In this Indian name, the name Subbiah is a patronymic, and the person should be referred to by the given name, "Veerapandian" or the abbreviation "Subavee".
Subbaiah Veerapandian (born 22 April 1952), known popularly as Suba Veerapandian or Subavee, is an Indian political activist, author, orator, former Tamil-language professor and former film artist. Since 2007, he has been serving as the general secretary of the Dravida Iyyakka Tamilar Peravai, a Tamil Nadu-based political organisation that aims to promote Ambedkarite, Dravidian and Marxist ideals in the State and elsewhere.[2]
In 2021, Subavee was appointed to two posts – Member of the Advisory Committee for Tamil Nadu Text Book and Educational Services Corporation, and as chairperson of the newly constituted Social Justice Monitoring Committee of Tamil Nadu
Early life and career
Subavee was born in Karaikudi on the early morning of 22 April 1952 as the youngest of seven children[3] to Rama.Subbaiah (1908–1997) and Visalatchi (d.19 September 1987).[4] His eldest living brother is Tamil film director S. P. Muthuraman.[5] As per the norms in their region, Subavee's parents gave him another name – Pazhaniyappan (name of his paternal grandfather) – which became obsolete over time.[6]
After completing his education, he joined as a typist-cum-clerk in Madras University on 16 August 1971. In 1976, he joined as a tutor of Tamil at S.I.V.E.T College in Chennai, as a lecturer of Tamil at Sentamil College, Thiruppanandal (14 September 1982 – February 1984) and then in P. M.T. College in Tirunelveli district (Feb- Dec 1984). On 5 December 1984, he rejoined S.I.V.E.T College.
Following the Madras High Court's dismissal of an order (which caused a break in his career), Subavee resumed teaching at S.I.V.E.T College from February 1997. On 15 September, he submitted his letter for voluntary retirement and was relieved on the evening of 15 December.
While working in college, he formed an organisation named Tamilar Iyakkam (Tamils Movement).
In 1979, Subavee was imprisoned along with others including professor-poet Kuruvikkarambai Shanmugam for a week in connection with a protest organised by the Association of University Teachers (AUT), in which he was serving as Secretary for Zone II. The protest was against the first MGR ministry's decision to shift the Pre-university course (PUC) in Tamil Nadu's higher education institutions to schools (as classes XI and XII). The protesters feared that the government's decision will affect existing staff in PUCs. Eventually, the government announced that PUC teachers will be transferred to colleges with vacant posts.
In 1980, he befriended poet Inkulab and gained an interest in Communism. During the years of work in Thiruppanandal, Subavee began to participate in public events. This enabled him to gain friendship with writers Pothiya Verpan and Kudanthai Geethalayan, who enhanced his inclination towards Marxism.[8]
On 12 May 1990, Subavee became the founder-secretary of a newly found organisation named Viduthalaikuyilkal (Liberation Cuckoos). In June, he was imprisoned for 20 days along with about 100 others in Tiruchirappalli Central Prison for participating in a rally against a ban on "Tamil Nation's Self Determination Conference" held in Thanjavur by Pazha Nedumaran (president of Tamilar Desiya Iyakkam). His prison-mates included Perunchithiranar, Pozhilan (Perunchithiranar's son), Ki. Venkatraman, Salai Elanthiraiyan, and Salini Elanthiraiyan. During the imprisonment, Venkatraman repeatedly said to Subavee: "At a point, quit the teaching job and become a full-time cadre for serving people through politics". Subavee later recollected "The seed that he [Venkatraman] sowed that day could be said of as the chief reason for my transformation as a full-time [political] worker seven years later... As far as I am concerned, that imprisonment was one which moved me towards full-time politics".
On 5 March 1992, Subavee (then general secretary of Viduthalaikuyilkal) was arrested and later imprisoned in Madras Central Prison. The charge against him was that of forcing shops in Thana Street (in Purasawalkam, Chennai) to shut in order to show solidarity with the Eelam Tamils. The arrest came just before the planned "Tamils Unity Conference" that was to be held on 8 March by Viduthalaikuyilkal. On the scheduled day, Nedumaran and 96 others were arrested (for trying to rally towards the conference pandal) and brought to the same prison. Subavee came out on bail five days later and so did the others, gradually.
In January 1993, Subavee, Nedumaran and functionaries from the PMK and Dravidar Kazhagam planned for a mass rally in Madras condemning the "assassination" of Kittu, an LTTE commander, on the 16th. On the same day of their discussion, Subavee was arrested along with Nedumaran and Pulamaipithan. It was alleged in court that these three, along with Professor Saraswathi, conspired to blow up the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Madras that was to be inaugurated by the then Prime Minister P. V. Narasimha Rao on 19 January. Saraswathi was released on bail, while the three men were sentenced to 15 days of judicial custody.
On 1 January 1994, he merged his Tamilar Iyakkam with Thozhar Thiyagu's Thileepan Mandram (Thileepan Forum) to form the "Tamil-Tamilar Iyakkam" (Tamil-Tamils Movement). In November, he was imprisoned for a week, in connection with his pro-LTTE speech in a meeting.
In 1995, Subavee also became a member of Tamilchandror Peravai (Assembly of Tamil Scholars) in which he showed additional involvement.
In December 1996, Subavee was briefly jailed along with Maniyarasan in Vellore Central Prison for another speech in support of LTTE, which by then had become an officially proscribed organisation.[9] During this imprisonment, he was suspended from his job as professor. He got bail in late December, an year before his voluntary retirement as a professor in late 1997.
From 1998, he began to accept the Eelam Tamil diaspora's calls to travel abroad and to gather international support for the "rationales behind the struggle of the LTTE". The National Television of Tamileelam (NTT), the Tigers' official television channel, reported Prabhakaran's statement: "Father Gaspar and Subavee are campaigning for us all over Europe. [The Tamil diaspora] should receive them and utilize them for meetings".[10]
In 2001, Subavee quit the Tamil-Tamilar Iyakkam due to differences with Thiyagu, and worked solely with Tamilchandror Peravai.
" [People like Thiyagu and Maniyarasan] gradually created the impression that Tamil nationalism was more correct than Dravidian nationalism. They instilled in me the idea that Dravidian nationalism was also a factor in the obstruction of Tamil nationalism. I also believed this to be true. I criticized all other Dravidian leaders except Periyar. Among the leaders who came under my severe criticism are Kalaignar [Karunanidhi] and Asiriyar Ayya Veeramani [ Dravidar Kazhagam president ] ".
In 2002, he joined Pazha Nedumaran's Tamilar Desiya Iyakkam (Tamils National Movement) and became its general secretary.
In August 2002, Tamil Nadu Police booked Subavee[9] along with Nedumaran, Pudukottai Paavanan and Dr. Thayappan Azhagirisamy under Section 21 of the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA) for making speeches in support of LTTE.[11] Earlier, on 11 July 2002, the same section was used to book MDMK general secretary Vaiko under similar charges.[12] On 29 March 2003, the Government of India submitted in the Supreme Court that Vaiko's speech constituted an act of terrorism under the POTA. This meant that Vaiko, Subavee and others were likely to get up to 10 years of imprisonment. On the early morning of 30 March 2003, DMK president M. Karunanidhi asked his party MP and the then Union minister T. R. Baalu to pressurise the Union government into changing their statement. On the same day, the ruling National Democratic Alliance held a discussion meet in New Delhi, during which Baalu criticised the government's statement. He also conveyed Karunanidhi's stand to Deputy Prime Minister L. K. Advani and Minister of Law & JusticeArun Jaitley. The next day, Jaitley announced that there were some errors in the government's statement that were corrected by redacting paragraphs 12 and 13. He added that some junior lawyers had erroneously written in the statement that even verbal support to a proscribed organisation amounts to terrorism. Jaitley clarified that the Union government did not endorse the said statement. As a result, Subavee, Paavanan and Thayappan were released under bail on 22 December 2003 (Vaiko received bail on 7 February 2004). This was the point from which Subavee started to consistently wear a black shirt.[13]
On the same day of their release, Subavee and Thayappan went to Anna Arivalayam (the DMK's headquarters) and met Karunanidhi to thank him for his involvement in their release. This was not received well by some members of the Tamilar Desiya Iyakkam. However, Nedumaran himself met Karunanidhi with Subavee on 9 January 2004, a day after being released. Both Subavee and Nedumaran campaigned all over Tamil Nadu for the DMK-led Democratic Progressive Alliance during the 2004 Indian general election. However, during the 2006 Tamil Nadu assembly election, Tamilar Desiya Iyakkam refused to campaign for the alliance.[14] Protesting this decision, Subavee quit as the organisation's general secretary and primary member on 15 April. On Nakkeeran Gopal's arrangement, he met Karunanidhi on 17 April. From 19 April onwards, he began to speak in pro-DMK meetings.[8][15] After Karunanidhi returned as Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu in 2006, he withdrew the POTA cases that his predecessor J. Jayalalithaa filed against Subavee, Nedumaran, Paavanan and Thayappan.[15][16]
On 22 January 2007, Subavee launched the Dravida Iyyakka Tamilar Peravai[17] (Dravidian Movement's Tamils' Assembly) at Kalaivanar Arangam, in the presence of K. Anbazhagan (then Tamil Nadu's Minister of Finance). The motto of the organisation is "ஆரியத்தால் வீழ்ந்தோம், திராவிடத்தால் எழுந்தோம், தமிழியத்தால் வெல்வோம்" ("(We) fell by Aryanism, arose by Dravidianism, and will win by Tamilism"). Subavee has been serving as its general secretary ever since.
On 12 August 2012, he participated in the "Eelam Tamils Rights Protection Conference" organised by the DMK, in which many other luminaries from outside Tamil Nadu were present.[19]
On 2 January 2022, Ka. Su. Nagarajan's Tamil Nadu Dravidar Kazhagam (not to be confused with the Dravidar Kazhagam) merged with the Dravida Iyyakka Tamilar Peravai. The merger ceremony was held at the Corporation Kalaiarangam in Coimbatore. The event was attended by V. Senthil Balaji (then Tamil Nadu Minister for Electricity, Prohibition and Excise) and M. Kannappan (former Union Minister for Non-conventional energy sources). At the ceremony, Subavee appointed Nagarajan as the Peravai's state organisation secretary. The latter's predecessor Pulendran was appointed as the Peravai's state principal secretary. Subavee indicated that many other Periyarist organisations would come to work with the Peravai. Furthermore, he said that the Peravai would hold protests for abolishing National Eligibility cum Entrance Test and for State Rights.[20][21][22][23]
Subavee has advocated for progressive reforms pertaining to caste abolition and women's rights.
During his career as a professor, Subavee wrote articles and poems for several journals, including Chutti, Viduthalai, Unmai, and Thenmozhi (owned by Perunchithiranar). In 1984, he published the தமிழீழச் சிவப்பு மலர் (translit.Tamiḻīḻac civappu malar; meaning Red Flower of Tamil Eelam) exposing the anti-Tamils violence in Sri Lanka. Later, he served as editor-in-chief for Ini (Hereafter; 26 November 1992 -December 1995),[26]Nandan Vazhi (Nandan's Way; 1 May 1997 – 28 March 2000), and Thaayagam (Homeland).
He is currently the editor of the fortnightly magazine Karunchattai Tamilar (Blackshirt Tamils) since July 2007.
Works
Subavee began to keep a diary right since 1963. He has written nearly 40 books on Tamil literature, politics and history. He also has written and published 11 short stories as of 2012.
Right from his college years, Subavee began to write plays, inspired by (and imitating) Karunanidhi's style as seen in films like Raja Rani (1956). He also used to mono-act the exchange between Cheran Senguttuvan and his wife Venmal as found in the aforementioned film.[28] His interest to work in the film industry was discouraged by his brother.[8] Later, during his career as a clerk in Madras University, he founded a theatrical troupe named Kalaivanar Kalaimanram (in memory of actor-comedian N. S. Krishnan). Actress Kutty Padmini performed in one of the troupe's play, titled Aval oru Navarasam.[28]
From 1972 to 1978, Subavee worked as a radio-play actor. He produced a serial show for Makkal TV, titled Kalloori Vaasal (College Gate). It did not give the expected success.[6]
Subavee made his film debut as dialogue writer (uncredited) for Mudhal Kural (1992) directed by V.C. Guhanathan (who became a friend to Subavee's family after introducing his brother into Kollywood as a director). Subavee paired with his colleague Peer Muhamad and in about two weeks, wrote dialogues for about 60 scenes. At a point, Subavee and Guhanathan differed over the portrayal of the female lead after she becomes a widow. Being a rationalist, Subavee argued that the heroine has revolutionary ideals and therefore need not be portrayed in a white saree (attire of a traditional Hindu widow). Guhanathan said "There are some sentiments when it comes to cinema. Women [in the audience] will not accept if we do as you say". As it was Guhanathan's project, Subavee chose not to stress on his opinion. This was the point at which both decided to end their film partnership and collaborate only in pro-Eelam activities. Subavee also insisted on not being named in the film credits, as only 10 of the 60 scenes he wrote made their way into the final script.[6]
Subavee appeared as a magazine editor in the film Ilakkanam (2006) directed by Chandraseyan.
Starting from 17 September 2008,[29] Subavee appeared in an eight-minute speech programme titled ஒன்றே சொல் நன்றே சொல் (Say One Thing, Say It Good) in Kalaignar TV.
He also wrote lyrics for the song Achamenna Achamenna Aasai Thamizhey from the film Vengayam (2011) directed by Sankagiri Rajkumar.
When approached by director K. V. Anand for acting as a newspaper editor in Ko (2011), Subavee declined that role. Later, director Suseenthiran approached him for offering a role as a rebel leader in a film (unreleased as of 2021). Citing his socio-political commitment, Subavee declined that role as well.[8]
When asked about his favourite actor, Subavee said that he once liked M. G. Ramachandran and that his present favourite was Suriya, whom he valued for the latter's "sense of social responsibility". He also commended Siddharth along the same lines.[8]
Awards
On 17 January 2012, Subavee received the Iyal Selvam award from Karunanidhi, at the Muthamizh Vizha organised by the Muthamizh Peravai.[30]
Personal life
Subavee married Vasantha (granddaughter of his aunt) on 8 February 1973. Their wedding was presided over by K. Rajaram, then minister in the second Karunanidhi ministry.
The couple has three children – Lenin (b.1974), Indhira (b.1978) and Bharatidasan (b.1980). Lenin was named after Subavee's eldest (deceased) brother who himself was named after Vladimir Lenin. Indhira was named after Subavee's second eldest sister (deceased). Bharatidasan got his name from the Tamil poet of the same name.[31][6][9]
Lenin married Vijayalakshmi (daughter of Subavee's brother-in-law Ramasamy) at a wedding held at Hotel Palmgrove, Chennai in May 2000. The couple has a daughter named Oviya[9] and a son named Kumaran.
Indhira married Suresh in December 2001. The couple has two sons – Naveen (b. 30 August 2002)[9] and Nithin.
Bharatidasan married Vidya in September 2005. The couple has a son named Shravan.
Indhira's and Bharatidasan's were inter-caste marriages. All three weddings were presided over by Nedumaran. Karunanidhi also took part in Indhira's wedding.[8]