. The royal court opposed this and the women were only allowed to wear a long blouse that the Muslims and Syrian Christians of the time wore.

The Nadar women were not satisfied demanding that they be treated on par with the Nair women. In the ensuing civil unrest, countless women were manhandled and molested.

Missionaries of the time got involved in the issue and many Nadars converted into Christianity. The Raja issued a proclamation again in 1859 reiterating that Nadar women could not dress like their Savarana counterparts.

“This issue went on well into the 20th century,” explains Dr K Gopalankutty, president of the South Indian History Congress. “Clothing is a marker of one’s social identity, and the blouse took on a symbolic role.”

Breast tax was just one of the abhorrent measures in Kerala used to fill up the royal coffers. Many strange and repressive taxes, such as “meniponnu” or cess on ornaments worn, and “meesha  kazhcha” or cess to grow a moustache were levied, especially on the backward and Dalit communities.

“Taxes and cess of extortionary nature ran into more than 120…of which 110 were levied exclusively on poor communities,” notes Dr S N Sadasivan, in his book, “A Social History of India”.

It must be noted however that despite what history tells us, the situation wasn’t all that peachy for the so-called upper caste women either. Namboothiri women- antharjanam (women who lived indoors) were allowed to cover their chest, but could move only within the inner rooms of their own homes.

They were allowed speak only to their husband, immediate family and the “thozhi” assigned to them. They had to cover their face with an “olakkuda” or palm umbrella on the rare occasion when their husbands gave them permission to go outside the home.

Nair women were allowed to cover their chest – unless they were in the presence of Brahmins, royalty or in a temple. “The proper salutations from a female to persons of rank was to uncover the bosom. On one occasion, a Nair woman appeared before the Zamorin of Calicut’s lady (sic); with her breasts concealed, and they were cut off, as wearing of a bodice before one belonging to such a higher group was considered immodesty,” explains R Raman Nair and L Sulochana Devi, in their work “Chattambi Swami: An Intellectual Biography”.

The irony is that traditionally, being bare-chested was neither a mark of shame nor a forced show of respect, for men and women staying in the west coast of South India. They wore sparse lower body garments because of the weather conditions – such attire would aid evaporation of sweat, and prevent overheating in sultry humid climates. Hygiene and common sense dictated what they wore, not social norms.

http://www.thenewsminute.com/article/dress-code-repression-keralas-history-breast-tax-avarna-women-48982