Longform
Dr George Gheverghese Joseph
Sep 22, 2012, 01:12 AM | Updated Apr 29, 2016, 02:09 PM IST
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Continued from Part 1
Missionaries, Colonel Munro and Syrian Christians
In the early nineteenth century, reports by European travelers and missionaries painted a gloomy picture of the state of indigenous kingdoms. State monopolies controlled by the rajas were apparently strangling trade and commerce. In their drive to finance their own extravagant lifestyles and patronage of Hindu religious institutions, the rajas were apparently making indiscriminate demands on the population and notably on the indigenous Christians. Lurid accounts by missionaries such as Whitehouse (1801), Arthur (1810), Buchanan (1811), and Wrde (1820) of the supposed plight of ‘lost’ fellow believers subjected to ‘dark and cruel tyranny’ of ‘fanatical and bigoted rulers’ appeared in a number of pamphlets, Accompanying these reports of oppression were claims that the Syrian Christians were in a state of ‘poverty and spiritual depression’. There was desperate need to rescue, regenerate, and modernize this group of ancient Christians. The presumption was that this ought to be carried out by right-thinking officials and missionary organizations.
The time was ripe for the appearance of a ‘savior’ of the Christian community. And he appeared in the form of Colonel John Munro, the British Resident in Travancore and Cochin between 1810 and 1819. He was a fervent evangelical Christian, possessing the familiar qualities that one associates with the early nineteenth-century English administrators of India. With boundless energy, a hatred of heathenish practices, native superstition’ and ‘popery’, and a fierce desire to reform and ‘uplift’ Indian society, Munro had predilection for direct action in pursuit of his goals. And, with his close links with proselytizing organizations, such as the Church Missionary Society (CMS) and the London Missionary Society (LMS), an army of missionaries descended on Kerala. Many of these missionaries began to engage in a wide range of educational and social reform activities in the region that would have a far-reaching impact on the future of Kerala. An important thrust of their activities was aimed at the Syrian Christians, particularly of the non-Catholic variety. Like the Portuguese, Munro’s game plan was to transform these ancient Christians into a loyal client population. He too believed that this bond could be secured by making them share the same doctrines and style of worship as their European patrons. But unlike the Jesuits, the desire was that the transformed group would become fervently anti-papist and iconoclastic and share the beliefs of the nineteenth-century Anglican evangelist.
Within a span of three hundred years, the Syrian Christians were faced with yet another attempt at imposing a foreign religious ideology on them. Despite the blatantly direct approach of the Jesuits, which had brought about the first schism in 1,500 year history of the Syrian Christian church, they achieved only limited success. The practices that the Jesuit intervention had introduced, namely the organization of elaborate processional rites, the veneration of the Virgin Mary, and the use of cult images of the saints, had in any case close parallels with Hindu religious practices. However, the supercharged evangelism of the CMS variety was quite alien to both the Syrian Christian and Hindu world-view.
In 1816, following the death of the current chief prelate, Munro took a step that was to have serious consequences for the Syrian Christians. Instead of confirming the consecration of the dead metran’s heir, traditionally from the Pakalomattom family, he chose a cleric from another priestly family in the belief that the new man would be more sympathetic to the CMS ideology. At a stroke, the Resident had overturned the whole traditional system of succession which had remained the one single stabilizing force, now that state support and encouragement of the Syrian Christian church had virtually collapsed. It was particularly unfortunate for Munro that the new metran died within weeks of his appointment and the same fate awaited the Resident’s next three replacement metrans. Over the next few years, the process of choosing a metran disintegrated into a free-for-all with many leading “Syrian Christian families battling inconclusively for the post. In the end, the claimants were reduced to drawing lots for the metranship. This undignified expedient left the winner with no inherited link to the West Asian church and no clear backing from the Resident or the local rules to sustain his authority. This was amply demonstrated when new overseas metran, Mat Athansius, arrived in Kerala in 1825. On his arrival, he quarreled with hapless local metran and led his followers on an even more aggressive bout of tomb smashing. These exploits reduced every Syrian Christian locality to a state of siege before the Resident finally stepped in and had Mar Athansius deported.
The Firming up of Communal Boundaries
There were other action of Munro that threatened the delicately balanced age-old relationship between the Syrian Christians and the Hindus. The explanation for Munro’s behavior lay in the potency of European misconceptions. As in their dealings with other supposedly ‘oppressed’ groups, the British administration displayed an immense capacity to create problems where none had existed. They did this by throwing the whole weight of the colonial apparatus into redressing a set of grievances that had only emerged in response to their own misconceptions. The non-existent problem was the supposed oppression of Syrian Christians by the Hindu officials of Travancore and Cochin. Believing in the missionary stores of Syrian Christian penury and degradation, Munro began to inundate the ‘oppressed’ group with funds and state patronage in an attempt to ‘rescue’ and uplift’ them from their ‘melancholy’ State. On the assumption that priestly celibacy was a papist custom forced on them by Portuguese, Munro offered bounties up to Rs. 500 to any katanar who agreed to marry. Large sums of money were allocated for the repair and reconstruction of Syrian churches. Such funds were not forthcoming for the Catholics or other groups.
Believing that the Christians were being singled out for harsh extraction of revenue, Munro instructed missionaries whom he had appointed to new magisterial posts to collect evidence against Hindu officials who had abused their powers by ‘extorting’ goods and cash from Syrian Christians. There was no evidence to show that Christians in general or Syrian Christians in particular were being treated more harshly than other groups. Indeed, the Syrian Christians who dominated the regions remaining trading networks were well established enough to reach an understanding with state officials on the level of the local revenue demanded. Munro’s policy of singling out one section of the population as a client group and encouraging them section of the population as a client group and encouraging them to avoid the machinery of justice and revenue collection could only aggravate existing tensions among the communities.
As early as 1821, the touring Anglican missionary, W.H. Mill reported unmistakable signs of tension between high-caste Hindu and Syrian Christians in localities which had earlier operated joint schemes for Hindu and Christian (temple festivals). What Mill found was that funds provided under Munro’s scheme of grants towards the improvement of Christian churches were creating bitter conflicts between the Syrians and high-caste Hindus. There was unrest in Chengannur, a place in which a Christian church stood almost adjoining a sizable Hindu temple. When the Syrian Christians sought to use their newly acquired funds to rebuild the main pathway and procession route leading to the Chengannur church, the local Hindu residents sent a group of Brahmins to block the path and stop the work on the grounds that the Syrian Christians had no right of access to the precincts of a Hindu temple and that their presence there would be ritually polluting. The actions of Munro and his missionaries had resulted in running a high-ranking group with considerable social status into a group who were indistinguishable from low-caste, low-status Christian converts.
Over the next sixty years there was a dramatic deterioration in the ties between the Syrians and high caste Hindus in localities all over Travancore. In 1841, for example, there were fierce outbreaks of violence in several centers where Nair landholders sought to exclude Syrian Christians from access to temple precincts. At least one of these confrontations occurred in Amabalapuzha where the Christians had played a prominent role in Hindu rites during the eighteenth century and where an image of St. Thomas had been carried previously in the Ambalapuzha temple’s festival processions.
However, the most damaging impact of missionaries was the irretrievable break in the delicate bonds that tied the Syrian Christian to the high-caste Hindu. In a campaign launched by the Church Missionary Society (CMS) to enhance the status of low-caste or outcaste Hindus who had converted to Christianity, the missionaries claimed that all converts, whatever their caste origins, possessed the same status as Syrian Christians and were entitled to all the marks of social and ritual standing held by the Syrian Christians, including the right to enter Hindu temple streets and all other privileged precincts from which they had been banned before. Street battles occurred all across northern Travancore and Cochin as low-caste converts agitated for access claiming that conversion to Christianity had ‘made them Syrian’!.
By the mid-1880s, the breakdown in ties between the Syrian Christians and high-caste Hindus had reached its final stage. Syrian Christians were now routinely excluded from Hindu festival rites, and in many temple centers the Hindu temple officials levied fines on Christians who tried to cling on to their longstanding temple honors. Some Hindu notables even declared that Syrian Christians who sought access to temples were guilty of polluting sacred Hindu precincts. During the 1880s and 1890s there occurred several riots involving both parties, reminiscent of the Hindu-Muslim clashes of North India. A communal problem was born when none existed a few decades earlier.
Tensions among the Syrian Christians
The firming up of boundaries between religions was also reproduced in a hardening of internal boundaries among the Christians. Until the nineteenth century there had been no firm distinction between the members of the two main Syrian Christian groups-‘Orthodox’ Syrians on the one hand, and the ‘Romo-Syrians’ who were members of the Roman Catholic fraternity. Until the missionaries set about reforming them, the two groups regularly intermarried; many churches were shared in common between members of the two denominations; and the great Syrian tomb shrines were venerated equality by Catholic and Orthodox Syrians alike.
The distinction between the Catholic and Orthodox Syrians was more a question of allegiance and factional alignment rather than one of conflicting belief and observance. Dominant families in each locality tended to shift back and forth between loyalties to the Orthodox metran and the Roman Catholic Church hierarchy. Even in their style of worship and church furnishing the ‘within-group’ variation was more marked than the ‘between-group’ variation. To his annoyance, the Anglican missionary, W.H. Mill, who toured the region in the 1820s, found fewer ‘papist’ style images and statues in the Syrian Catholic churches than those controlled by the Orthodox group.
Under the indefatigable Colonel Munro, all this began to change. Acting on the advice of his missionary friends that the Christianity found in the region had degenerated into Catholicism with the ‘most abominable superstitions equal to many if not all the disgusting ceremonies of the monstrous worship of Brahma (i.e., Hindu) (Day 1863, 248) and believing that the Catholic church hierarchy in India was a kind of fifth column supporting pro-French sentiments among in adherents, he felt that he should lend a hand to the Orthodox Syrians whose churches and church properties had been seized by the Romo-Syrians. To do so he gave grants to the former.
In fact, given that these two groups were far from being separate or rival communities, this was yet another imaginary disability of the Orthodox group that Munro wanted to redress. The sudden availability of funds and patronage to one group and not the other only served to foster tension between the groups where it had not existed previously. The net effect of Munro’s providing relief money to buy out their Romo-Syrian co-sharers and take control of the region’s joint-managed churches was to create two jurisdictions for the first time. The Orthodox group found for the first time a real incentive to treat the two denominations as separate and exclusive affiliations. The result was that the region acquired yet another form of sectarian or communal conflict. By the early 1830s, it was common for groups that claimed either Orthodox or Romo-Syrian affiliations to stage pitched battles against each other over the allocation of churches and church properties.
The CMS was also promoting another campaign, one of spiritual ‘uplift’ and ‘mission of rescue’. They directed this campaign at the Orthodox Syrians to wipe out the group’s ‘popish superstitions’ and ‘heathenish practices’. In place of charms and saint cults, the non-Catholic Syrians were to be infused with a passion for prayer meetings, individual ‘conversion experience’, Bible readings and all the other hallmarks of the protestant evangelical tradition. During the 1820s, the CMS set up a network of schools, a printing press for Malayalam Bibles and evangelical tracts, and a training college for Orthodox priests. It was hoped that through these institutions the missionaries could spread the message of a ‘purified’ form of Christianity among the orthodox priesthood and the Syrian population at large. The ‘firming up of the boundaries between the Syrian Catholics and the orthodox Christians continued with the ensuing tension driving an unbridgeable barrier at a personal level between the two groups. Conversion from one group to another was frowned upon and marriages between members of the two groups were strongly discouraged.
The ‘firming up of the boundaries’ between the Syrian Christian and the Hindu and between the Syrian Christian of the Orthodox variety and one of the Roman Catholic variety remains one of the lasting effects of the British presence.
The Aftermath
The officially recognized missionary and the government-supported English education had a powerful impact among the Syrian Christians but not in the way that Munro and his associates had hoped. Their access to modern education helped a number to enter the newly emerging commercial and professional occupations before the other communities. They were to become, the vanguard of a social protest movement against the disabilities suffered, along with other non-Hindus and outcaste Hindus, in an administration monopolized by upper-caste Hindus.
Conclusion
To sum up, the late 18th and early 19th century was marked by considerable changes taking place within Syrian Christian community. Their traditional role as traders and farmers had become less defined, and mainly because of their voluntary and involuntary connections with the British Raj. They found themselves better prepared than other communities to enter the newly emerging professions that required both technical and academic competence. The gradual breakdown of long-established social hierarchies within the Syrian Christian community created opportunities for new set of families emerge from traditional obscurity and form the vanguard of the newly emergent middle classes in Kerala. However, the firming up of communal boundaries resulting from the Munro legacy had the effect of isolating the Syrian Christians from their Hindu neighbors and from one another.
(Dr George Gheverghese Joseph teaches at University of Manchester and Mcmaster University)