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April 1987
Reunion Tamils Return To Their Saivite Roots
Nine Tamil devotees from Reunion
assembled on the raised platform of India's famed Siva Temple,
Chidambaram, for their Nama Diksha (name giving) ceremony. Though Tamil by
descent, they spoke no Tamil and had never set foot on Tamil soil until a
week before. They had been baptized as Catholics when they were born and
given names such as Jacques, David and Brigette. Now, in the shadow of the
temple's kodimaram, they were being brought into the Saivite fold as they
returned to the religion of their soul. They were participants in the 1986
India Odyssey Pilgrimage of the Saiva Siddhanta Church, the reason they
came to India.
These pilgrims are typical of 120 thousand Tamils on
the small French island of Reunion in the Indian Ocean, 400 miles east of
Madagascar. Indians came to Reunion as indentured laborers in the
mid-nineteenth century. By law, they were required to become Catholics and
to this day must be baptized in the Catholic Church and receive a
Christian name. A dawning awareness of their great Hindu heritage has come
to many in recent years.
The activity of Saiva Siddhanta Church on
nearby Mauritius came to their attention in 1983. There the Hindu Church
was both strengthening religion among the Saivites and reclaiming those
who had been forced into other faiths by economic or legal pressure. At
their request, several missionaries of the Church visited Reunion,
culminating in the visit last year of the Church's head, His Holiness,
Gurudeva, Sivaya Subramuniyaswami.
Appealing to the Saivite leader
for guidance on returning to Hinduism, they explained they were now aware
of the rich Tamil Saivite tradition which their ancestors left behind in
India. Subramuniyaswami said, "Come to India with me," and hence the
Church's 1986 India Odyssey Pilgrimage came to be with devotees from
Reunion, Mauritius, Sri Lanka, India, Malaysia and America participating.
Soon the Reunion Tamils were stepping from the plane in Madras wearing
Yves Saint-Laurent pants and French berets. With exclamations of Mon Dieu,
they knew they had returned home.
Overwhelmed from all sides by
religion - the temples, the priests, the Gods - the first any had ever
seen before, their European facade melted. High-fashion Continental
clothes were traded for saris and verthis, make-up for Holy Ash, and
French food for the equally exquisite Tamil cuisine.
The group
returned to Reunion determined to bring Saivism back to life on their
small island: to build temples, hire priests, and train their children in
the Sanatana Dharma. Their first order of business is a test case to
challenge the laws regarding compulsory baptism and Christian names.
Appeals may be needed all the way to the High Court in Paris to overturn
the present laws. The devotees also know that the Catholic Church had no
irreversible hold on them. Once they leave to practice another religion,
they are automatically excommunicated from Catholicism [see the article in
Hinduism Today, November/December, 1986, on conversion from Catholicism].
Other devotees in Reunion look forward to the next pilgrimage in 1987,
when more will return to the Holy Feet of Siva Nataraja to graft their
soul again to its Saivite roots.
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