Taravath Madhavan Nair (b.
January 15, 1868 -
d.July 17, 1919) was an Indian
politician and political activist of the Self-Respect Movement from the
Madras Presidency. He
founded the
Justice Party
along with
Theagaroya
Chetty.
Early life
Nairhttp://www.nss.org.in\was born near
Tirur
on January 15, 1868 in the Taravath family of
Palghat
, Madras
Presidency. His father Chingicham Veetil Sankaran Nair
was a District Munsiff in the Judicial service at Tirur. Madhavan
Nair's elder brother Sankaran Nair studied law and served as Deputy
Collector while his sister Taravath Ammalu Ammal was a Sanskrit and
Malayalam scholar who wrote a book in Malayalam on the lives of the
63 Nayanmars.
Nair did his schooling at Government High School, Palghat. He was
known for his academic proficiency and he passed his matriculation
exam one year in advance. He did his graduation from Presidency
College, Madras and joined Madras Medical College. However, he did
not complete his course in medicine.
Instead, he
discontinued his course and moved to Edinburgh
. He graduated in M.B., Ch.B. at Edinburgh
and obtained his M. D. in 1896, with Sanskrit as the compulsory
classical subject. He researched in E. N.
T. diseases at
Paris
and returned to India in 1897. During his stay in the
United
Kingdom
, he was a member of the Edinburgh Student's
Representative Council, Secretary and later, President of the
Edinburgh Indian Association, member of the Edinburgh University
Liberal Association and University Union and one of the editors of
Edinburgh University Liberal's magazine "The Student". Prior
to his return to India, Nair spent some time in London where he
served as Secretary and later Vice-President of London Indian
Society which was led by
Dadabhai
Naoroji. He also served as a member of the British Medical
Association, the Royal Asiatic Society, the National Liberal Club
and the Royal Society.
Public offices
Nair
represented Triplicane
in the Madras Corporation from 1904 to 1916.
During his term, he frequently attacked the Corporation and its
President Mr. Molony over the quality of water supplied. In 1910,
he agitated for the revival of the Palghat Municipal Council.
In 1908, Nair was appointed member of the Labor Commission by the
Government of India. He submitted a report condemning the situation
of workers in factories and recommended the reduction of hours of
work. He personally submitted his condemnation and recommendations
before the Secretary of State for India at London.
In 1912, Dr. Nair was elected to the
Madras Legislative Council. When
the
First World War broke out, Dr.
Nair served as one of the surgeons in the hospital ship, S. S.
Madras and was commissioned as a Lieutenant. At the end of the War,
he was awarded the Kaiser-i-Hind medal and the War Service medal
posthumously.
In the Indian National Congress
Nair was associated with the
Indian National Congress right from
the time of his return to India in 1897. In the Congress sessions
in 1898 and 1899, he strongly condemned the present status of
Indian officers in the Medical services and campaigned for equal
treatment to be meted out to them.
He presided over the District Congress at
Chittoor, North
Arcot
in 1907.
Formation of the South Indian Liberal Federation
When Dr. Nair lost the elections to the
Imperial Legislature of India
held in 1916, he blamed caste-based prejudices in the Indian
National Congress for his loss. Nair felt that the Brahmins
Tamil Brahmins were dominating the
Indian National Congress. He protested the
Home Rule Movement launched by
Annie Besant.
In 1917, Dr. Nair left the Indian National Congress. At a meeting
on August 1917, Dr. T. M. Nair spoke:
In October 1917, Dr. T. M. Nair launched the South Indian Liberal
Federation, also known as the
Justice Party in collaboration with
Sir Pitti Theagaroya Chetty.
Editorship of the Justice
In November 1916, a meeting was held at Madras in which Sir P.
Theagaroya Chetty and Dr. T. M. Nair participated. The meeting
brought out a resolution mandating the establishment of a newspaper
for voicing the aspirations of non-Brahmins.
Accordingly, from February 26, 1917 onwards, the
Justice
began to be published. Dr. Nair was the Chief Editor until his
death in 1919. In his newspaper, Dr. Nair attacked his opponents in
the Indian National Movement and supporters of the Home Rule
Movement. Once when the Indian National Congress carried out
agitations in Ernad Tirur and Valluvanad, he prophesized that "the
Congress was smoking in a gunpowder magazine". His words proved to
be true when the
Moplah Rebellion
broke out in the region in the year 1921.
Mission to England and death
In
1918-19, despite warnings from fellow doctors not to travel abroad
considering that his health was deteriorating, he led a mission to
England
to speak in support of communal representations
before a Joint Parliamentary Committee. He remains one of
the few Indians to have addressed a meeting of the members of the
British Parliament. However, he was prohibited from speaking to the
public on the orders of
Edwin
Samuel Montagu, the
Secretary of State for India.
Dr. Nair died on July 17, 1919 at the age of fifty-one due to heart
seizure following diabetic gangrene and Bright's disease. His body
was brought to India and cremated at Golders Green.
Inclination
Nair always wore Western clothes and followed Western manners and
customs. Due to this reason, he was frequently criticized as an
Anglophile. However, at the same time, he
displayed his love for his mother tongue
Malayalam by speaking and writing in chaste
Malayalam.
Commemoration
In 2008, the
Government of India
released a postage stamp in his honor.
Dr. Nair Road, an
arterial road running through T.
Nagar
, Chennai
is named after him.
Notes
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 9
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 8
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 10
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 12
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 14
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 15
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 13
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 17
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 16
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 19
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 7
- Encyclopedia of Political
Parties, Pg 11
References
Further reading
See also