The debate on celebrating the second annual Tipu Jayanti is underway in Karnataka with the usual suspects taking the usual ideological positions. The Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have taken to the nasty sniping that could easily fuel the kind of acrimony, which has claimed two lives in Kodagu last year over the same issue.
It isn’t surprising that the BJP and the Congress are sticking to their positions on the state government’s plan to celebrate Tipu Sultan’s birth anniversary on November 10. Karnataka is gearing up for assembly polls in 2018 and every electoral issue is being milked dry for what it is worth.
South Kodagu lawyer KP Manjunath filed a PIL against the celebrations recently. The Karnataka high court posted the PIL for hearing on November 8 and on the same day, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and other right wing bodies held protests against the event in Bengaluru. The chief Justice of the Karnataka high court, Subhro Kamal Mukherjee, commented, “As far as my knowledge of history goes, he (Tipu) was not a freedom fighter but a ruler of a princely state. What is the use of celebrating this? Even if the Nizam of Hyderabad had come, he would have countered him in the same way.” The court postponed the PIL appeal hearing with the sardonic and completely accurate addendum, “Let his soul rest in peace as his Jayanti celebrations would cause trouble to the government.”
The story so far
Last year, the Karnataka government declared that November 10 will be celebrated as Tipu Jayanti . It said this had been a long-standing demand of those who admired the Mysuru monarch as a freedom fighter for his trenchant battle against the British. Politicians and scholars are sharply divided over the declaration. Tipu is credited with two large-scale massacres: that of the Kodavas who were killed and tortured and forced to join Tipu’s “Ahmadi” army — the name Tipu assigned to the battalions formed of prisoners of war — and Mandyam Iyengars who were executed in large numbers in Melkote. Manjunath’s PIL says, “If Kodava today is one of the second least populated race in this world, it’s because of a barbaric character from history as Tipu Sultan [sic]. Tipu’s barbarism reached its peak from 1760 to 1790 and this period is considered as one of the most gruesome eras in the history of Kodavas.”
The RSS and its affiliates maintain, as they did in 2015, that Tipu does not deserve this kind of state-sponsored adulation because he killed Hindus and Christians in large numbers during his expansionist drive across the coastal districts of Karnataka and in Kerala’s Malabar areas.
The Siddaramaiah government has described these voices as communal and stayed with their argument that Tipu was, in fact, a freedom fighter. Last year, noted writer Girish Karnad had fiercely defended Tipu’s contribution to Karnataka, comparing him to Shivaji. If Tipu was a Hindu, his work would have been better acknowledged, Karnad said, demanding that the Bengaluru International Airport be named after the 18th century Mysuru king, instead of Kempegowda, the 16th founder of the city of Bengaluru. Karnad’s remarks raised a huge political furore in the state and ended in Karnad apologising for his remarks and chief minister Siddaramaiah saying that Karnad’s remarks had nothing to do with the government.
But the government intends to observe Tipu Jayanti and has reportedly planned celebrations in every district of Karnataka and earmarked Rs 60 lakh towards it, apart from a celebration in Bengaluru that will cost the state Rs 10 lakh.