By: I K Anil
Executive Editor – CLN
We have been overwhelmed by the response to the Editorial Note of 29th January 25. As I had emphasized The need of the hour is to remain calm. Select Community Leaders, Retired Armed Forces Personnel and Elders of those aggrieved should be brought back to the table to resolve their differences through dialogue – as essentially, we are rational and peace-loving people from both the communities – Kodava Bashikas and Arebhashe Gowdas from Kodagu. External influences should be firmly kept out of Kodagu.
Day 3 of the PEACEFUL and EXTREMELY well conducted Walkathon (appreciated by the Police Forces all along) was completed yesterday with a touching welcome reception by The Peggade Samaja. The tremendous support by all communities including the Mapilas’ all along resonates well with the intent of peaceful coexistence – based on the tenets of Kodavaame. People from every village enroute has taken part in the March and in true spirit of Kodava hospitality, provided refreshments, hosted lunch and encouraged all the participants. Age was no bar – including elders in wheel chairs and proud 90+ year old Kodavas participating to express their support. On Day 3 the numbers exceeded 10,000 – way beyond the expectations of the organizers.
Having interacted with the quiet, self-effacing organizers, their intent and objectives are absolutely well-meaning. They have worked tirelessly for all the Kodava Bashikas to come together, no personal agendas, no speeches, no fanfare, no protest – it is a solidarity March for Peace, Identity and to Preserve the Culture that has served Kodagu well from time immemorial.
Every place lives and thrives on its identity which falls into place over centuries of living and protocols of custom. This is the crux of what India stands for – distinct, individual cultures , holding its own in terms of language, appearance (dress), food habits, festivals, folklore and so on. Rajasthan is distinct and different from Punjab, Bengal, Tamil Nadu and so on. This is exactly the case with Kodagu and Kodava Bashikas. Why disturb the time tested peace of Pommale Kodagu with external influences?
I was deeply touched by the exceptional comment made by T G Rajesh where he explained with great empathy what it means to live in Kodagu. Similarly M P Ponnanna in his Comment to the CLN Editorial has reiterated after the Padyatra what is the plan of action to sustain the tenets of Kodavaame for everyone’s benefit and the peaceful co-existence amongst all communities.
Kodavas are very proud of the rich legacy of our contribution of personnel to the Armed Forces; at one point in time almost EVERY FAMILY sent a child to join the Forces. It was considered and deemed a privilege to have ones kith and kin in the Forces. It would be only natural therefore to expect even more participants from all ranks in the next few days, standing shoulder to shoulder to express solidarity with the need to preserve Kodavaame in Kodagu.
Kodagu has always been a very peaceful place with cordial communal harmony. Those who come to Kodagu must respect the age-old customs that have provided identity and prosperity to this land of ours. After all, if we went to neighbouring lands would they entertain Kodava culture being rolled out in their backyard?
I support this peaceful march. I urge all Kodava Bashikas to participate peacefully, responsibly and reiterate all that Kodavaame stands for. The end objective should be to restore peace to our beloved Kodagu.
KODAGU FIRST
ALWAYS AND EVERYTIME
The Kodavamme Balo Peace Walkathon is the subject matter of every WhatsApp Group. Many of them are blind forwards/postings without a jot of comment nor interpretation. It is important to step back and take an inventory of what has happened:
– The Padyatra has been an outstanding success in unifying peoples thoughts – especially Kodava Bashikas – and virtually every village and all the communities enroute have come out in vast numbers – voluntarily. The spontaneous hospitality has been a trait keeping with our principles of Kodavaame .
– Contrary to general opinion, the Kodavas have demonstrated exemplary discipline on all days, drawing positive endorsement by the Police. No aggression, no untoward incident nor provocative action at any time.
– Other communities have gone out of the way to support Kodavas – especially the Kodava Bashikas, long tenured Muslims and others.
– What is extraordinary is that a group of relatively young people took the initiative and rightly put it under the banner of *The Akhila Kodava Samaja*. There are too many splintered and “individual” focussed/obsessed organizations that need to fall in line and speak with one voice in the best interests of Kodavas, Kodava Bashikas and Kodagu. The Organisers have done a fantastic job – low profile, humble, involving everyone at the grass roots level – so much commitment, ownership and pride from the people joining from every village for the walk/virtually every 500 mts. Kodavas along with all other communities have shown tremendous generosity in their hospitality. It has become a veritable movement like none other seen in Kodagu in living memory. Even the low key funds collection and utilization has been very well managed and accounted for with independent scrutiny. They deserve much praise and clearly are icons for future leadership traits amongst leaders in the making.
All in all, the Peace March has surpassed every expectation with age-no-bar, everyone capable of joining the walk to Madikeri from Mekeri will be there – *disciplined, common purpose, seeking peace and respect for Kodavaame, which has served the people of Kodagu well for centuries.* We hope the President of the Akhila Kodava Samaja will get similar support to drive a common agenda for Kodagu, jointly with Kodava Bashikas so that divisive elements are kept at bay and Kodagu can progress for everyone’s well-being.
I have wholeheartedly participated in the walkathon for two days, apparently waiting to reach the closing on the 7th.
The eagerness, and the zeal to take part without wasting time but moving continuously in a peaceful March is what I sensed.
The support from all Kodavas comes as a perfect validation of the indigenous inhabitants since centuries. A calm and perfect answer to the resolve of the Kodavas.
I read the Editorial with great interest – balanced and the right way to proceed. We just finished the 4th Day’s walk as I send this Comment.
This was an exhilarating experience – extremely peaceful, no untoward behaviour and people were joining the walking group at every conceivable point.
The purpose of the walk was well understood and there was nothing but good intentions all the way. Refreshments and thirst quenching drinks were available from impromptu stalls put up every 500 mts. At Virajpet, there could well have been around 10,000 participants. There was good natured and somewhat joyful response from the Police and traffic flow was excellent.
Hats off to all concerned. The peaceful, disciplined, considerate participation from many communities was amply visible.
Time to settle the somewhat unwanted Kattemad incident. It is difficult to believe that it was unnecessarily blown out of proportion. Long may Kodavaame reign in this blessed land, without unwanted divisive elements.
This morning, we expressed a solidarity as Senior citizens and joined the group coming from Bittangala near Cauvery college Virajpet and walked for half an hour and gave our moral support for a NOBLE cause. We wish all the very best for the continuing walk to Murnad and thereafter to Madikeri.
Excellent editorial. We have lived in Kodagu for many generations and have always felt that I belong here. Kodavas have the reputation of being good and considerate leaders. The incident at Kattemad need not have been allowed to go out of control.
Everyone has been following the peaceful progress of the Kodavaame Balo Walkathon of the past four days. It has been disciplined, free of any incident, respect for all and Police have praised the crowd behaviour.
I wish all of them well for the next two days- especially the huge gathering in Madikeri. At the end of the day, we need peace and good relations in Kodagu. That is all that matters.
Very well-said. As we walked along the surge of crowd was so huge day by day. Displaying again the respect Kodavas show to be disciplined and follow traffic rules with every step. Every person strengthened our collective voice, fostering unity and resilience. Together we strive for an empowered Kodava community that stands proud, preserving our roots and shaping a future rooted in our unique traditions.
I am regular reader of CLN Online.I have been following the developments in Kodagu with sadness initially with the temple incident and now with happiness, the manner in which the Kodavas are showing their peaceful resolve through correct leadership. I have a number of Kodava friends(mostly in our College days given our links for higher education all across Mangalore, Udupi, Karkala and more.
Mixing religion with politics is not a good idea. Also, the path to progress is hard work, job creation, dignity of labour and upward economic movement. Building temples and indulging in religious divisiveness does not deliver any of the above.
In Tulunadu we were subjugated by Jainism for several Centuries and later by the British. Then in 1956 we merged with Mysore State, similar to Kodagu. There lies the commonality. The people of our region virtually started from scratch in building small, medium and big enterprises in every field – Banks, Educational Institutions, Hospitals, Hotel and Restaurant chains, Food Processing, Manufacturing hubs – anything to create jobs and upward economic activity. We also had lots of people go abroad for work but always kept our assets in our home intact.
This is the need of the hour in our Kodagu too. Good leadership( actually it’s the the essence of Kodagu) at micro level who deliver value and not just keep looking for vote share. Kodagu has lush plantations – add value to the crops. On the side, every family should have additional sources of income through trading, hospitality business (not just home stays), garages, cafeterias – there are so many opportunities. The essential ingredient is HARD WORK – My request, Please make that part of the cultural platform.