Thillaiaadi Valliammai
Thillaiyadi Valliammai (22 February 1898 - 22 February 1914) was a South African Tamil
woman who worked with Mahatma Gandhi in his early years when he developed his nonviolent methods
in South Africa fighting its apartheid
regime.
Biography
She was born to R. Munuswamy
Mudaliar and Mangalam , a young immigrant couple from a small village called
Thillaiyadi in [[Nagappatinam]]
near Mayiladuthurai in India to Johannesburg – the gold-city of South Africa to work for their way out
of difficulty. Her father was a trader and owner of a confectionery shop. Since her mother Janaki is from Thillaiyadi in Tamil
Nadu, her daughter Valliammai came to be popularly called Thillaiyadi
Valliammai. Valliammai had never been to India. She grew
in an environment that was rather hostile to Indians. But the young child did
not even know that it was not right to be segregated so,until she was in her
early teens.
A law was passed that any marriage that
is not according to the Church or according to the marriage law of South Africa
would be held null and void, which disproportionately affected the Indian
community in that country.[2]
Doubts regarding of inheritance arose. Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi began his opposition. Young
Valliammai joined her mother in the march by women from Transvaal
to Natal – which was not legally permitted without passes.
Valliamma, and her mother Mangalam,
joined the second batch of Transvaal women who went to Natal in October 1913 to
explain the inequity of the three pound tax to the workers and persuade them to
strike. (Valliamma’s father, R. Munuswamy Mudaliar, owner of a fruit and
vegetable shop in Johannesburg and a satyagrahi in the Transvaal, was
recovering from an operation). They visited different centres and addressed
meetings. They were sentenced in December to three months with hard labour, and
sent to the Maritzburg prison. Valliamma fell ill soon after her conviction,
but refused an offer of early release by the prison authorities. She died
shortly after release, on 22 February 1914.
Gandhi wrote in Satyagraha in South
Africa:
“Valliamma R. Munuswami Mudaliar was
a young girl of Johannesburg only sixteen years of age. She was confined to bed
when I saw her. As she was a tall girl, her emaciated body was a terrible thing
to behold.
‘Valliamma, you do not repent of
your having gone to jail?’ I asked.
‘Repent? I am even now ready to go
to jail again if I am arrested,’ said Valliamma.
“But what if it results in your
death?’ I pursued.
‘I do not mind it. Who would not
love to die for one’s motherland?’ was the reply.
“Within a few days after this
conversation Valliamma was no more with us in the flesh, but she left us the
heritage of an immortal name…. And the name of Valliamma will live in the
history of South African Satyagraha as long as India lives.”
On 15 July 1914, three days before
he left South Africa, Gandhi attended the unveiling of the gravestones of
Nagappan and Valliamma in the Braamfontein cemetery in Johannesburg.
Honors
- Thillaiyadi Valliammai Memorial Hall, including a public library, was instituted in 1971 on 2452 square meters of land by the Indian Government in the village of Thillaiyadi, now in Tharangambadi Taulk, Nagapattinam, India. The Library is functioning regularly in this memorial. Other buildings in her name include Thillaiyadi Valliammai Nagar and the Thillaiyadi Valliammai High School in Vennanthur.
- A commemorative stamp on her was released on 31-December-2008.
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